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.
Hospitals
editThe 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]
Defunct hospitals
editThe following general hospitals in New York are defunct. Defunct VA and psychiatric hospitals are listed in separate sections of this article.[119]
Military hospitals
editAs of 2022, there were 11 United States Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals in New York, and one VA hospital that closed in 1950.
Military hospitals
editPsychiatric hospitals
editAs 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]
Notes on hospitals
edit- ^ The Tri-Town Campus of A.O. Fox Memorial Hospital only has an emergency department.
- ^ Albany Memorial Hospital merged with Samaritan Hospital.
- ^ Bon Secures Hospital was previously known as Mercy Community Hospital, Port Jervis.
- ^ BronxCare Health System was formerly Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center.
- ^ Cayuga Medical Center was originally known as Tompkins Community Hospital, which was established before 1970.
- ^ The Claxton-Hepburn Medical Center opened in 1885 as the Ogdensburg City Hospital and Orphan Asylum.
- ^ Columbia Memorial Health is affiliated with the Albany Medical Center, which is part of Albany Med Health System.
- ^ The Eastern Niagara Hospital, Lockport was formerly the Lockport Memorial Hospital.
- ^ E.J. Noble Hospital in Gouverneur was previously known as Gouverneur Hospital.
- ^ E.J. Noble Hospital in Alexandria Bay is also known as River Hospital.
- ^ Franklin Hospital Medical Center merged with Long Island Jewish Medical Center.[2]
- ^ Interfaith Medical Center was formed in 1982 with the merger of Brooklyn Jewish Hospital and Medical Center and St. John's Epsicopal Hospital.
- ^ Long Island Community Hospital was formerly known as Brookhaven Memorial Hospital.
- ^ Franklin Hospital Medical Center merged with Long Island Jewish Medical Center.[2]
- ^ Mather Hospital is also known as the John T. Mather Memorial Hospital.
- ^ MidHudson Regional Hospital was until 2014 the St. Francis Hospital
- ^ The Misericordia Hospital, previously Monetefiore Medical Center North Division, was formerly the Our Lady of Mercy Medical Center, until 2008.
- ^ Montefiore New Rochelle Hospital was formerly Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester.
- ^ Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital was formerly Babies' Hospital in the City of New York until 2003.
- ^ Mount Sinai Beth Israel is also referred to as Beth Israel Medical Center.
- ^ Mount Sinai South Nassau was formerly called South Nassau Communities Hospital.
- ^ The NYU School of Medicine, which is part of NYU Langone Health, was founded in 1841. It was renamed the Grossman School of Medicine in 2019.
- ^ The total number of beds in NY Langone Health hospitals is 1,350.
- ^ NY Langone Orthopedic Hospital was formerly the Hospital for Joint Diseases.[81]
- ^ Peconic Bay Medical Center was formerly Central Suffolk Hospital.
- ^ Plainview Hospital is also known as Northwell University Hospital, Plainview.
- ^ St. Mary's Hospital in Troy is also known as Seton Health.
- ^ In 1994, St. John's Riverside Hospital, affiliated with Yonkers General Hospital, officially merged in 2001 and is now known as the ParkCare Pavilion of St. John's Riverside Hospital.[36]
- ^ Formerly known as St. Luke's Hospital
- ^ Stony Brook Southampton Hospital was formerly known as Southampton Hospital.
- ^ Syosset Hospital was also known as Northwell Syosset.
- ^ Amsterdam Memorial Hospital merged with St. Mary's Healthcare in Amsterdam.[2]
- ^ The Amsterdam Memorial Hospital merged with St. Mary's Hospital in 2009.
- ^ Bayley Seton Hospital merged with Sisters of Charity Medical Center.
- ^ Bayley Setton Hospital became part of Richmond University Medical Center in 1980.
- ^ The Newfane Division of Eastern niagara Hospital was formerly the Inter-Community Memorial Hospital
- ^ Millard Fillmore Hospital became part of the Medical Campus attached to Buffalo General Hospital.
- ^ The Tri-County Memorial Hospital was rendered unusable by an August 2009 flood. It was demolished in 2012.
- ^ a b c This hospital is on the National Register of Historic Places in New York state.
- ^ The James J. Peters VA Medical Center was previously known as Bronx Veterans Hospital and Bronx Veterans Administration Medical Center.
- ^ U.S. Army General Hospital No. 1 was previously known as Columbia War Hospital.
- ^ Brooklyn Children's Psychiatric Center is also referred to as the New York City Childrens Center - Behavioral Health.
- ^ The New York Department of Health reported that the Brunswick Hospital was closed in 2022.
- ^ The Middletown State Hospital was originally known as the Middletown State Homeopathic Hospital.[170]
- ^ Willowbrook State School was previously called Halloran General Hospital and Veterans Hospital.
