Advocate Masonic hospital planning sweeping, $645 million construction, modernization project

France Nouvelles Nouvelles

Advocate Masonic hospital planning sweeping, $645 million construction, modernization project
France Dernières Nouvelles,France Actualités
  • 📰 chicagotribune
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 74 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 33%
  • Publisher: 91%

Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center is planning a sweeping, $645 million project to modernize the hospital.

, which is a facility for outpatient care, which is care that does not require an overnight hospital stay, according to an application the hospital filed with the State Health Facilities and Services Review Board.

Overall, the project would mean 332,780 square feet of new construction, with completion in 2030. Once it’s finished, the hospital would have 326 licensed, staffed beds, said hospital president Susan Nordstrom Lopez. Now, the hospital has 397 licensed beds, but only about 304 are staffed, meaning only 304 are able to be used, she said.The state review board must approve the project before it can proceed. The board is scheduled to consider the project at its June 7 meeting.

The new bed tower would house inpatient and intensive care unit beds as well as labor and delivery and neonatal intensive care unit beds. Most of the hospital’s inpatient beds would be moved to the new bed tower.The expansion of the Center for Advanced Care would include a new breast center with mammography and ultrasound services that are now in a leased medical office building. It would also expand outpatient cancer services, as well as relocate and modernize operating rooms.

A number of doctors and local health care leaders have already expressed their support for the project, writing letters to the state review board endorsing it. “Five decades of advancements in medicine bring with it the need for additional space and modernization in order to accommodate the significant increase in technology,” Fantus wrote. He added that, “The recent pandemic illustrates how semiprivate patient rooms no longer have a place in the delivery of modern health care.”

Nous avons résumé cette actualité afin que vous puissiez la lire rapidement. Si l'actualité vous intéresse, vous pouvez lire le texte intégral ici. Lire la suite:

chicagotribune /  🏆 8. in US

France Dernières Nouvelles, France Actualités

Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.

Podcast: Airport to downtown tunnel idea makes no sense as a transportation projectPodcast: Airport to downtown tunnel idea makes no sense as a transportation projectThe project from Elon Musk’s Boring Company is expected to cost between $247 million...
Lire la suite »

Memorial Hermann starts $167M expansion at Katy hospitalMemorial Hermann starts $167M expansion at Katy hospitalThe planned additions will bring the hospital’s total bed count to close to 300 as the...
Lire la suite »

IU Health reveals plans, design for new, expanded Indianapolis hospitalIU Health reveals plans, design for new, expanded Indianapolis hospitalIndiana University Health has released design plans for its new hospital that will consolidate the current Methodist and University Hospitals downtown.
Lire la suite »

Affordable housing development in San Jose edges closer to constructionAffordable housing development in San Jose edges closer to constructionA San Jose housing project with scores of affordable homes is edging closer to a construction launch with a city assessment that the complex won’t have a major environmental impact.
Lire la suite »

'cheaper late-night and weekend fares' coming to Metro as Board approves $4.5B budget'cheaper late-night and weekend fares' coming to Metro as Board approves $4.5B budgetFrom WMATA: 'Metro's Board of Directors today voted to approve a $4.5B package of service and construction projects that delivers affordability, service and
Lire la suite »

Employers deny claims of collusion, price-fixing as Seattle-area concrete strike nears fifth monthEmployers deny claims of collusion, price-fixing as Seattle-area concrete strike nears fifth monthAn ongoing concrete strike has prompted local leaders to question whether Seattle-area suppliers are engaging in collusion to inflate their supply contracts. Full story:
Lire la suite »



Render Time: 2025-03-31 14:01:08