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List of hospitals in the US state of New York From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of hospitals in the U.S. state of New York. The hospitals are listed by the most recent hospital name with the name of the health system, county, city, date the hospital first opened, and most recent number of beds, when known. For defunct hospitals, the closing date is included, when known. Military hospitals and psychiatric hospitals are listed separately. More detailed descriptions are in the lists of hospitals in New York City's five boroughs and separate articles for many notable hospitals.
The American Hospital Directory lists 261 active hospitals in New York State in 2022. 210 of these hospitals have staffed beds, with a total of 64,515 beds. The largest number of hospitals are in New York City.[1] The January 1, 2022 listing by the New York Health Department of general hospitals covered by the New York Healthcare Reform Act show 165 hospitals 63 closed hospitals, and 51 hospitals that had been merged with other hospitals.[2]
The oldest hospital in New York State and also oldest hospital in the United States is the Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan, established in 1736. The hospital with the largest number of staffed beds is the NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan, with 2,678 beds in its hospital complex.
The notable hospitals in New York are listed below using the current name of the hospital and previous names described in footnotes. This list is sortable by name, county, city, date opened and number of beds. The range of number of beds in hospitals goes from the multi-campus NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan with 2,678 beds to Mercy Hospital in Orchard Park with only two beds. The number of beds for each hospital since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic has fluctuated, so references are included.[1][3]
The following general hospitals in New York are defunct. Defunct VA and psychiatric hospitals are listed in separate sections of this article.[119]
Name | County | City | Coordinates | Opened - closed | Beds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adirondack Medical Center | Essex | Lake Placid | 44°15′57″N 73°59′01″W | [120] | |
Adirondack Regional Hospital | Saratoga | Corinth | 43°14′41″N 73°48′50″W | 1964-1967 | 60[121][122][123] |
Amsterdam Memorial Hospital[Note 32] | Montgomery | Amsterdam | 42°57′32″N 74°11′15″W | 1889–2009[Note 33] | 8[3][124][125] |
Bayley Seton Hospital[Note 34] (Sisters of Charity) |
Richmond | New York City: Staten Island | 40°37′20″N 74°04′32″W | 1831–1980[Note 35] | 25[126] |
Beth David Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°46′55″N 73°57′11″W | 1886-1962 | [127][128] |
Bethesda Hospital | Steuben | North Hornell | 42°20′53″N 77°39′48″W | 1920–1970 | [129] |
Cabrini Medical Center | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°44′11″N 73°59′02″W | 1973–2008 | 490 (1973) |
City Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan, Roosevelt Island | 40°45′11″N 73°57′31″W | 1832–1957 | |
Doctors Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°46′35″N 73°56′40″W | 1929–2004 | |
Doctors' Hospital | Richmond | New York City: Staten Island | 40°36′10″N 74°5′31″W | 1940–2003 | 71 |
Eastern Niagara Hospital, Newfane Division[Note 36] (Eastern Niagara Hospital) |
Niagara | Newfane | 43°17′19″N 78°42′33″W | 1908–2019 | ?[130][131] |
Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: New York Harbor: Ellis Island | 40°41′58.4″N 74°2′22.5″W | 1902–1951 | 300 |
French Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°45′02″N 73°59′48″W | 1881–1977 | |
Genesee Hospital | Monroe | Rochester | 43°8′59.2″N 77°35′44.2″W | 1889–2001 | [132] |
Gowanda State Hospital (NYDCCS) |
Erie | Gowanda | 42°29′18″N 78°56′13″W | 1894–2021 | [133] |
Herkimer Memorial Hospital | Herkimer | Herkimer | 43°01′33″N 74°59′57″W | 1925–1983 | 70[134] |
Island Medical Center | Nassau | Hempstead | 1956–2003 | [135] | |
Jewish Maternity Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°42′54″N 73°59′06″W | 1906–1931 | |
Jewish Memorial Hospital | Nassau | Inwood | 40°51′40″N 73°55′48″W | 1898–1982 | 186[136] |
Knickerbocker Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan: Harlem | 40°48′57″N 73°57′11″W | 1862–1979 | 228 |
Lakeside Memorial Hospital | Monroe | Brockport | ?–2013 | [137] | |
Long Beach Medical Center | Nassau | Long Beach | 40°35′41″N 73°39′00″W | ?–2012 | |
Long Island College Hospital | Kings | New York City: Brooklyn | 40°41′23″N 73°59′48.3″W | 1858–2014 | 508 |
Lake Shore Hospital | Chautauqua | Irving | 42°33′32″N 79°07′31″W | ?–2020 | 182[1][138] |
Madison Avenue Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°46′27.2″N 73°57′48.4″W | 1955–1976 | |
Mary McClellan Hospital | Washington | Cambridge | 43°1′32.1″N 73°23′29.5″W | 1919–2003 | |
