Providence Milwaukie Hospital | |
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Providence Health & Services | |
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Geography | |
Location | Milwaukie, Oregon, United States |
Coordinates | 45°26′58″N 122°37′39″W / 45.4494°N 122.6276°W |
Organization | |
Care system |
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Type | General |
Services | |
Beds | 77 (licensed) |
History | |
Opened | 1968 |
Links | |
Website |
oregon |
Lists | Hospitals in Oregon |
Providence Milwaukie Hospital is a 77-bed acute care hospital in Milwaukie, Oregon, US. Located in the Portland metropolitan area, it is owned by Providence Health & Services. Opened in 1968, it was originally Dwyer Memorial Hospital, a private hospital, before becoming a community hospital a few years after opening.
There were competing plans for a hospital in Milwaukie in the mid-1960s, with one being Milwaukie General Hospital to be built at Stanley and Railroad avenues, while Dwyer Memorial Hospital was planned for 32nd and Harrison streets. [1] Plans for the Dwyer Memorial Hospital won out, with construction starting in May 1967 on what was to be an $800,000, 60-bed facility. [2] The new 62-bed hospital opened in July 1968. [3] The $1.5-million private hospital was named in honor of A J. Dwyer, an lumberman in Clackamas County. [3] Dwyer was then transferred in July 1971 to North Clackamas Community Hospital, Inc., a non-profit organization established to run the formerly for-profit institution as a community hospital. [4]
In 1980, a new emergency department opened with 10 examination rooms. [5] The hospital changed its name to Dwyer Community Hospital in January 1982. [6] The North Clackamas Community Hospital, which operated as Dwyer Community Hospital, started talks in January 1986 with then Providence Health Care System about merging into Providence, [7] which was consummated later that year. [8] The market share of the hospital was 1.5% for the Portland area in 1988. [9] The hospital added a new surgical wing and entrance in 1997, part of a $15 million expansion project. [10] Prior to the expansion, the hospital was only licensed for 56 beds. [11]
Providence Milwaukie started construction on a three-story, 42,000-square-foot (3,900 m2) building to house the Healing Place in February 2001. [12] Labor strife with nurses over 19-months, including a one-day strike, ended in November 2003 with a new contract for the nurses. [13] In May 2002, construction started on a new emergency department that was expected to cost $9 million and add 16,000 square feet (1,500 m2) to the existing ER. [5] Providence Milwaukie was named one of the top 100 hospitals in 2004 by Solucient. [14]
The hospital is licensed for 77 beds, but as of 2013 only had 66 beds available. [15] Services at Providence Milwaukie include radiology, surgery, emergency, cancer treatment, pediatrics, nuclear medicine, and sleep disorders, among others. [16] For 2012, the hospital had a total of 3,129 acute care discharges, with 9,266 patient days, and 30,399 emergency department visits. [17] For the fiscal year ending in 2011, the hospital had total revenues of $95 million and a profit of $10.6 million. [18] That year Providence Milwaukie also provided $11.3 million in charity care. [18]