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Paradise Valley Hospital (California)

Coordinates: 32°41′07″N 117°04′57″W / 32.68531°N 117.08251°W / 32.68531; -117.08251
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Paradise Valley Hospital
Prime Healthcare Services, Inc.
Map
Geography
Location2400 East Fourth Street, National City, California, United States
Coordinates32°41′07″N 117°04′57″W / 32.68531°N 117.08251°W / 32.68531; -117.08251
Organization
Care systemPrivate
TypeCommunity
Affiliated universityNone
Services
Beds291
History
Opened1904
Links
Websitehttp://www.paradisevalleyhospital.org/
ListsHospitals in California

Paradise Valley Hospital is a 291-bed acute care facility in National City, California. It began operation in 1904 as a sanitarium and is currently under the ownership and operation of Prime Healthcare Services, a hospital management company located in Ontario, CA. Paradise Valley Hospital is the largest private employer in National City, with an ethnically diverse workforce of approximately 1,200 employees.

History

In 1883, Dr. Anna L. Potts started construction of Mount Paradise Sanitarium seven miles from San Diego. The thirty room sanitarium was finished in 1887. But in 1895, lacking water and patients, Dr. Potts closed Potts Sanitarium, mortgaging it for $14,000.[1] In 1900, Ellen G. White a founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church repeatedly received strong impressions from God that the region was a good location for a sanitarium and hospital. During Mrs. White's visit to San Diego in 1902, Paradise Sanitarium was for sale for $11,000. Real estate prices slowly declined as the drought continued. In 1904, the price was down to $6,ooo, but the local conference didn't want to buy it. Later Mrs. White and a wealthy friend, Mrs. Josephine Gotzain, bought it for $4,000.[1] There still was no water, so Ellen White hired a well digger and water was found at 98 feet. Before Paradise Valley Sanitarium could open, Mrs. Julia Ulrich arrived becoming the first patient. Others followed putting off the dedication of the sanitarium until 1906. After 5 years Paradise Valley Sanitarium was sold to the Seventh-day Adventist Church in 1910.[1] Mabel White, the sanitariums first nurse did all the cooking and cleaning. The sanitarium gave natural remedies, a healthy diet and clean living. A training school for nurses was started at Paradise Valley Sanitarium in 1909. In 1914 the school was approved by California and continued to operate until 1966. In 1966 a new Paradise Valley Hospital opened in National City.[1] In 2006, the money losing Paradise Valley Hospital needed a $61 million remodeling to make it earthquake compliant. Adventist Health sold Paradise Valley Hospital to Prime Healthcare Services, a new for-profit hospital chain owned by Dr. Prem Reddy, for $30 million.[2]

Community Programs

In addition to its basic 24-hour emergency services and more than 15 clinical services and specialties, Paradise Valley Hospital offers free to low-cost classes and programs to the community through its Center for Health Promotion.[3] These cover areas such as diabetes management with glucose screening, asthma and other respiratory issues, nutrition, quitting smoking, stress and weight management, first time parent classes, and fitness.[4]

Services

  • 24-hour Emergency Department
  • San Diego Spine & Joint
  • Cardiac Catheterization Lab
  • Senior Health Center
  • Maternity/Birthing Center
  • South Bay Rehabilitation Center
  • Center for Wound Healing and Hyperbaric Medicine
  • Critical Care/DOU
  • Wellness Services
  • Pain Management Program
  • Behavioral Health - 2 campuses
  • Rehabilitation
  • Medical/Surgical unit with telemetry
  • Imaging Services - Digital Filmless Radiology*Pharmacy
  • Outpatient Physical Therapy
  • Women's Care

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Hospital Based Nursing Schools in San Diego, 1900-1970". San Diego History Center. Retrieved 2019-05-22.
  2. ^ "The man behind the nation's fastest-growing hospital chain". Modern Healthcare. Retrieved 2019-05-22.
  3. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-04-21. Retrieved 2012-05-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-05-08. Retrieved 2012-05-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

External links