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St. Bernards Medical Center | |||||||||||
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St. Bernards Healthcare | |||||||||||
Geography | |||||||||||
Location | 225 East Washington Avenue, Jonesboro, Arkansas, United States | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 35°50′11″N90°42′09″W / 35.8365003°N 90.7025422°W | ||||||||||
Organization | |||||||||||
Funding | Non-profit hospital | ||||||||||
Religious affiliation | Catholic church | ||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||
Emergency department | Level III trauma center | ||||||||||
Beds | 454 | ||||||||||
Helipads | |||||||||||
Helipad | 0AR5 | ||||||||||
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Public transit access | Jonesboro Economical Transit System (JET), Route 27 | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Former name(s) | St. Bernards Hospital | ||||||||||
Opened | July 5, 1900 | ||||||||||
Links | |||||||||||
Website | stbernards | ||||||||||
Lists | Hospitals in Arkansas |
St. Bernards Medical Center is a 454-bed acute-care hospital in Jonesboro, Arkansas. [1] The hospital, established on July 5, 1900, is the flagship facility of its nonprofit parent, St. Bernards Healthcare, serving as a regional referral center for 23 counties in northeast Arkansas and southeast Missouri. [2] St. Bernards Medical Center houses the largest Level III trauma center and Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) in the eastern part of Arkansas. [3]
The hospital began in response to a malaria fever epidemic ravaging northeast Arkansas in 1899. Local physicians asked the Olivetan Benedictine Sisters to help take care of the sick. The sisters had come to Arkansas in 1887 to teach children of immigrants settling in the area. Initially, the sisters settled in Pocahontas, but they relocated their convent to Jonesboro in 1898. Malaria fever spread throughout the area the following year, and the sisters were asked to help, despite their training mostly in teaching. The sisters purchased a two-story, six-room frame house in Jonesboro and set up rooms with cots for beds and covered orange crates for wash stands. On July 5, 1900, St. Bernards Hospital, named after the sisters' patron saint, Bernardo Tolomei, took its first patients.
Within a week of its opening, most of the beds at St. Bernards were occupied by malaria patients. The sisters prepared food from their garden in the convent kitchen and did laundry at the convent, using tubs, washboards and homemade soap. Initially, local physicians instructed the sisters on medical techniques. [1]
To help finance operations, the sisters made solicitation tours, riding the trains on payday to nearby logging camps to sell "Hospital Tickets." In exchange for $9, a workman would receive a ticket that ensured admission and care for an entire year. By the following year, the sisters purchased a second frame building and moved it next to the first, joining the two with a hallway.
By 1905, a 40-bed brick hospital and chapel were erected, connecting the convent with the original hospital building. Financial challenges continued throughout the years, but St. Bernards continued to grow, adding both buildings and services. The hospital survived floods that affected Arkansas in 1927 and 1937 and tornadoes that wreaked destruction in 1968 and 1973, providing care for the sick and injured.
By the 21st century, the hospital, now named St. Bernards Medical Center, expanded to a 454-bed, acute-care hospital with more than 2,700 employees. [4]
St. Bernards Medical Center serves as a regional referral hospital across four areas of services, including heart and vascular, cancer, women's and children's services and senior services.
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