Mission Hospital (Mission Viejo, California)

There are other hospitals also named Mission Hospital
California Mission Hospital
St. Joseph Health System
Geography
Location Mission Viejo, California, California, United States
Organization
Care system Non-profit
Hospital type Specialist
Services
Emergency department Yes
Beds 552
Speciality Trauma Heart Maternity Pediatric Spine Brain
History
Founded 1971
Links
Website http://www.mission4health.com/
Lists Hospitals in California

Mission Hospital is located in Mission Viejo, California.

It is a 552-bed acute care, full-service facility serving all of south Orange County and houses the region’s designated trauma center, one of only three in the county, with UCI Medical Center in Orange being the only Level I Trauma Center in the County. Currently Mission Hospital is the Largest Hospital in Orange County.

Mission Hospital offers healthcare services including:

Mission Hospital also offers care in orthopedics, rehabilitation, cancer, stroke, spine, vascular and wellness services.

Mission Hospital is a member of the St. Joseph Health System, sponsored by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange.

History

The Mission Hospital opened on August 11, 1971 with 124 patient beds, 330 employees and a medical staff of 41 physicians providing general acute care, including obstetrics, pediatrics, surgery, intensive care and emergency services.

Mission Hospital continues to be #1 Stroke Care Center in Orange County.

Also Mission Regional Hospital is one of only 3 Hospitals in Orange County rated as a Regional Trauma Center. LEVEL 2 for Adults, and rated as a Level 2 Trauma Pediatric center as well. Only University of California Irvine Hospital in Orange is Trauma Rated Higher as a Level One.

Mission Hospital has embarked on an ambitious plan to significantly expand the hospital campus during the next two decades to accommodate the community's growing health care needs. This includes an expanded Emergency Department and Mission Regional Trauma Center, huge new 7 floor parking structure, as well as the completed Mission Conference Center. Mission Hospital in Mission Viejo also completed in 2009 the purchase of Laguna Beach Community Hospital, which is now Mission Hospital Laguna Beach.

The new tower has external "X" beams incorporated into the exterior architecture for earthquake compliance, and this makes it possible for the patient rooms to have nearly wall-size windows, which is proven to aid in healing, by promoting the body's natural "circadian rhythm" (day–night cycle).

In addition the new tower (called Tower 2) features some of the finest modern diagnoses and medical equipment available, including state of the art tools such as a powerful linear accelerator, which pinpoints high-energy X-rays directly to a patient's tumor, while sparing surrounding healthy tissue, to more effectively isolate and destroy cancer cells, and a Single Photon Emission Computer Tomography equipment, which uses nuclear medicine to produce 3-D images that allow physicians to see how organs are functioning.

The hospital and many other hospitals are run by the non-profit Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange, California, through their Ministry. The Sisters Ministry was founded in 1650 in France, and in 1840 came to America. Their first Hospital Ministry was founded in 1912, and in 1920 their first hospital was opened in Eureka, California, based upon the caring for the needy and now providing health care in California, Texas and New Mexico. The Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange Healing Ministry built this new tower to address all aspects of patient care. All of this, as Mission Hospital President and CEO Kenneth McFarland says, covers everything "from meeting critical medical needs, to healing for the mind and spirit, to comforts for family and loved ones."

Fact Sheet

Quick Facts
Bed Size: 582
Annual Admissions: 19,639
Outpatient Visits: 102,084
Avg. Daily Census: 230
Number of Employees 2700

Number of Physicians: 698
Annual # of Traumas: 1340
Annual # of ER Visits: 70,696
Annual # of Births: 5,043

Joint Commission of Hospitals says as of 2010, According to the most recent survey data, 58361 patients visit the hospital's emergency room; a total of 18220 patients are admitted. Its physicians perform 4498 inpatient and 2849 outpatient surgeries.

Mission Hospital Centers of Excellence
Mission Regional Trauma Center
Mission Heart Center
Mission Maternity Center
Mission Vascular Center
Mission Spine Center
Mission Cancer Center
Mission Brain Injury Center

Mission Hospital Services
Center for Rehab/Sports/Wellness
Rehabilitation Programs
Orthopedic Services
Wellness Programs
Senior Services
Spiritual Care Services
Surgical Services
Outpatient Testing Services

Random uncited claims
• Mission Hospital is a not-for-profit healthcare ministry and one of three trauma centers in Orange County.

• 2008 recipient of the 12th annual Ernest Amory Codman Award by Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO). The award recognizes excellence in the use of outcomes measurement by health care organizations to achieve improvements in the quality and safety of health care.

• Winner of the 2000 Ernest A. Codman award for excellence in quality healthcare presented by Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO).

• Our Patient Care Tower houses CHOC at Mission, the only pediatric hospital in the area and a cooperative effort with Children's Hospital of Orange County.

• In 1994, the hospital became one of 15 Catholic, not-for-profit hospitals operated by the St. Joseph Health System and sponsored by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange.

• Accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) and CARF, the Rehabilitation Accreditation Commission.

•2007, 2008 & 2009 Gallup Great Workplace Award Winner

• As a non-profit organization, Mission Hospital commits ten percent of its net income to programs benefiting the underserved and 1.5 percent of its operating expenses to programs that benefit the community.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.