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Hospital in New Jersey, U.S. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St. Mary's General Hospital is an acute care hospital in Passaic, New Jersey that offers a range of health care services and community outreach programs. The hospital is located on a campus in Passaic that is bordered on the south by Oak Street, the north by Crescent Place, the west by Lafayette Avenue, and the east by Boulevard.
St. Mary's Hospital | |
---|---|
Prime Healthcare Services | |
Geography | |
Location | 350 Boulevard, Passaic, New Jersey, U.S. |
Organisation | |
Care system | Medicare (US), Medicaid, Charity care |
Type | Acute care |
Services | |
Standards | The Joint Commission |
Beds | 287 |
History | |
Opened | 1895 |
Links | |
Website | http://www.smh-nj.org/ |
Lists | Hospitals in U.S. |
St. Mary's address, officially, is 350 Boulevard. For most of its existence, however, the hospital operated at a facility located at 211 Pennington Avenue in the Passaic Park section of the city. It is affiliated with the Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth, a Roman Catholic convent in Morris Township, New Jersey.
As of 2014, St. Mary's is owned by Prime Healthcare Services. It added the "General" to its name following the acquisition.[1]
St. Mary's Hospital currently serves approximately 13,000 inpatients annually, in addition to caring for 10,500 patients requiring same-day procedures. A new ER Fast Track Center was added in 2009 to better accommodate the nearly 35,000 visits to St. Mary's busy ER each year.[2]
Construction of St. Mary's original location began on May 23, 1897.[3][4] (Other accounts, likely mistaken, indicate that it was almost completed in March of that year.[5]) Until then, the city had only a medical dispensary, but not a full service hospital facility.[3] There was some controversy between competing groups over the building of a new hospital, but both groups appear to have succeeded in opening separate institutions at about the same time.[6][7]
Two other hospitals later opened, giving the city three hospitals for many years. They all eventually merged into a single remaining entity, today's St. Mary's. Though each provided full-service hospital facilities, each predecessor Passaic hospital had its own specialty.
In 2000, Atlantic Health Systems acquired the General Hospital Center at Passaic. Four years later, the owners of Beth Israel Hospital bought General from Atlantic and closed the Parker Avenue facility, merging the operations of both hospitals into the Boulevard facility. The merged hospital took on the name PBI Regional Medical Center. Within two years, PBI Regional filed for bankruptcy.
St. Mary's, which was having problems maintaining its 112-year-old facility, was called on to save the failing hospital and received a grant from the state to purchase the hospital and move their operations to the Boulevard site, thus leaving Passaic with one surviving hospital.
Although on March 9, 2009, St. Mary's Hospital filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, a federal bankruptcy judge approved of its reorganization plan less than a year from filing, as reported in the week of March 2, 2010. "St. Mary's emerges from Chapter 11 stronger and better than before," said Michael J. Sniffen, St. Mary's president/CEO, in a media release. "After less than one year, we emerge revitalized, improved, and re-committed to serving the community and the physicians that have so loyally supported us through this difficult process."[11]
The facility on Pennington Avenue was maintained for psychiatric admissions and care for some time after the rest of the hospital moved. However, St. Mary's closed its psychiatric unit on May 12, 2009, transferring admissions to Clara Maass Medical Center in Belleville, New Jersey.[12] The Psychiatric Emergency Screening Unit moved to St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center in Paterson; this unit is the primary facility used for psychiatric emergency care in Passaic County, which left the original facility empty. From 2009 to 2010 the building was used by NBC to film episodes of the first season of the medical drama Mercy.[13]
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