Washington Hospital Center

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Washington Hospital Center
MedStar Health, Georgetown University
Geography
Location , Washington, D.C., United States
Organization
Care system Private not-for-profit
Hospital type Teaching
Services
Emergency department Level I trauma center
Beds 926
History
Founded March, 1958
Links
Website home page
Lists Hospitals in Washington, D.C.

Washington Hospital Center is the largest private hospital in Washington, D.C.. It serves as a teaching hospital for Georgetown University School of Medicine.

A member of MedStar Health, the not-for-profit Hospital Center is licensed for 926 beds and, on average, operates near capacity. Health services in primary, secondary and tertiary care are offered to adult and neonatal patients. The Hospital Center occupies a 47-acre (190,000 m2) campus in Northwest Washington it shares with three other medical facilities. Immediately adjacent to the Washington Hospital Center are the National Rehabilitation Hospital and Children's National Medical Center (although Children's has satellite centers scattered across the city).

The Washington Heart program is a national leader in the research, diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular disease; its angioplasty or cardiac catheterization has the largest volume of PCI cases in the nation within the University HealthSystem Consortium. (UHC). One of the Washington area's first heart transplants was done at the Hospital Center on May 22, 1987. Washington Hospital Center is home to Washington's only 256-slice Cardiac CT scanner and has the only onsite 24/7 cardiac catheterization team in the region. Its Ventricular Assist Device program is certified by The Joint Commission.

In addition to its cardiac care specialties, the Hospital Center is respected as a top facility in other areas including cancer, neurosciences, gastrointestinal disorders, endocrinology, women's services, transplantation and burn. Washington Hospital Center’s neurosciences program offers the full range of surgical and minimally invasive treatment and operates the first JCAHO-accredited Primary Stroke Center in the District.[citation needed] The Hospital Center is home to the region's adult burn center.

The Washington Cancer Institute (WCI) is the District's largest cancer care provider, treating more cancer patients than any other program in the nation's capital. The Cancer Institute diagnosed more than 2,305 new cases during fiscal year 2007. There were more than 79,720 outpatient visits and more than 2,334 inpatient admissions during that period. WCI provides comprehensive, interdisciplinary care including surgical, radiation, robotic and medical oncology services as well as counseling for patients and families, cancer education, community outreach program and clinical research trials. The Center for Breast Health saw 15,242 patients during fiscal year 2007.

The Hospital Center's transplantation program ranks among the top five percent in the nation for patient outcomes and consistently exceeds the national average.[citation needed] The program for kidney, pancreas and heart is one of the busiest on the East Coast.{(www.optn.org)}[citation needed]

Perhaps the Hospital Center's most wide-reaching presence is its MedSTAR Transport air ambulance service, which, as of 2007 had carried 40,293 patients since its inception in 1983. The American College of Surgeons consistently recognizes the MedSTAR Trauma program as one of the nation's best Level I shock/trauma units.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] History

The Washington Hospital Center was founded in March 1958 when three specialty hospitals merged into one. On May 7, 1998, Medlantic Healthcare Group, the Hospital Center's not-for-profit parent company, merged with Helix Health, a group of four Baltimore, MD-based hospitals, making the combined company the largest health care provider in the mid-Atlantic region. Helix/Medlantic was renamed MedStar Health on February 1, 1999.

[edit] Recent Statistics

In fiscal year 2007, 46,209 inpatients were served --including 4,556 births-- and 371,575 outpatients. The Hospital Center has a medical/dental staff of 1,602. A total of 14,987 cardiac catheterizations were performed during FY 2007. There were 1,863 open-heart surgeries and five heart transplants performed during the fiscal year. There were 105 kidney transplants, seven combination kidney/pancreas transplants and one pancreas transplant performed during fiscal year 2007. There were 3,210 helicopter transports and 983 trauma unit visits in FY 2007. There were 77,113 Emergency Department visits, including 19,007 admissions. The Hospital Center provided nearly $27 million in charity care during FY 2007.

[edit] Washington Hospital Center In the News

In 2008, the Washington Hospital Center was named among “America’s Best Hospitals” for heart and heart surgery, respiratory disorders, Geriatric Care and Endocrinology by U.S.News & World Report in the magazine’s 19th annual survey of 5,462 health care facilities.[1]

The Hospital Center was the only Washington hospital to be ranked in the areas of heart and heart surgery, endocrinolgy, geriatrics, respiratory disorders in 2008. Only 170 medical centers in the U.S. were ranked in one or more of 16 specialties designated in U.S.News & World Report's survey.

A sampling of board-certified doctors in each specialty was randomly selected from the American Medical Association’s master list of 850,000 physicians nationwide. U.S.News randomly polled 200 doctors in each specialty who were asked to list the five hospitals they considered best in their specialty for difficult cases. The mail survey also asked that the decision be made without consideration of cost or location. An estimated 46 percent of the 3,200 doctors contacted responded to the 2006 survey. Hospitals were judged on three equally weighted factors - reputation, mortality rate, and patient care-related factors including nursing and patient services. The 50 hospitals with the highest scores in each specialty made the list.

The Washington Hospital Center's homegrown[2] Azyxxi healthcare software made the news when it was purchased by Microsoft in July 2006.[3]

[edit] Transit Service

The following Metrobus routes serve the hospital:

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 38°55′48″N 77°00′54″W / 38.93°N 77.015°W / 38.93; -77.015

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