Greater San Fernando Valley hospitals: ranked by average daily census of patients in 2005.EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The majority of hospitals on the Business Journal's list this year serviced more patients on a daily basis than they did in 2004, with the exception of Glendale Glendale. 1 City (1990 pop. 148,134), Maricopa co., S central Ariz., adjacent to Phoenix; inc. 1910. It is located in a rich agricultural region irrigated by the Salt River project. Glendale has become one of the fastest-growing U.S. Memorial Hospital, West Hills Hospital & Medical Center and Simi Valley Hospital Simi Valley Hospital (SVH) is a Seventh-day Adventist hospital located located in Simi Valley, California. SVH is a member of Adventist Health. New Construction Simi Valley Hospital is in the process of building a new wing to the hospital. . Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center is a hospital in Burbank, California, USA. The hospital has 455 beds, and is part of Providence Health & Services. It's adress is: 501 S. Buena Vista St., Burbank, CA 91505. has the highest average dally census census, periodic official count of the number of persons and their condition and of the resources of a country. In ancient times, among the Jews and Romans, such enumeration was mainly for taxation and conscription purposes. for 2005 with 302 patients, Encino-Tarzana Regional Medical Center with 301 patients and Glendale Adventist Medical Center Glendale Adventist Medical Center is located in the Los Angeles suburb of Glendale, California. It was founded in 1905. Glendale Adventist Medical Center is a sister institution of Loma Linda University Medical Center and is a part of the Seventh-day Adventist hospital system. with 300.9 patients. Employing the most people on the list is Kaiser Permanente Kaiser Permanente is an integrated managed care organization, based in Oakland, California, founded in 1945 by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and physician Sidney R. Garfield. Panorama City with 2,793 workers total, including 260 doctors and 650 registered nurses. The second largest employer on the list is Providence Providence, city (1990 pop. 160,728), state capital and seat of Providence co., NE R.I., a port at the head of Providence Bay; founded by Roger Williams 1636, inc. as a city 1832. Saint Joseph Saint Joseph, cities, United States Saint Joseph (sānt jō`zəf). 1 City (1990 pop. 9,214), seat of Berrien co., SW Mich., a port on Lake Michigan at the mouth of the St. Joseph River across from Benton Harbor; inc. with 2,250 employees, and the third is Glendale Adventist Adventist Member of any of a group of Protestant churches that arose in the U.S. in the 19th century and believe that the Second Coming of Christ is close at hand. Adventism was founded during a period marked by millennialism by William Miller (1782–1849), a former U. with 2,190 employees. Providence Holy Cross Medical Center Providence Holy Cross Medical Center is a hospital in Mission Hills, California, USA. The hospital has 254 beds, and is part of Providence Health & Services. History has the highest occupancy rate Noun 1. occupancy rate - the percentage of all rental units (as in hotels) are occupied or rented at a given time pct, per centum, percent, percentage - a proportion in relation to a whole (which is usually the amount per hundred) at 93 percent, which has decreased marginally mar·gin·al adj. 1. Of, relating to, located at, or constituting a margin, a border, or an edge: the marginal strip of beach; a marginal issue that had no bearing on the election results. 