Millard Fillmore Hospital[Note 37] | Erie | Buffalo | 42°55′12″N 78°52′01″W | ?–2012, | |
Mohawk Valley General Hospital | Herkimer | Ilion | 43°00′50″N 75°02′17″W | 1908–1991 | 84[139][140] |
Mount Vernon Hospital | Westchester | Mount Vernon | 40°54′49″N 73°50′23″W | 1890s–1999 | [141] |
Neponsit Beach Hospital | Queens | New York City: Queens | 40°34′07″N 73°51′53″W | 1915–1955 | |
New York United Hospital Medical Center | Westchester | Port Chester | 1889–2005 | 222[1][142] | |
North General Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan: East Harlem | 40°48′12″N 73°56′31″W | 1979-2010 | |
Our Lady of Victory Hospital of Lackawanna | Erie | Lackawanna | |||
Pan American Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°46′55″N 73°57′11″W | 1927-1930 | |
Pearl River General Hospital | Rockland (county) | Pearl River, New York | 41°05′56″N 74°01′33″W | closed ~1972 | |
Seaview Hospital | Richmond | New York City: Staten Island | 40°35′30″N 74°7′58″W | 1909-1938 | |
Sheehan Memorial Hospital | Erie | Buffalo | 42°53′05″N 78°52′06″W | 1884–2012 | [143] |
Smallpox Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan: Roosevelt Island | 40°45′6″N 73°57′34″W | 1856-1875 | 100 |
St. Agnes Hospital | Westchester | White Plains | ?–2000 | [144] | |
St. Clare's Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°45′54″N 73°59′22″W | 1934–2007 | |
St. Vincent's Catholic Medical Center, Manhattan | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°44′11″N 73°59′59″W | 1849-2010 | 758 |
Summit Park Hospital | Rockland | Pomona | 41°09′28″N 74°02′25″W | Closed 2015[145] | |
Sydenham Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan: Harlem | 40°48′35″N 73°56′56″W | 1892–1980 | 200 |
Tioga Community Hospital | Tioga | Waverly | closed 1990[146] | ||
Tonsil Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 1921-1946 | ||
Tri-County Memorial Hospital[Note 38] | Erie | Gowanda | 42°27′52″N 78°56′36″W | ?–2009 | |
Wadsworth Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan: Washington Heights | 40°51′09″N 73°55′58″W | 1929–1976 | 25 |
Westchester Square Medical Center | Bronx | New York City: The Bronx | 40°50′27″N 73°50′54″W | 1830–2013 | [147] |
As of 2022, there were 11 United States Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals in New York, and one VA hospital that closed in 1950.
Name | County | City | Coordinates | Opened - closed | Beds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Batavia Veterans Administration Hospital[Note 39] | Genesee | Batavia | 43°00′42″N 78°11′59″W | 1934–1950 | [148] |
Bath VA Medical Center[Note 39] | Steuben | Bath | 42°20′37″N 77°20′46″W | 1879 | 440[149][150][151] |
Canandaigua VA Medical Center[Note 39] | Ontario | Canandaigua | 42°54′05″N 77°16′11″W | 1933 | 218[150][151] |
Central Park Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan, Central Park | 1862-1865 | ||
James J. Peters VA Medical Center[Note 40] | Bronx | New York City: The Bronx | 40°52′02″N 73°54′22″W | 1922 | 311[151] |
Northport VA Medical Center | Suffolk | East Northport | 40°53′40″N 73°18′29″W | 1928 | 500[152] |
Rockefeller War Demonstration Hospital | New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan, Upper East Side | 1917-1919 | ||
Samuel S Stratton Albany VA Medical Center | Albany | Albany | 42°39′07″N 73°46′21″W | 1951 | 67[153][151] |
Syracuse VA Medical Center | Onondaga | Syracuse | 43°02′21″N 76°08′20″W | 1953 | 106[154][151] |
U.S. Army General Hospital No. 1[Note 41] | Bronx | New York City: The Bronx: Norwood | 1917-1919[155] | Over 1,000[156] | |
VA Hudson Valley Healthcare System, Castle Point Campus |
Dutchess | Castle Point | 41°32′34″N 73°57′46″W | 1924 | 250[157][151] |
VA Hudson Valley Healthcare System,[158] Montrose, Franklin Delano Roosevelt Campus |
Westchester | Montrose | 41°14′18″N 73°55′54″W | 1950 | [157][151] |
VA New York Harbor Healthcare System, Brooklyn Campus |
Kings | New York City: Brooklyn | 40°36′31″N 74°01′27″W | 1950 | 153[159][160][151] |
VA NY Harbor Healthcare System Manhattan Campus |
New York (county) | New York City: Manhattan | 40°44′14″N 73°58′39″W | 1954 | 166[159][151] |
Western New York VA Health Care System | Erie | Buffalo | 42°57′05″N 78°48′45″W | 1950 | 199[161][151] |
As of 2022, there were 97 operating hospitals in New York that have psychiatric beds.[162] The New York hospitals listed in the table below are or were used solely for psychiatric patients. Defunct hospitals' names are in italics. County, city, coordinates, date the hospital opened, number of beds in most recent data, and references are given for each hospital.
When Pilgrim State Hospital (Pilgrim Psychiatric Center) opened in 1931, it was the largest psychiatric hospital in the United States. At its peak, it had 14,000 patients.
In 2018, there were a total of 11,109 adult in-patient psychiatric beds in New York state and New York City hospitals, including 7,228 beds in general hospitals.[163]
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