UH Cleveland Medical Center is the main campus of University Hospitals. With 150 locations throughout the
Cleveland metropolitan area, the University Hospitals health system encompasses hospitals, outpatient centers, and primary care physicians.
UH Cleveland Medical Center is home to world-class clinical and research centers, including cancer care,[3] pediatrics, women's health, orthopedics, spine, radiology, radiation oncology, neurosurgery, neuroscience, psychiatry, cardiology, cardiovascular surgery, organ transplantation, and human genetics.
Locations
The main campus of the University Hospitals system is UH Cleveland Medical Center in the
University Circle neighborhood of Cleveland, neighboring both
Case Western Reserve University and the
Cleveland Clinic to the west. The UH Cleveland Medical Center complex comprises the Alfred and Norma Lerner Tower, Samuel Mather Pavilion, Lakeside Hospital, Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital, MacDonald Women's Hospital, Seidman Cancer Center, and Hanna Pavilion. In addition to the main campus, UH provides hospital services at 11 regional locations throughout
Northeast Ohio.
Main Campus
UH Cleveland Medical Center ("Lakeside", "Bolwell", "Humphrey", "Mather")
UH Cleveland Medical Center is ranked in the top 25 nationally in Ear, Nose & Throat; Gastroenterology & GI Surgery, Gynecology; Nephrology; and Neurology & Neurosurgery.[5]
Among UH Rainbow pediatric specialties, Neonatology, Pulmonology, Diabetes & Endocrinology, Orthopedics, Cancer, and Urology are ranked among the top 25 in the nation.[5]
Cleveland Medical Center and Case School of Medicine together form the largest biomedical research center in Ohio.[7]
In biomedical research, Case Medical Center ranks among top 15 centers in the United States with approximately $75 million in annual extramural research funding and a further $20 million in various clinical trials.[7]
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center also includes MacDonald Women's Hospital, Ohio's only hospital for women; and Seidman Cancer Center (formerly known as Ireland Cancer Center).
Vision 2010
Vision 2010 was the largest construction and upgrade project in the history of University Hospitals. New construction included a new 200-bed cancer hospital (UH Seidman Cancer Center), upgraded
emergency room facilities at CMC, a new
neonatal intensive care unit (
NICU) at Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital, and new construction at other hospital sites. The capital expenditure for this project, according to hospital press releases, was to be approximately US$1 billion.[8] Construction was originally due to be completed by the year 2010, but was not scheduled completed until 2011.[9]
Harrington Project
The Harrington Project for Discovery & Development, launched in 2012, is a $300 million initiative at the University Hospitals whose purpose is to speed the delivery of new drugs and enhance the medical reputations of Cleveland and the Hospitals.[10] It was established through a $50 million gift from the Harrington family and an additional $100 million in support from University Hospitals.[11] The project has three components, the Harrington Discovery Institute (HDI), the Innovation Support Center (ISC), and
Biomotiv.
In June 2014, the Harrington Discovery Institute received a $25 million grant from the State of Ohio through the Third Frontier economic development program to further its mission.[12]
Started the first
CPR teaching course for medical professionals (1950).
Peter C. Agre (1978 Internal Medicine alumnus) - co-recipient 2003
Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discoveries that have clarified how salts and water are transported out of and into the cells of the body, leading to a better understanding of many diseases of the kidneys, heart, muscles and nervous system.[16]
In 2015, the cable network NatGeo broadcast
Brain Surgery Live from UH Cleveland Medical Center, the first brain surgery ever televised live in the United States.[17]
In 2017,
Roger Daltrey of The Who visited cancer patients at the Angie Fowler Adolescent and Young Adult Cancer Institute at UH Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital, part of University Hospitals.[18]
University Hospitals faced multiple
lawsuits following an incident in March 2018 at its Fertility Center that compromised 4,000+ eggs and
embryos stored in liquid nitrogen as the result of an unexpected
temperature fluctuation with a tissue cryo storage tank.[20]
In 2021, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, University Hospitals required all workers to be vaccinated against the disease. It later permitted its careworkers to be unvaccinated against COVID due to a federal injunction.[21] The mandate was reinstated following a Supreme Court ruling.[22]