Gallery of hospitals
edit-
Albany Medical Center (2009)
-
Bellevue Hospital, Manhattan, New York City (2021)
-
Bloomingdale Insane Asylum (1834)
-
Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo State Hospital, Sisters of Charity Hospital (1901)
-
Buffalo VA Medical Center (2019)
-
Columbia University Irving Medical Center (2009)
-
Creemore Psychiatric Center (2010)
-
Elmhurst Hospital Center (2020)
-
Erie County Medical Center (2013)
-
Glens Falls Hospital, northwest tower (2009)
-
John R. Oishei Children's Hospital (2019)
-
Long Island Jewish Hospital, Zuckerberg Pavilion (2015)
-
New York Eye and Ear Infirmary (2006)
-
North Central Bronx Hospital (2008)
-
NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital (2011)
-
NYU Langone Medical Center, showing Kimmel Pavilion and Hassenfeld Children's Hospital (2018)
-
Metropolitan Hospital Center (2019)
-
New York State Inebriate Asylum (1882)
-
Orbis Flying Eye Hospital flying out of Hong Kong (1997)
-
Queens Hospital Center (2017)
-
Rochester General Hospital, Rochester (2016)
-
Rochester City Hospital in Rochester, predecessor of the Rochester General Hospital (1864)
-
Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center (2019)
-
St. Barnabas Hospital, The Bronx (2012)
-
Syracuse VA Medical Center (2014)
-
Upstate University Hospital in Syracuse (2014)
-
Upstate Children's Hospital (2016)
-
Weill Cornell Medical Center (1911)
Health systems in New York State
edit- Albany Med, based in Albany
- Bassett Healthcare Network
- Catholic Health, Buffalo (Trinity Health)
- Catholic Health, formerly Catholic Health Services of Long Island
- Cayuga Health System, based in the Finger Lakes Region
- Finger Lakes Health, based in Geneva
- MediSys Health Network, based in Queens
- Mohawk Valley Health System
- Montefiore Health System, based in the Bronx: Hospitals in the Bronx, Westchester and Rockland counties
- Mount Sinai Health System, based in Manhattan: Hospitals in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens
- NewYork-Presbyterian Healthcare System (NYPHS), based in Manhattan: Hospitals in Manhattan, Queens, Bronx, Brooklyn, Westchester County
- Northwell Health, based in Nassau County, hospitals in Manhattan, Nassau, Queens, Staten Island, and Suffolk counties
- Nuvance Health (includes former Health Quest System), based in Mid-Hudson Valley
- NYC Health + Hospitals, operates the NYC public hospitals and clinics as a public benefit corporation
- Oswego Health System, based in Oswego
- Rochester Regional Health System, based in Rochester
- St. Joseph's Health (Syracuse, New York) (Trinity Health), based in Syracuse
- St. Lawrence Health System
- St. Peter's Health Partners (SPHP) (Trinity Health), based in Troy
- Stony Brook Medicine, based in Stony Brook
- United Health Services, based in Binghamton
- UR Medicine Health System, Rochester, New York,[204] based in Rochester
- Westchester Medical Center Health Network (WMCHealth), also known officially as the Westchester County Healthcare Corporation. WMCHealth hospitals are in the lower and mid-Hudson Valley. This network includes three former Bon Secours Charity Health System hospitals.
See also
editNotes
editReferences
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- ^ a b c d "New York State Health Care Reform Act, General Hospitals". NY State Health. January 1, 2022. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm "Hospital Bed Capacity in New York". NY Department of Health. Retrieved January 23, 2022.
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including .. "near misses"
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60 in Harris
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at Glens Falls Hospital
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and finance chairman of Ira Davenport Memorial Hospital, Bath, N.Y.
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$991,338.23 in restitutions.
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- ^ "Lisa Perry Wed To a Psychiatrist". The New York Times. October 17, 1983.
a social worker at the Rye Psychiatric Hospital Center.
- ^ "Klemperer Gone From Sanitarium". The New York Times. March 2, 1941.
- ^ "Sagamore Children's Psychiatric Center". American Hospital Directory. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
- ^ "South Beach Psychiatric Center". American Hospital Directory. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
- ^ Lucy Clark. "A Century of Progress at Utica State Hospital, 1843-1943" (brochure/PDF). Utica State Hospital Alumnae Association.
- ^ a b Walsh, James J. (1919). History of Medicine in New York - Three Centuries of Medical Progress. New York, N.Y.: National Americana Society. p. 700. Retrieved October 4, 2015.
- ^ "Western NY Children's Psychiatric Center". American Hospital Directory. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
- ^ "UR Medicine Center". UR Medicine Center.
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