Baptist Health is a health system based in Louisville, Kentucky. It consists of eight hospitals, along with affiliated physician groups, urgent care centers and freestanding emergency departments, therapy and rehabilitation clinics, and various other health-related service centers. The system traces its roots to Kentucky Baptist Hospital, the first Baptist hospital in Kentucky, which opened in 1924 at Barrett Avenue and DeBarr Street, near Breckinridge Street in Louisville. [1]
The eight hospitals are located in Louisville, Lexington, Elizabethtown, La Grange, Corbin, Paducah, Richmond and New Albany, Indiana, for a total of more than 2,300 licensed beds. An additional hospital is operated in partnership with Deaconess Health System in Madisonville. [2]
Baptist Health employs more than 23,000 people in Kentucky and surrounding states. The current chief executive officer is Gerard Colman. [2]
The following is a list of Baptist Health hospitals (in Kentucky, unless otherwise indicated):
Hospital | County | City | Staffed beds [3] [4] | Founded |
---|---|---|---|---|
Baptist Health Corbin | Whitley | Corbin | 221 | 1986 [5] |
Baptist Health Deaconess Madisonville | Hopkins | Madisonville | 159 | |
Baptist Health La Grange | Oldham | La Grange | 42 | 1987 [6] |
Baptist Health Lexington | Fayette | Lexington | 434 | 1954 [7] |
Baptist Health Louisville | Jefferson | Louisville | 486 | 1924 [7] |
Baptist Health Paducah | McCracken | Paducah | 176 | 1953 [7] |
Baptist Health Richmond | Madison | Richmond | 50 | |
Baptist Health Hardin | Hardin | Elizabethtown | 262 | |
Baptist Health Floyd | Floyd | New Albany, Indiana | 248 | 1953 [8] |
Additionally, in May 2022 Baptist Health announced plans for a new hospital in Crestwood, in Oldham County, to be built in coordination with the New Urbanist planned community Clore Station. [9] While no timeline for hospital construction has been announced, construction at Clore Station is expected to begin in 2026. [10] [11]
Louisville is the most populous city in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, sixth-most populous city in the Southeast, and the 27th-most-populous city in the United States. By land area, it is the country's 24th-largest city, although by population density, it is the 265th most dense city. Louisville is the historical county seat and, since 2003, the nominal seat of Jefferson County, on the Indiana border.
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The University of Louisville (UofL) is a public research university in Louisville, Kentucky, United States. It is part of the Kentucky state university system. Chartered in 1798 as the Jefferson Seminary, it became in the 19th century one of the first city-funded public colleges in the United States. The university is mandated by the Kentucky General Assembly to be a "Preeminent Metropolitan Research University".
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The Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Railroad was a 19th-century railway company in the U.S. state of Kentucky. It operated from 1869, when it was created from the merger of the Louisville and Frankfort and Lexington and Frankfort railroads, until 1877, when it failed and was reincorporated as the Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Railway.
Religion in Louisville, Kentucky includes religious institutions of various faiths including Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and Sikhism.
Mike King is an American journalist and author. King spent most of his newspaper career working at The Courier-Journal in Louisville, Kentucky, and at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He is the author of Spirit of Charity: Restoring the Bond between America and Its Public Hospitals, which was published in 2016.
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