Penn Medicine Rittenhouse Explained

Penn Medicine Rittenhouse
Org/Group:University of Pennsylvania Health System
Location:1800 Lombard Street and
1840 South Street
Region:
Philadelphia
State:PA
Country:US
Coordinates:39.9445°N -75.1731°W
Healthcare:Private
Funding:Non-profit
Type:Specialist
Affiliation:Perelman School of Medicine
Network:University of Pennsylvania Health System
Beds:95
Speciality:Rehabilitation, radiology
Founded:2007

Penn Medicine Rittenhouse is a rehabilitation and long-term acute-care facility in the Southwest Center City neighborhood of Philadelphia founded in 2007.[1] The current facility is owned by the University of Pennsylvania Health System (UPHS)[2] and operated by Good Shepherd Penn Partners.[3]

The space was formerly occupied by the Graduate Hospital, which opened in 1916, though medical care originally began on the site in 1889 under the name Philadelphia Polyclinic.

History

The origins of the hospital are with the Philadelphia Polyclinic, founded in 1889 in the area of 20th and South Streets in Philadelphia. In 1916, the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Medicine established Graduate Hospital as a clinical teaching facility. The hospital was spun off as an independent, non-profit hospital in 1977 after losing money for several years. The hospital was a member of Pittsburgh's Allegheny Health System from 1996 until 1998, when the company went bankrupt, and was part of Tenet Healthcare from 1998 to 2007, when it finally sold back to the University of Pennsylvania Health System[4] and in 2006 it sought to sell this and two other Philadelphia hospitals. At this point, Penn Medicine closed the facility as a full-service hospital and converted it to a specialty medical facility.

Facilities

The main campus, part of the Penn Medicine Institute for Rehabilitation Medicine, is a 58-bed inpatient rehabilitation facility operated by Good Shepherd Penn Partners.[5] The second building, known as the Tuttleman Center, houses a 37-bed outpatient ambulatory surgical center and a radiology department.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Penn Health System to buy Graduate . . January 24, 2007 . May 16, 2008.
  2. Web site: Graduate hospital purchase . 2008-05-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080610105915/http://www.uphs.upenn.edu/news/News_Releases/jan07/graduate-hospital-purchase.htm . 2008-06-10 . dead .
  3. Good Shepherd and the University of Pennsylvania Health System Form New Organization to Enhance Rehabilitation Care in the Region . Good Shepherd Rehab . 2007-01-23 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070216124123/http://www.goodshepherdrehab.org/news-events/press-releases/release-01-23-07.asp . 2007-02-16 . 2017-03-28 .
  4. http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/314788/philadelphias_graduate_hospital_enters_unusual_arrangement_with_competitor/ Tenet troubles in 2005
  5. Web site: Penn Medicine Rittenhouse . . April 14, 2017.
  6. Web site: Tuttleman Center . . April 14, 2017.