Children's Mercy Hospital

This article is about Children's Mercy Hospital. For other similarly named hospitals, see Children's Hospital (disambiguation).
Children's Mercy Hospital

Adele Hall Campus
Geography
Location 2401 Gillham Road, Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Coordinates 39°05′06″N 94°34′48″W / 39.085°N 94.580°W / 39.085; -94.580Coordinates: 39°05′06″N 94°34′48″W / 39.085°N 94.580°W / 39.085; -94.580
Organization
Funding Non-profit hospital
Hospital type Specialized
Affiliated university KU-MED
UMKC
Services
Emergency department Yes (Adele Hall Campus and Children's Mercy Hospital Kansas) [1]
Helipad Yes (Two at Adele Hall Campus and one at Children's Mercy Hospital Kansas)
History
Founded 1897
Links
Website Official website
Lists Hospitals in Missouri

Children's Mercy Hospital is a 354-bed[2] comprehensive pediatric medical center in Kansas City, Missouri that integrates clinical care, research and medical education to provide care for patients ages birth to 21. The hospital's primary service area covers a 150-county area in Missouri and Kansas. Children's Mercy has received national recognition from U.S. News & World Report in ten pediatric specialties.[3] The hospital was the first in Missouri and Kansas to receive Magnet Recognition for excellence in nursing services from the American Nurses Credentialing Center, and has been re-designated three times.[4]

Children's Mercy Hospital is the primary location for Children's Mercy Kansas City, a comprehensive pediatric health system with multiple locations in Missouri and Kansas. The not-for-profit hospital was founded in 1897 by two sisters, one a surgeon and the other a dentist, to provide care for poor and ill children. The hospital quickly grew and expanded services to all children in the region. According to the hospital's Community Benefit Report, in 2012, the hospital provided more than $130 million in uncompensated care, which includes charity care, unreimbursed Medicaid and other means-tested government programs, and subsidized health services.[5]

History

The Berry Sisters

Alice Berry Graham
The lobby of Children's Mercy Hospital

Katharine and Alice Berry were both widowed when they came to Kansas City from Wisconsin in 1895. They put each other through school; Katharine being the first to get her medical degree while Alice worked as a school teacher, and then Alice obtained her dentist degree—both male-only professions during the 19th century. The women were excluded from professional medical groups because of their gender, and their entrepreneurial spirit discouraged. But the two persevered and due to their widowed status, were permitted to control their own finances, which they poured into their medical work with children.[6]

Children's Mercy Hospital was founded in 1897 when Dr. Katharine Berry Richardson, now a surgeon, and her sister Dr. Alice Berry Graham, a dentist, found a crippled, malnourished girl abandoned in the streets of Kansas City, Missouri and treated and cared for her at a rented bed in a hospital. Since no hospital in the city allowed a woman physician on the staff, the sisters continued treating patients by renting beds in a small hospital.[7]

The bed soon became known as the "Mercy Bed," and the need for health care for children continued to grow. By 1899, the Berry sisters had moved into their own building, naming it Free Bed Fund Association for Crippled, Deformed, and Ruptured Children.[8] The hospital soon changed its name to Mercy Hospital before finally becoming Children's Mercy Hospital in 1904.[7]

At first, the public ridiculed the sisters' work, especially the Berry sisters' ardent belief of women-only staffers. Many believed women should work in the home and not be physicians. But as the hospital progressed and showed miraculous outcomes, the ridicule lessened and public opinion soon helped the hospital strive.

Giving all they had, the sisters bought a home in 1909 to work as a hospital, sheltering children. The sisters and few staff members begged for supplies, volunteers, and monetary support. Dr. Kate (Katharine Berry) would keep a sign near the street, letting the public know the needs of the hospital, such as the basic comforts of new sheets, pillow cases, bath towels and canned food. Johns, Beatrice. Women of Vision. p. 17. 

In 1915, construction on what would be the first official hospital began at Independence Avenue. The hospital flourished in its new home until 1970, when it moved to its current location on Hospital Hill.

Timeline

The Significant Dates, according to the Children's Mercy Website are as follows:

Research

Children's Mercy Hospital was ranked nationally in ten categories in 2015.

The research program at Children’s Mercy features 48,000 square-feet of dedicated clinical research space and nearly 100 physicians and scientists actively participating in research studies.[9]

It is one of the 10 stakeholder institutions in the Kansas City Area Life Sciences Institute, which also includes the University of Kansas, MRI Global, the University of Missouri-Kansas City and the Stowers Institute.[10]

The hospital’s research is focused on four strategic areas.

The hospital is one of 13 designated Pediatric Pharmacology Research Units.[11] Hospital clinical pharmacologists work closely with the Pediatric Trials Network, researching and developing accurate drug doses and devices for children.

The hospital’s Center for Pediatric Genomic Medicine was termed "among the most technologically advanced in the world" in a January 2014 Bloomberg article.[12] In 2012, the hospital’s Center for Pediatric Genomic Medicine’s development of a rapid whole genome sequencing approach was named one of Time magazine’s Top 10 Medical Breakthroughs.[13]

Locations

Children's Mercy Hospital, Adele Hall Campus, near downtown Kansas City 
Children's Mercy Hospital Kansas, located in Overland Park, Kansas 
Children's Mercy Broadway, located south of Liberty Memorial, Kansas City 
Children's Mercy East, located in Independence, Missouri 
Children's Mercy administrative offices at The Crown Center 

Hospitals

Outpatient centers

In addition to hospitals, Children's Mercy offers services at several other locations throughout Missouri and Kansas:

Regional centers

Clinical care

Children’s Mercy Hospital is located on the Children’s Mercy Adele Hall campus. Hospital services include a Level 1 Trauma Center; a Level IV Intensive Care Nursery; heart, liver, kidney, blood and marrow transplant programs; and more than 40 pediatric subspecialty clinics.

