Providence Newberg Medical Center Explained

Providence Newberg Medical Center
Org/Group:Providence Health & Services
Location:Newberg
Region:Yamhill County
State:Oregon
Country:US
Coordinates:45.3082°N -122.936°W
Healthcare:Medicare/Medicaid/Charity/Public
Type:General
Emergency:IV
Affiliation:None
Beds:40
Founded:1957
Website:http://www.providence.org/yamhill/

Providence Newberg Medical Center is a not-for-profit [1] acute care hospital in Newberg, Oregon, United States. Opened at a different location as Newberg Community Hospital, a new 40-licensed-hospital-bed and Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)-certified facility was opened in 2006, the first gold certified hospital in the nation. The three building medical center is located on on the eastern edge of the city along Oregon Route 99W and is owned by Providence Health & Services.

History

In 1957, the city of Newberg opened Newberg Community Hospital, with three additions built later.[2] The Sisters of Providence Health System (now Providence Health & Services) took over management of the facility in 1986.[2] In 1993, the city owned hospital dealt with issues regarding administrator Mark Meinert who was accused by the city council of ethical violations concerning self-dealing involving his wife.[3] The hospital was overseen by a city commission and still operated by the Sisters of Providence.[4] Later in the year a member of the city council also accused the hospital's administration with other ethics violations concerning travel and the use of public money.[5]

In June 1994, Sisters of Providence purchased the facility from the city.[2] At that time the hospital sat on on Villa Road and had 35 hospital beds, two operating rooms, and covered a total of .[6] [7] In 2004, the hospital was one of three in Oregon named by Solucient as a top 100 hospital in the United States.[8]

New campus

Providence decided to replace the aging hospital in the early part of the 2000s. Early plans called for a 39-bed facility at a cost of $58 million to be opened in December 2005.[6] [9] In January 2003, Roger Yost sold his former nursery to Providence.[10] Site preparation for the new hospital began in September 2003.

On September 27, 2004, an official ground breaking ceremony was held at the construction site.[11] Officials gave out commemorative shovels and had a total of 2,453 people assist in the ceremony to set a new Guinness Book World Record.[12] Construction on the buildings started in July 2004, with the buildings completed in May 2006. On June 16, 2006, Providence Newberg Medical Center opened to the public at a total cost of $70.6 million.[13] The hospital was Providence's first new hospital in the state since 1971.[13]

Neighboring George Fox University purchased the old hospital grounds from Providence for $3 million.[14] The new hospital received a Gold LEED certification for the environmentally friendly building.[15] This was the first hospital to achieve the gold certification in the country[16] [17] Long-term plans call for the construction of a second physicians office building at the campus.[13]

Details

Providence Newberg sits on a 56-acre campus on the eastern edge of Newberg.[18] Built at a cost of $70.6 million, more than $5 million was raised in the community to help pay for the center.[18] The facility offers a variety of medical services including critical care, a 24-hour Level IV emergency room, diagnostic imaging, pediatric, a birth center, operating rooms, three operating rooms, a sleep apnea laboratory, and general medicine among others.[7] [18]

In 2006, the hospital had a net loss of $1.6 million on gross patient revenues of $89 million with $3.8 million in charity care.[19] In 2007, the center staffed 40 hospital beds and had 179,527 visits of which 16,555 were emergency department visits.[20] That year there were 446 surgeries and 573 babies born at the hospital.[20] The medical center is accredited by The Joint Commission and employs 239 full-time and 290 part-time people, with 182 doctors with privileges.[18] [21]

Buildings

The hospital portion covers, with an office building adding for a total of at the medical center.[18] The three-story tall Medical Office Building connects to the hospital through an atrium that includes a café.[18] A two-story Patient & Community Services Building houses non-medical operations including the lobby, gift shop, and administrative offices.[18] The hospital building is also three stories and includes an emergency medicine department with 15 beds, imaging, 27 beds for post-operation recovery, and a birthing center with eight beds.[18] An ICU unit is located on the second floor with four beds, but the floor is designed to allow for expansion to increase that number to eight or allow for more space for birthing.[18]

Mahlum Architects designed the new facility which includes only private patient rooms.[7] Skanska USA served as the general contractor for construction.[18] Environmentally conscious amenities include advanced HVAC systems, natural light in all patient rooms, and windows treated for improved heat transfer resistance.[18] Other items that helped obtain LEED certification were the use of recycled construction material, a system for utilizing storm water, use of environmentally friendly housecleaning products, and purchasing 100% wind generated electricity.[22] Much of the artwork at the hospital was created by area school kids.[23]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Oregon Trauma Hospitals. State of Oregon DHS. August 19, 2008. State of Oregon. 2009-01-21. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20111228202923/http://public.health.oregon.gov/ProviderPartnerResources/EMSTraumaSystems/TraumaSystems/Documents/Hosplist.pdf. December 28, 2011.
  2. Staff and wire reports. “Newberg Community joins Providence hospital system”, The Oregonian, June 29, 1994, p. B18.
  3. Haynes, Dana. “Newberg council-local hospital relationship ruptures”, The Oregonian, July 28, 1993, p. C2.
  4. Haynes, Dana. “Council, panel end hospital dispute”, The Oregonian, July 29, 1993, p. F2.
  5. Haynes, Dana. “Councilman charges public cash misused”, The Oregonian, October 1, 1993, p. C2.
  6. Goetze, Janet. “George Fox plans to buy Providence Newberg Hospital”, The Oregonian, April 13, 2004, p. D1.
  7. Goetze, Janet. “Area hospitals build for the future”, The Oregonian, September 22, 2003, p. B1.
  8. “Business Briefs: Providence Milwaukie listed as a top hospital”, The Oregonian, June 3, 2004, South Zoner, p. 2.
  9. “Community Snapshot: Couple’s donation helps Providence reach goal”, The Oregonian, March 22, 2005, p. B2.
  10. Rose, Michael. “Yost places his bets on downtown”, Statesman Journal, April 26, 2008, p. 1.
  11. Goetze, Janet. “Hospital invites people to dig in”, The Oregonian, September 25, 2003, p. D2.
  12. “Community Snapshot: Newberg hole-digging new Guinness record”, The Oregonian, April 20, 2004, p. B2.
  13. Goetze, Janet. “Patients make move from old hospital to new”, The Oregonian, June 19, 2006, p. B2.
  14. http://www.bizjournals.com/portland/stories/2004/04/12/daily4.html “George Fox to buy Newberg hospital site”
  15. Rivera, Dylan. “Hospitals build healthier environment”, The Oregonian, December 1, 2006, p. D1.
  16. Eagle, Amy. “Gold star: Oregon hospital becomes first to earn gilded LEED rating”, HFM Magazine, July 2007.
  17. http://www.architectureweek.com/2007/0502/environment_1-1.html “LEED Gold Hospital”
  18. http://www.providence.org/yamhill/new_medical_center/facts.htm Medical Center Facts.
  19. http://www.oregon.gov/OHPPR/RSCH/docs/2006HospitalMargins_FINAL2.xls Hospital Financial and Community Benefit Reporting: Financial Data, 2006.
  20. Nemer, Jerry. Databank 2007. Oregon Health Policy and Research. Retrieved January 21, 2009.
  21. http://health.usnews.com/listings/hospital-directory/oregon/providence_newberg_med_ctr Hospitals Directory: Providence Newberg Med Ctr.
  22. Goetze, Janet. “Hospital in Newberg will run clean, green with wind power”, The Oregonian, June 12, 2006, p. B2.
  23. Goetze, Janet. “Healthy dose of kids' art brightens Newberg hospital”, The Oregonian, April 22, 2006, p. D1.