2. since 2004, with only 255 licensed beds and an average daily census daily census See Census. of 224 patients. --Vanessa Herman Herman only goal in life becomes winning at cards. [Russ. Opera: Tchaikovsky, Queen of Spades, Westerman, 401] See : Obsessiveness PACESETTER PROVIDENCE SAINT JOSEPH MEDICAL CENTER CARING for the most patients daily is Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center, in Burbank Burbank, city (1990 pop. 93,643), Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1911. Tourism and the entertainment industry are central to its economy; several motion-picture studios and television headquarters are here. Burbank's aerospace industry collapsed with the end of the Cold War. , with an average number of 302, up from 289 patients in 2004. Providence Saint Joseph has an, occupancy rate of 90 percent versus 87 percent in the prior year. Employing 2,250 people, Providence Saint Joseph has 654 physicians and 589 registered nurses. The hospital offers services through its Cancer Center, Heart and Vascular vascular /vas·cu·lar/ (vas´ku-ler) 1. pertaining to vessels, particularly blood vessels. 2. indicative of a copious blood supply. vas·cu·lar adj. Center, Women's services, Emergency, Rehabilitation rehabilitation: see physical therapy. Services, Home Health and Home Hospice hospice, program of humane and supportive care for the terminally ill and their families; the term also applies to a professional facility that provides care to dying patients who can no longer be cared for at home. Programs. Providence Saint Joseph recently opened a Northeast “Northeastern” redirects here. For the Boston college, see Northeastern University, Boston. Northeast or north east is the ordinal direction halfway between north and east. It is the opposite of southwest. See boxing the compass. building in January January: see month. 2005, a seven story, 200,000-square-foot building. The Northeast building will offer enhanced amenities for patient care including, a new laboratory, imaging department, a surgery wing, intensive care unit, obstetrics obstetrics (ŏbstĕ`trĭks), branch of medicine concerned with the treatment of women during pregnancy, labor, childbirth (see birth), and the time after childbirth. and neonatal intensive care unit Noun 1. neonatal intensive care unit - an intensive care unit designed with special equipment to care for premature or seriously ill newborn NICU ICU, intensive care unit - a hospital unit staffed and equipped to provide intensive care , a GI lab, cardiac catheterization Cardiac Catheterization Definition Cardiac catheterization (also called heart catheterization) is a diagnostic procedure which does a comprehensive examination of how the heart and its blood vessels function. lab and 128 all-private patient rooms. --Vanessa Herman
Rank Hospital Avg. Daily Census
* name * 2005
* address * 2004
* licensed beds
1 Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center 302
501 S. Buena Vista St. 289
Burbank 91505 427
2 Encino-Tarzana Regional Medical Center 301
18321 Clark St. 281
Tarzana 91356 396
3 Glendale Adventist Medical Center 300.9
1509 Wilson Terrace 293.1
Glendale 91206 448
4 Northridge Hospital Medical Center 251
18300 Roscoe Blvd. 250
Northridge 91328 425
5 Providence Holy Cross Medical Center 224
15031 Rinaldi St. 222
Mission Hills 91364 255
11 Glendale Memorial Hospital 221
1420 S. Central Ave. 227
Glendale 91204 334
12 Valley Presbyterian Hospital 167.5
15107 Vanowen St. 153.4
Van Nuys 91405 380
13 Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital 155
23845 McBean Pkwy. 149
Valencia 91355 217
14 West Hills Hospital & Medical Center 150.1
7300 Medical Center Drive 155.1
West Hills 91307 236
15 Kaiser Permanents Woodland Hills 143
5601 De Soto Ave. 143
Woodland Hills 91367 212
16 Kaiser Permanents Panorama City 119
13652 Cantara St. 119
Panorama City 91402 262
17 Mission Community Hospital 104
14850 Roscoe Blvd. 100
Panorama City 91402 145
18 Lancaster Community Hospital 99.5
43830 N. 10th St. West 99.5
Lancaster 93534 117
19 Simi Valley Hospital 95
2975 N. Sycamore Dr. 102
Simi Valley 93065 153
20 Sherman Oaks Hospital 80
4929 Van Nuys Blvd. 80
Sherman Oaks 91403 153
Rank Occupancy Profile Facilities
Rate * owner * employees
(percentage) * year established total
* 2005 * facilities valley / total * doctors
* 2004 * registered
nurses
1 90 Providence Health System 2,250
87 1943 654
3/40 589
2 80 (1) Tenet Healthcare 1,773
75 (1) 1993 1000
2/69 300
3 67.16 Adventist Health 2,190
64.84 1905 705
2/20 600
4 59 Catholic Healthcare West 2,001
59 1955 844