Academics

Children's Mercy is an Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education institutional sponsor. Graduate medical education focuses on the development of programs based on the ACGME core competencies and the acquisition of clinical skills.

Children’s Mercy is academically affiliated with University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine and offers a pediatric residency program that annually accepts 24 categorical pediatric residents, three preliminary residents, and six internal medicine/pediatrics residents.[14] Residents currently hail from 42 medical schools representing 25 states throughout the United States and two foreign countries. Children’s Mercy also offers 28 pediatric fellowship programs to train the next generation of pediatric subspecialists.[15]

In addition, Children’s Mercy is designated a principal pediatric teaching hospital for The University of Kansas Medical Center. In 2013, Children’s Mercy, The University of Kansas Hospital, The University of Kansas Medical Center, and The University of Kansas Physicians announced they were working to develop a single, integrated pediatric program allowing the institutions to enhance clinical care for children, advance pediatric academic development, expand pediatric research initiatives, and strengthen advocacy activities on behalf of children in the Midwest and surrounding region.[16]

Expanding its boundaries beyond the Midwest, Children’s Mercy has established educational partnership programs for foreign residents and for its own residents study abroad. Children’s Mercy has formal relationships with hospitals in China, Panama and Mexico.[17]

Rankings and performance

Children's Mercy Hospital was one of 87 facilities in the United States that made national rankings in at least one of 10 pediatric specialties analyzed for the 2015-'16 Best Children's Hospitals, by U.S. News & World Report. The hospital has consecutively been nationally ranked in all ten pediatric specialty areas:[3]

The highest ranking was nephrology at #5.[3]

In 2013 Parents magazine ranked Children's Mercy at #14 among the country's best children's hospitals.[18]

The hospital has also been designated a "Magnet Recognized" center by the American Nurses Credentialing Center, won the "Gold Achievement" award for a fit friendly work site in 2012 by the American Heart Association, and has been designated as Kansas City's Healthiest Employer by the Kansas City Business Journal in 2013.

CMH's Center for Pediatric Genomic Medicine has been termed "among the most technologically advanced in the world".[19]

Naming Rights

On November 19, 2015, Children’s Mercy announced a ten year partnership with Sporting Kansas City. The deal includes Children's Mercy getting the naming rights to the team's stadium, now named Children's Mercy Park, as well as the team's training center and the championship field and training center at Swope Soccer Village. The hospital will also open a Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation Center at the United States Soccer Federation National Training Center, which is set to open in 2017.[20][21]

References

  1. "Emergency and Urgent Care", Retrieved on 6 November 2011. Archived November 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  2. "ABOUT CHILDREN'S MERCY History". childrensmercy.org. Children's Mercy Hospital. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 "Children's Mercy Hospitals and Clinics". Health.USNews.com. U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved 2014-10-14.
  4. "NURSES". childrensmercy.org/. Children's Mercy Hospital. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  5. "Community Benefit Report for 2012" (PDF). ChildrensMercy.org. Children's Mercy Kansas City. Retrieved 2014-10-14.
  6. Women of Vision, Beatrice Johns, ImagineInk Publishing Company, Inc., 2004
  7. 1 2 "Alice Berry Graham (1850-1913) and Katherine Berry Richardson (1858-1933)." Women in Health Sciences. Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine. 2004. Web. 25 Aug. 2011
  8. Sirrigge, Marjorie. "The Lady of Mercy." The Foundation for the History of Women in Medicine. 2002. Web. The Lady of Mercy. 25 Aug. 2011. Archived October 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  9. "Research Facilities". Children's Mercy. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
  10. "Stakeholder Institutions". Kansas City Area Life Sciences Institute (KCALSI). Retrieved 27 August 2014.
  11. "Pediatric Pharmacology Research Units (PPRU) Network". NICHD.
  12. "Baby DNA Analysis Ushers in Brave New World of Treatment". Bloomberg.
  13. Park, Alice (December 4, 2012). "Speeding DNA-Based Diagnosis for Newborns". Time Magazine. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
  14. "Pediatric Residency Program FAQs". Children's Mercy. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
  15. "Fellowship Programs". Children's Mercy. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
  16. "Children’s Mercy GME Annual Report, 2013".
  17. "Pediatric Residency Program International Electives". Children's Mercy. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
  18. Cicero, Karen. "10 Best Children's Hospitals". Parents Magazine. No. March 2013 (Meredith Corporation). Retrieved 2014-10-06.
  19. Lauerman, John (2014-01-15). "Baby DNA Analysis Ushers in Brave New World of Treatment". Bloomberg.com. Bloomberg. Retrieved 2014-10-06.
  20. McDowell, Sam. "National soccer education and training center gets final approval for construction in Kansas City, Kan.". kansascity.com. The Kansas City Star. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  21. Augustine, Lisa; Jacobson, Jake. "Children’s Mercy and Sporting Kansas City announce youth health and pediatric sports medicine initiative". news.childrensmercy.org. Children's Mercy Hospital. Retrieved 19 November 2015.

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