Alta Bates Summit Medical Center Explained

Sutter Health Alta Bates Summit Medical Center is located in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area. Its three hospital campuses are located in Berkeley (Alta Bates Campus, Herrick Campus) and Oakland (Summit Campus). Alta Bates Summit is a non-profit community-based medical center and is part of Sutter Health.

History

Alta Bates Campus

The flagship Berkeley campus of the medical center was named after Alta Miner Bates, the nurse who founded the hospital in 1905. Bates was a prominent early California nurse anesthetist. The first graduate of a nurse training program in Eureka, California, she was among the first female anesthetists in the San Francisco Bay Area, administering over 14,000 anesthetics during her career.[1] Until her retirement in 1949, Bates served as the hospital's director and was president of its board.[2]

Alta Bates Hospital, later renamed Alta Bates Medical Center until its merger with Summit Medical Center in 1999, is now known as the Alta Bates Campus of Alta Bates Summit Medical Center.[3]

Proposed Alta Bates hospital closure

In 2016, Sutter Health told Berkeley's mayor that Sutter Health plans to close Alta Bates in 2030. Sutter claimed that it is infeasible to do seismic upgrades that would be required to keep the hospital open. Alta Bates served 50,000 patients in 2015 - a 21% increase from 2010. The City of Berkeley is conducting a study to assess the impact of closing Alta Bates on the region; a summary presented by Berkeley's mayor Jesse Arreguin and Berkeley Councilmember Sophie Hahn on May 20, 2024 highlighted impacts to people of color, Medi-Cal and Medicare patients, and the uninsured especially. Hospital closure could be catastrophic in a disaster scenario such as an earthquake, another pandemic, or a Chevron refinery fire. An increase in travel times to other hospitals could lead to an increase in deaths, when minutes matter for emergency care. A February 2024 article is here: https://www.berkeleyside.org/2024/02/28/berkeley-to-fund-study-on-alta-bates-closure-impact-local-health-needs

Herrick Campus

In 1904, Dr. LeRoy Francis Herrick, a graduate of the Kentucky College of Medicine (1893),[4] purchased a Berkeley mansion known as the Hume House, located on the same block upon which the current Herrick Campus is situated, between Dwight and Channing Ways, and Milvia and Grove (now Martin Luther King Way). He converted the large home into a 25-bed hospital which he chose to name for President Theodore Roosevelt whom he admired. (President Roosevelt was an early proponent of a government-supported national public health system.) The Roosevelt Hospital was expanded to 50 beds by 1924, and renamed Berkeley General Hospital. In 1932, Dr. Herrick died, and his heirs converted the hospital into a non-profit corporation. By 1934, the hospital had 100 beds. The original Roosevelt Hospital building was demolished to accommodate additional wings and facilities which were added over time. In 1945, the hospital was again renamed Herrick Memorial Hospital, in honor of its founder.[5] [6] Further improvements and expansions continued through the ensuing decades.

Herrick Memorial Hospital formally affiliated with Alta Bates Hospital in 1984 and fully merged in 1988. The joint organization, spanning both sites, was briefly named Alta Bates Herrick Hospital but became Alta Bates Medical Center in 1992.[7] The site is now known as the Herrick Campus of Alta Bates Summit Medical Center.

Summit Campus

The Summit Campus of Alta Bates Summit Medical Center was previously three separately owned and operated facilities located in the same "Pill Hill" neighborhood, generally bounded by Broadway, Telegraph Avenue and the 580 (Macarthur) freeway, immediately north of downtown Oakland: Providence Hospital (founded in 1904 by the Sisters of Providence[8]), Peralta Hospital (founded by local Oakland doctors in the 1920s) and Samuel Merritt Hospital. Dr. Samuel Merritt (1822–1890) was a successful San Francisco physician and also the 13th mayor of Oakland, California from 1867 to 1869. In 1867, Merritt donated to the city of Oakland the wetlands now known as Lake Merritt. Merritt left plans for a hospital and nursing school to be built in his name after his death; in 1909 Samuel Merritt College (still in operation as Samuel Merritt University and affiliated with Sutter Health) and Merritt Hospital opened.[9] Merritt and Peralta merged in 1982; the combined Merritt merged with Providence in 1992 to form Summit Medical Center, which merged with Alta Bates in 1999.[10]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CANA History. California Association of Nurse Anesthetists. California Association of Nurse Anesthetists. January 14, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170116175019/http://canainc.org/organization/cana-history.html. January 16, 2017. dead.
  2. Web site: Profile: Alta Alice Miner Bates. Childers . Linda . April 29, 2011. Nurse.com. January 14, 2017.
  3. Web site: Alta Bates, Summit Merge / East Bay hospitals close deal within hours of judge's ruling. Abate. Tom. Hoover. Ken. 1999-12-28. SFGate. 2020-04-25. Writers. Chronicle Staff.
  4. Web site: Kentucky School of Medicine class of 1893. :: Kornhauser Health Sciences Library History Collections. Digital.library.louisville.edu. 16 September 2018.
  5. "The Hospital Story", The Herrick Hospitaler, June 1951, p.2
  6. Web site: 404 Page Not Found - City of Berkeley, CA. Ci.berkeley.ca.us. 16 September 2018.
  7. Web site: Herrick Campus Area. 2007. City of Berkeley Historic Resources Reconnaissance Survey. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20180322015210/https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Planning_and_Development/Level_3_-_DAP/5%20Health%20and%20Medicine.pdf . 2018-03-22 .
  8. Web site: Sisters of Providence - Daring to live our charism in an evolving world.. Sistersofprovidence.net. 16 September 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20160318223804/http://www.sistersofprovidence.net/150years//index.php?page=history&h=timeline. 2016-03-18. dead.
  9. Web site: Better Health East Bay - Sutter Health. Absfdn.com. 16 September 2018.
  10. Web site: Our History. 2021-10-23. www.samuelmerritt.edu.