AdventHealth Tampa | |
---|---|
AdventHealth | |
![]() | |
Geography | |
Location | Tampa, Florida, United States |
Organization | |
Care system | Private hospital |
Funding | Non-profit hospital |
Type | General hospital |
Religious affiliation | Seventh-day Adventist Church |
Services | |
Emergency department | Yes |
Beds | 626 [1] |
Helipad | Aeronautical chart and airport information for 3FA1 at SkyVector |
History | |
Former name(s) | University Community Hospital Florida Hospital Tampa |
Links | |
Website | www |
Lists | Hospitals in Florida |
AdventHealth Tampa is a non-profit hospital campus in Tampa, Florida, United States. It became part of the AdventHealth hospital network following a merger with University Community Health in September 2010.
In early July 1993, University Community Hospital agreed to purchase Centurion Hospital of Carrollwood from Centurion Health of Carrollwood for $17.4 million. The sale had to be approved by creditors and the United States bankruptcy court. [2] In early November, University Community Hospital officially took over the management of Centurion Hospital of Carrollwood and renamed it to University Community Hospital-Carrollwood. [3]
In late April 1998, the board of University Community Hospital unanimously approved to create a joint venture with Adventist Health System. The new company included the hospitals University Community Hospital, University Community Hospital-Carrollwood and East Pasco Medical Center in Zephyrhills. [4]
On September 1, 2000, University Community Hospital took over the management of Helen Ellis Memorial Hospital, [5] after getting approval from the city commission government of Tarpon Springs and from voters on a 40-year lease. [6] [7] [8]
On September 1, 2010, University Community Hospital became part of Adventist Health System. This happened after University Community Health merged with Adventist Health System. [9] [10] [11] In late September 2011, University Community Hospital was rebranded to Florida Hospital Tampa. [12]
On August 23, 2016, the hospital opened a ten room pediatric emergency department. [13] [14]
On January 2, 2019, Florida Hospital Tampa rebranded to AdventHealth Tampa. [15] [16]
On January 1, 2021, the United States government passed a law requiring all hospitals to have their chargemaster on its website. [17] In a survey done in 2022, the majority of hospitals in Florida including AdventHealth Tampa had failed to comply with the new law. [17] [18] It was not until early February 2023, that the hospital was in full compliance with the law. [19]
In early September 2022, AdventHealth Tampa spent $2 million to upgrade its catheterization laboratory with the GE Allia from GE HealthCare, and a new single monitoring unit from Carrot Medical. [20] [21] [22]
In early March 2023, AdventHealth Tampa opened a twenty bed unit to treat patients with advanced stages of heart disease. [23] [24]
On February 20, 1995 a physician at University Community Hospital amputated the left foot of a man with diabetes, when it should have been the right foot. [25] [26] After the mistake the hospital required that no be written on the limb not to be amputated. And it also required the physician and head nurse to agree before all surgeries. [27] On May 12, the man settled his case against University Community Hospital for $900,000 and the physician for $250,000 for a total of $1.15 million. [28] [29] In late July, the same physician also cut off a woman's toe at Town and Country Hospital in Tampa without her permission. After the second amputation mistake his license was suspended by the Florida Board of Medicine. [30] [31] In early December, because of these two mistakes he was fined by the state $10,000 and his license was suspended for 6 months (140 of those days were already served, allowing him to practice medicine again in 1996). [32] [33] [34]
On March 3, a respiratory therapist at University Community Hospital turned off the ventilator of a wrong patient. [35] [36] And to make matters worse a physician falsified the death certificate as a natural cause, the University Community Hospital did not notify the medical examiner and they also did no autopsy before man was buried in a casket. [37] On March 13, the medical examiner gave an order to have him dug up after reading about the death in a newspaper, also the Florida Attorney General and the Hillsborough Sheriff's Office investigated his death as a crime. [37] Later the autopsy revealed that the man had suffocated to death due to the mistake. [38] [39]
On March 16, a physician at University Community Hospital partially sterilized a woman with a tubal ligation on her right fallopian tube, during a Cesarean section without her permission. [40] [41] In late December, the she sued the hospital, the physician and his former surgical group in Hillsborough Circuit Court. She was seeking $15,000 from defendants. [42]
On March 31 and April 3, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations investigated the hospital, after doing the investigations it stripped University Community Hospital of its accreditation. [43] [44] [45]
On April 5, a physician at University Community Hospital accidently cut a patient's lung, [46] that same day the president of the hospital asked the Agency for Health Care Administration to due an investigation. [47] The Agency for Health Care Administration ordered the hospital to stop all elective surgeries at midnight on April 8. [48] [49] [50] They did this after an investigation of the facility found that multiple violations were taking place. All 326 physicians were ordered to be instructed on how to safely do medical procedures in an operating theater. [49] During the ban other hospital's in Tampa received its patients, including Tampa General Hospital. [49] In late April, the ban was lifted at midnight, after University Community Hospital paid a $341,000 fine to the Agency for Health Care Administration for its violations. [46] [51] Also the federal government changed its plans to cut off Medicare and Medicaid to the hospital after it took steps to improved patient safety. [51]
By late November, the hospital had lost almost $6 million due to its mistakes. [52]
In 1996, a physician at University Community Hospital fused the wrong vertebrae in a man's neck. In mid January 1998, he and his wife both sued the hospital for $5 million in pain, mental anguish and lost wages. [53] In early April 2000, a jury awarded the man $3.3 million and the wife received $500,000 after they also sued the neurosurgeon. [54] [55] [56]
On August 23, 2016, Florida Hospital Tampa announced that physicians from Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital would be working at the hospital after it began offering pediatric programs in cardiology, hematology, intensive care medicine, oncology and hospital medicine from Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital. [13] [14]
In late April 2019, physicians at AdventHealth Tampa were learning how to use virtual reality technology so that they could treat patients with epilepsy. [57] [58]
In early September 2021, the hospital had put its first wireless monitoring sensor implant into a patient with heart failure. [59] [60]