1/1 581
5 93 Providence Health System 1,487
94 1961 580
3/40 426
11 65.81 Catholic Healthcare West 1,123
67.96 1926 516
2/2 477
12 44 Valley Presbyterian Hospital 1,073
52.7 1958 500
1/1 384
13 71 Private/Non-Profit 1,225
69 1975 356
1/1 355
14 50.6 Health Care of America 754
47.93 1961 430
6/6 266
15 67 Kaiser Foundation Hospitals 2,148 (2)
67 1986 355
11/461 657
16 45 Kaiser Foundation Hospitals 2,793 (2)
45 1962 260
11/461 650
17 69 Non-Profit Community Hospital 535
72 1923 242
2/2 215
18 79.4 Universal Health Services 532
79.4 1978 280
1/93 180
19 52 Adventist Health 824
55 1965 205
2/20 228
20 80 Sherman Oaks Hospital 600
78 1958 375
1/1 280
Rank Hospital Services Marketing Contact
(partial list)
1 cancer, heart & vascular, women's Brian Greene
services, orthopedics, occupational
health, emergency, surgery
2 acute care hospital Mitch Zevin
3 cardiology, imaging, women's & Kim Milstien
cancer services, emergency, ortho-
pedics, occupational medicine
4 general acute care, medical/surgical, Teddi Grant
obstetrics, behavioal health, car-
diopulmonary, emergency & trauma
5 heart and vascular, trauma, cancer, Brian Greene
women's services, orthopedic, surgery,
digestive disorders, emergency
11 heart & vascular, trauma, cancer, Bob Quarfoot
women's services, orthopedics,
surgery, digestive disorders
12 general acute care, ICU, pediatrics, Sharon Greengold
rehab, basic education, cardio-
vascular surgery, nuclear
13 emergency and trauma, surgery, Andie Bogdan
maternity, intensive care, oncology,
Sheila R. Veloz Breast Imaging Center
14 acute care, surgery, cardiology, Jill Dolan
oncology, critical care, bariatric
surgery, emergency & outpatient care
15 breast health center, craniofacial NA
clinic, children's center for attention-
al problems, high risk obstetrics
16 surgery, cardiology, health educa- NA
tion, pain management & teenage
health care center, nuclear medicine
17 medical/surgical/ICU services, behav- Jim Sullivan
ioral health services, medical detox unit,
24-hour mobile crisis response team
18 heart center, outpatient physical Richard Cook
therapy, impatient acute rehab unit,
in patient and out patient surgery
19 acute care hospital, Nancy Reagan Jeremy Brewer
Breast Center, surgical, diagnostic, imag-
ing, ICU, rehab, home health services
20 Grossman Burn Center, emergency Kate O' Rourke
care, senior services, wound care,
psychiatric care, outpatient services
Rank Top Executive
* name
* title
* phone
1 Arnold Schaffer
ceo
(818) 843-5111
2 Dale Surowitz
ceo
(818) 881-0800
3 Scott Reiner
president and ceo
(818) 409-8000
4 Michael L. Wall
president
(818) 885-8500
5 Arnold Schaffer
ceo
(818) 365-8051
11 Cathy Pelley
president
(818) 502-1900
12 Dan Ansel
ceo
(818) 782-6600
13 Roger Seaver
president/ceo
(661) 253-8000
14 Beverly Gilmore
ceo and president
(818) 676-4000
15 Cathy Cases
director
(818) 719-2000
16 Jane Finley
senior vice president
(818) 375-2000
17 Heidi Lennartz
interim ceo
(818) 787-2222
18 Robert Trautman
ceo
(661) 948-4781
19 Gary G. Irish
ceo and president
(805) 955-6000
20 David Levinsohn
ceo
(818) 981-7111
NA Not Available
(1) Occupancy rate is for Tarzana campus. The Encino campus had an
occupancy rate of 70% for 2005 and 64% for 2004.
(2) Kaiser's employee numbers include the medical facilities
surrounding the hospitals. Information was provided by the
representatives of the hospitals themselves.
To the best of our knowledge, this information is accurate as of press
time. While every effort is made to ensure the accuracy and the
thoroughness of the list, omissions and typographical errors sometimes
occur. Please send corrections or additions on company letterhead to
the Research Department, San Fernando Valley Business Journal, 21600
Oxnard St., Suite 250, Woodland Hills, CA 91367. [c] 2005 San Fernando
Valley Business Journal. This list may not be reprinted in whole or in
part without prior permission from the editor. Reprints are available
from Wright's Reprints, (877) 652-5295 ext. 104 or e-mail
jmartin@wrightsreprints.com.
Researched By Vanessa Herman
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