Coordinates: 43°46′10″N 79°21′46″W / 43.76944°N 79.36278°W / 43.76944; -79.36278

North York General Hospital

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North York General Hospital
Emergency entrance at NYGH
Map
Geography
Location4001 Leslie Street
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Organization
Care systemPublic Medicare (Canada) (OHIP)
TypeCommunity academic hospital
Affiliated universityUniversity of Toronto
Services
Emergency departmentYes (acute, subacute and ambulatory care)
Beds410 acute care beds and 192 long-term care beds
History
Opened1968
Links
Websitewww.nygh.on.ca
ListsHospitals in Canada

North York General Hospital (NYGH) is a teaching hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Primarily serving the North York district, as well as southern York Region, it offers acute care, ambulatory and long-term services at multiple sites. It is one of Canada's leading community academic hospitals and is affiliated with the University of Toronto.[1] NYGH is one of the three constituent hospitals of the Peters-Boyd Academy of the University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine.[2]

History

North York General Hospital from Leslie street

North York General Hospital at Leslie Street and Sheppard Avenue was opened in 1968. The four founding partners were: Friends of North York General (later to become the North York General Hospital Foundation); the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire (IODE), a Canadian women's charitable organization; the Missionary Health Institute; and Volunteer Services.[3] In 1960, a group of local citizens established the North Metropolitan Hospital Association to explore building a hospital to serve the growing area of North York. Under the leadership of Colonel Clifford Sifton, plans were made and funds raised for a 70-bed community hospital on the corner of Leslie and Sheppard. By November 1962, land on the Leslie site was obtained. Some 3,000 volunteers collected $3.2 million of the $8.6 million cost of the new hospital. On March 15, 1968, Premier John Robarts officially dedicated North York General Hospital.

The hospital underwent a major expansion that opened in 2003.

On 1 April 2003 a nurse was infected with SARS. Dr. Donald Low recalls poring over patient charts throughout the Victoria Day weekend, held that year on 19 May, when he hypothesized that a disease that caused the emergency that the province had declared finished a few days earlier was actually still spreading among health-care workers and hospital patients. Low resumed containment efforts and it took a city-wide effort to beat the outbreak completely. On July 2, the WHO removed Toronto from the list of affected cities. In Canada, health-care workers made up 43 per cent of SARS cases.[4][5][6]

North York General encompassed satellite sites, such as Branson Ambulatory Care Centre and the Seniors' Health Centre and Reactivation Care Centre. On March 1, 2017, North York General Hospital announced the hospital would not be renewing its lease at the Branson Ambulatory Care Centre in 2019 and would begin to transition services from that site.[7] On December 10, 2017, the Reactivation Care Centre: A Central LHIN Hospitals Collaborative opened at 2111 Finch Avenue West. In May 2018, the hospital announced two new locations would replace the Branson Ambulatory Care Centre.

In 2019, North York General Hospital was ranked the second best hospital in Canada and one of the top 100 hospitals world by Newsweek.[8]

Services

The General site is located at Leslie Street and Sheppard Avenue in north central Toronto. It offers services including inpatient acute care services and a 24-hour full service emergency. The Charlotte & Lewis Steinberg Emergency at the General site is a full-service emergency. In the 2019-2020 fiscal year there were 28,091 inpatient stays with an average length of stay of 5.1 days. The hospital emergency department had 118,800 visits in 2019-20.[9]

The Cancer Program provides treatment for many types of cancers, including breast, colon, prostate, gynecological and urinary.[10]

Other services in the hospital include family and community medicine, genetics testing, maternal and pediatric care, diagnostic imaging, geriatric care, mental health, surgeries

Satellite sites

Branson Ambulatory Care Centre

The Branson Ambulatory Care Centre is located at Bathurst Street and Finch Avenue West. It opened in 1957 as the North York Branson Hospital by the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It was named for Mr. William Henry Branson, an Adventist missionary and President of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. In 1997 it became part of North York General Hospital (as NYGH-Branson Division) after the final report by the Health Services Retructuring Commission.[11] On March 1, 2017, North York General Hospital announced the hospital would not be renewing its lease at the Branson Ambulatory Care Centre in 2019 and would begin to transition services from that site.[12] In May 2018, the hospital announced two new locations would replace the Branson Ambulatory Care Centre.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it is currently being used as a COVID-19 assessment centre.[13] The assessment centre occupies the former Urgent Care Centre.

Seniors' Health Centre and Reactivation Care Centre

The Seniors' Health Centre opened in 1985 and is located at 2 Buchan Court (Leslie and Sheppard). It houses both a long-term care home with 192 beds and Specialized Geriatric Services. These services are aimed at seniors with medical or mental health problems that threaten their independence or the ability to live at home. Along with the day hospital, the Seniors' Health Centre offers many elder care clinics.

The Reactivation Care Centre is a collaborative and innovative approach designed to help patients who no longer need acute care services, but often find themselves waiting for an alternate care facility, such as convalescent and long-term care. NYGH has a patient unit in the centre.

References

  • North York General Hospital receives 2017 Patient Safety Champion Award recognizing its innovative approach to Never Events, www.patientsafetyinstitute.ca, June 13, 2017
  • North York General offers breast cancer surgery, reconstruction at once, InsideToronto.com, Dec. 26, 2016
  • Health Heroes: Paediatric Surgeon Dr. Sharifa Himidan, Reader's Digest, Canada's Health Heroes, December 2016
  • Innovative biopsy procedure for prostate cancer, CTV News, November 25, 2016
  • North York General Hospital get $1.9 million provincial "HIRF" grant for facility upgrades, InsideToronto.com, August 8, 2016
  • Nurses drive 'closed loop medication administration' success, Canadian Healthcare Technology, July 7, 2016
  • North York General Hospital's breast cancer program receives full accreditation from the NAPBC, InsideToronto.com, June 8, 2016
Citations
  1. ^ North York General Hospital: Careers & Volunteers
  2. ^ "North York General Hospital Receives 2016 HIMSS Enterprise Davies Award". HIMSS. 2017-02-01. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
  3. ^ "North York General Hospital - History and Founding Partners". www.nygh.on.ca. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
  4. ^ Branswell, Helen (6 March 2013). "Ten years later, SARS still haunts survivors and health-care workers". The Globe and Mail Inc. The Canadian Press.
  5. ^ Cambell, Archie Gray (December 2006). Spring of Fear (Volume 1) (PDF). Toronto: Queen's Printer for Ontario. ISBN 1-4249-2821-4.
  6. ^ Low, Donald (2004). "Sars: Lessons from Toronto". Learning from SARS: Preparing for the Next Disease Outbreak: Workshop Summary. National Academies Press (US). pp. 63–71.
  7. ^ "North York General Hospital - Message to our community". www.nygh.on.ca. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
  8. ^ "Best Hospitals - Canada". Newsweek. 29 March 2019.
  9. ^ "CIHI". yourhealthsystem.cihi.ca. Retrieved 2021-05-04.
  10. ^ "North York General Hospital - Cancer Care". www.nygh.on.ca. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
  11. ^ "Health Services Restructuring Commission | Ontario Health Promotion E-Bulletin". www.ohpe.ca. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
  12. ^ North York General Hospital closing Branson Ambulatory Care Centre North York Mirror Retrieved May 15, 2019
  13. ^ "Assessment Centres | North York General Hospital". nygh.on.ca. Retrieved 2020-11-17.

External links

43°46′10″N 79°21′46″W / 43.76944°N 79.36278°W / 43.76944; -79.36278