Adventist Health

Adventist Health is a faith-based, nonprofit integrated health system serving more than 80 communities on the West Coast and in Hawaii. Founded on Seventh-day Adventist heritage and values, Adventist Health provides care in hospitals, clinics, home care agencies, hospice agencies and joint-venture retirement centers in both rural and urban communities.

Adventist Health
TypeOperates healthcare services in California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington
Location
OriginsSeventh-day Adventist Church
Employees
28,600
Websitehttp://www.adventisthealth.org/

Its headquarters are in Roseville, California. As of 2020 Adventist Health operates 22 hospitals in California, Hawaii, and Oregon.[1]

History

In the 1960s, the General Conference transferred ownership of the hospitals in the United States to the local conferences. In 1972, the General Conference centralized the management of its healthcare facilities, creating Adventist Health Systems.[2] The conferences then transferred the hospitals to the system, creating the entities Northwest Medical Foundation, and Adventist Health Services at the union level.[2]

In 1980 they merged creating Adventist Health System/West, which changed its name to Adventist Health in 1995.[2] The headquarters for Adventist Health used to be in Los Angeles.[2] But Adventist Health worried about the smaller hospitals being neglected, so the headquarters were moved to Roseville, California in 1982. In 2019 a new Roseville shared service center replaced the corporate office opened in 1985. Roseville.[2]

Hospitals

As of 2020, Adventist Health oversees the operations of dozens of hospitals:

List of hospitals operated by Adventist Health
HospitalNumber of bedsPlaceFounding yearOriginal namesAcquisition year
Adventist Health Bakersfield255Bakersfield and Kern County1910 San Joaquin Community Hospital 2017
Adventist Health Castle160Windward, Oahu
Adventist Health Clear Lake Critical Access HospitalClearlake, California and Lake County[3]
Adventist Health Delano
Adventist Health Feather River acute care hospital101Paradise, California1950 Feather River Hospital 1973
Adventist Health Glendale515Glendale, California1905 Glendale Sanitarium, Glendale Adventist Medical Center
Adventist Health Hanford199[4]Hanford, California
Adventist Health Howard Memorial[5] Critical Access HospitalMendocino, California
Adventist Health Lodi Memorial190Lodi, California
Adventist Health Mendocino CoastFort Bragg, California
Adventist Health Portland302Portland-Vancouver metropolitan area1893 Portland Adventist Medical Center 1973
Adventist Health Reedley49Reedley, California
Adventist Health and Rideout
Adventist Health Selma[6]57southern Fresno County satellite campus of Hanford Community Medical Center.
Adventist Health Simi Valley201Ventura County, including Simi Valley, Moorpark, Thousand Oaks, and the west San Fernando Valley.[7]
Adventist Health Sonora152Tuolumne and Mariposa County, California
Adventist Health St. Helena151the longest continually operating Adventist hospital, serving Napa, Lake, Sonoma and Solano counties.
Adventist Health Tehachapi Valley
Adventist Health Tillamook Critical Access HospitalTillamook, Oregon
Adventist Health Tulare
Adventist Health Ukiah Valley78Mendocino and Lake counties
Adventist Health Vallejo psychiatric inpatient hospital61Vallejo, California
Adventist Health White Memorial teaching hospital354Los Angeles1913 White Memorial Medical Center

See also

Other North American based Seventh-day Adventist healthcare operations:

References

  1. "Adventist Health, About Us". Adventist Health. Archived 2009-06-09 at the Wayback Machine – Adventisthealth.org, accessed 2013-01-26
  2. "Adventist Health". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2019-06-21.
  3. "Adventist Health Clear Lake Celebrates 50th Year". Adventist Health.
  4. "Overview". Health.usnews.com. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  5. "Will its new hospital open". North Bay Business Journal.
  6. "History of Central Valley". Adventist Health.
  7. Marsh, Carissa (September 23, 2011). "Residents welcome proposed ER expansion". Simi Valley Acorn. Simi Valley, California. Archived from the original on March 26, 2012. Retrieved September 26, 2011.
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