Medicine Hat Regional Hospital

Medicine Hat Regional Hospital
Alberta Health Services

Medicine Hat Regional Hospital visitor's entrance
Location in Alberta
Geography
Location Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada
Coordinates 50°02′30″N 110°40′39″W / 50.04167°N 110.67750°W / 50.04167; -110.67750Coordinates: 50°02′30″N 110°40′39″W / 50.04167°N 110.67750°W / 50.04167; -110.67750
Organization
Care system Medicare
Hospital type General, Teaching
Affiliated university Faculty of Medicine of the University of Calgary
Services
Emergency department Yes
Beds 325
History
Founded 1889 [1]
Links
Website http://www.albertahealthservices.ca/facilities.asp?pid=facility&rid=1000474

Medicine Hat Regional Hospital is a medical facility located in Medicine Hat, Alberta serving a catchment area of 117,000. It has 325 beds.

Alberta Health Services is responsible for the operations of the hospital.[2]

Services

[3]

Statistics

In the 2011/2012 year the emergency department assessed 31,337 patients. This equates to a rate of 246.3 per thousand of population in comparison with the Alberta average of 267.5 per thousand. The inpatient separation rate is 114 per thousand population compared to the Alberta average of 88.3, the most common admitting diagnosis being ischemic heart disease, markedly higher than the overall Alberta population average.[4]

Educational services

The hospital serves as a training center for multiple professions. Students from Medicine Hat College include the areas of nursing[5] and EMS.[6] The University of Calgary trains residents in their Rural Alberta South family medicine program and rotate medical students on elective.[7] The Canadian Forces Medical Service in Suffield also rotates medics through the emergency department. In October 2012 the University of Alberta began rotating pharmacy students through Medicine Hat as part of an 8-week placement program.[8]

History

Founding

The hospital was founded in 1889 and had its formal opening June 4, 1890. It was created to service Saskatchewan, Assiniboia, Alberta and Athabasca and was the first civilian hospital in Alberta.[9] This was partially in response to the 1888 typhoid fever epidemic in which there was no institution available to tend to the sick and also as a means of promoting the community. Initial funding was provided through government, individuals and corporations including the Canadian Pacific Railway, the Canadian Agricultural, Coal and Colonization Company and twelve lots from the Northwest Land Company. A new wing was added to the hospital in 1907.[10]

Lady Aberdeen Maternity Hospital

The construction of a maternity hospital was initially suggested in 1892 as a means to move deliveries outside of the general hospital. 50 yards north of the general hospital, construction of the Lady Aberdeen Maternity Hospital was started on May 25, 1894 and finished August 19, 1895. A second story was added in 1904. An annex was later attached in 1945.[11]

Victoria Nurses' residence

In that same time period that the maternity hospital was constructed, the Training School for Nurses was also established. The nurses initially stayed within the general hospital, however this ultimately resulted in a shortage of beds. As a result, the Victoria Nurses' Residence was created with fundraising by the newly formed Woman's Hospital Aid Society (WHAS). Construction started April 1904 and finished in December with a formal opening in 1905. The residence was enlarged in 1912, doubling its size.[12]

Budget

In the first two decades of operation, 23% of the budget was provided by patient payments although no patients were refused. To cover reduced revenues secondary to provision of free services to the indignant, corporate donations were secured in exchange for lower hospital rates for employees and insurance tickets were sold by the hospital in exchange for coverage in the event of admission. By 1926 the hospital had expenses of $47,326.21 with a $623.52 deficit due to falling admission rates. This improved by the end of the 1930s but in the 1940s deficits again rose and by the 1950s the hospital was surrendered by its board to the City of Medicine Hat.[13]

Current location

The initial Medicine Hat General Hospital and its support buildings were demolished to allow development of the city police station. As such the historic location is no longer viewable. The hospital was moved to its current location prior to this.[14]

Future development

A 30,800 square foot expansion of the hospital is currently underway with a budget of $220 million. The expansion includes a larger emergency department, more space for inpatient diagnostic services and a heliport. It is proposed to open in 2016.[15]

References

  1. Dirk, Marcel (1989). A Healthy Outlook: The Centennial History of the Medicine Hat Regional Hospital. Holmes Printing. p. 3.
  2. http://www.albertahealthservices.ca/facilities.asp?pid=facility&rid=1000474
  3. http://www8.albertahealthservices.ca/Medicine-Hat-Regional-Hospital.html
  4. http://www.health.alberta.ca/documents/PHC-Profile-MedicineHat.pdf
  5. http://www.mhc.ab.ca/ProgramsandCourses/Academic%20Programs/Programs%20of%20Study/Nursing.aspx
  6. http://www.mhc.ab.ca/ProgramsandCourses/Academic%20Programs/Programs%20of%20Study/Paramedic.aspx
  7. http://www.arfmn.ab.ca/south/overview.html
  8. Lisa Squires (February). "Perfect Prescription" (PDF). Alberta Health Services Zone News: South Zone. Retrieved 14 February 2013. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. Alberta Association of Registered Nurses (1942). Collection of facts for history of nursing : Alberta, 1864-1942. University of Calgary Press. p. 3.
  10. Dirk, Marcel (1989). A Healthy Outlook: The Centennial History of the Medicine Hat Regional Hospital. Holmes Printing. pp. 7–12.
  11. Dirk, Marcel (1989). A Healthy Outlook: The Centennial History of the Medicine Hat Regional Hospital. Holmes Printing. pp. 21–23, 51.
  12. Dirk, Marcel (1989). A Healthy Outlook: The Centennial History of the Medicine Hat Regional Hospital. Holmes Printing. pp. 23–32.
  13. Dirk, Marcel (1989). A Healthy Outlook: The Centennial History of the Medicine Hat Regional Hospital. Holmes Printing. pp. 17, 42–45.
  14. Dirk, Marcel (1989). A Healthy Outlook: The Centennial History of the Medicine Hat Regional Hospital. Holmes Printing. p. 90.
  15. http://www.albertahealthservices.ca/7450.asp
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