Michael Reese Hospital

Michael Reese Hospital in 2008

Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center was an American hospital founded in 1881. In its heyday, it was a major research and teaching hospital and one of the oldest and largest hospitals in Chicago, Illinois. It was located on the near south side of Chicago, next to Lake Shore Drive (U.S. Route 41) which lies along Lake Michigan.

The hospital closed its Internal Medicine Residency at the end of the 2007-2008 academic year and finished transferring patients to Mercy Hospital and Medical Center before the end of 2008; the 48-acre campus was then vacated. In July 2009, the streets through the campus were closed, and calls to the main number were greeted by: "We're sorry. All circuits are busy now. Please try your call again later." Demolition began in late fall 2009.

Medical staff residency training records and verification have become available through the Federation Credentials Verification Service (FCVS)[1] Closed Residency program records.[2]

Psychology internship/residency training records and verifications have become available through the Association of State and Provincial Psychology Boards (ASPPB) Closed Record Verification Service (CRVS).[3]

Reese had been most recently owned by Envision Hospital Corporation of Scottsdale, AZ. The hospital officially closed August 31, 2009. At one time, the hospital had a large health plan which included 300,000 patients; at the time of the hospital's closure the health plan was terminated and it only had 2,900 clients.

History

Michael Reese was a real estate developer who died in 1877, leaving funds in his will to build a new hospital. Reese's heirs requested that the hospital would be open to all people, regardless of creed, nationality, or race. Construction of the first hospital on the corner of 29th and Groveland Avenue was completed in 1880. In its early years, it served a diverse array of mostly European immigrants; by the time the hospital was shuttered in 2009, it primarily served the black community. For much of its history, Michael Reese was dedicated to charity care as well as medical research and education. In 1890, the hospital established a training school for nurses in order to ensure a steady supply of nursing staff. A Centennial History of Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center, 1881-1981. Chicago: Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center, 1981. In 1899, the hospital became famous as the first US institution to implement a motorized ambulance service. The vehicle was electric, running on a 44-cell battery. Similar models used shortly thereafter in New York City had a top speed of 16 miles per hour and a range of approximately 25 miles before they needed to be recharged.

The original Michael Reese building was demolished in 1905 and replaced in 1907 by another, larger 1000 Bed, building on the same site.

Leonidas Berry was a pioneer in the development and use of the gastroscope. Dr. Samuel Soskin and Dr. Rachmiel Levine made important discoveries about the "gatekeeper" action in insulin, which is of fundamental importance to the understanding of diabetes. Dr. Albert Milzer and his research team were the first to kill the polio virus and make an effective vaccine against this debilitating virus. The hospital was also the first to have an infant incubator (1915), and the first permanent incubator station for prematurely born babies 1922, both of which were innovated by Dr. Julius Hess.

As early as the 1940s, the area surrounding Michael Reese Hospital was already in economic and physical decline. The hospital, along with Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) and Mercy Hospital and Medical Center (several blocks away), was one of the businesses in the area responsible for creating the South Side Planning Board. IIT and Michael Reese opted to try urban renewal instead of abandoning the neighborhood altogether.

From 1954 to 1986, the hospital purchased adjacent properties, demolishing structures on those properties, and building additional clinics and pavilions on the growing campus. The new buildings housed many specialty clinics, including a tumor center, a Psychosomatic and Psychiatric Institute, a city public health clinic, a nurse's residence and school building, a heart surgery center, the Siegel Institute for Communicative Disorders, and the Simon Wexler outpatient psychiatric facility. At its height, the hospital had 2,400 beds and was the largest hospital in Chicago. At the time of its closure, there were only 150.

In 1991, Michael Reese Hospital was acquired by Humana.[4] In March 1993, Humana spun off its hospitals under the name Galen Health Care.[5] In June, Galen merged with Columbia Healthcare.[6] In 1994, Columbia merged with HCA to form Columbia/HCA.[7]

Nursing School

The Michael Reese Hospital School of Nursing put new students to work assisting in the hospital wards, where they learned working along with hospital physicians. In addition to practical training, students took courses in anatomy, physiology, and medicine. What began as a two-year program was extended to three years in 1895.

Many young women came to Michael Reese directly after finishing high school; some had ambitions to go beyond their vocational nursing training to attend college afterward. By the time the school closed in 1981, advancement in medical science and the increasing complexity of the nursing field led more and more prospective nurses to opt for university-based programs. Over the course of nearly a century, the Michael Reese Hospital School of Nursing graduated 4,160 students.[8]

Financial difficulties

In 1998, ownership was transferred from Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation to what is now known as Envision Hospital Corporation.[9] At this time, the number of beds was reduced from 1,100 to 450 Beds, and the hospital began closing clinics and laying off employees.

Operating expenses for the aging facilities continued increasing, while the hospital itself operated at a loss for the last several years. Heating and physical plant expenditures were staggeringly high compared to newer and more modern facilities such as Mercy Catholic Hospital and Little Company Of Mary Hospital.

In the face of escalating financial challenges, the hospital abandoned their effort to return to profitability. Many buildings on the campus had fallen into disrepair, and some were already completely unused. In 2004, archived medical records were kept in unsorted piles on wooden pallets, in a gutted clinical research building on the campus. In mid 2007, the number of beds was reduced to 150. By this time, almost all of the clinics had closed and the medical research centers had closed.

On June 5, 2008, WLS-TV reported that the hospital filed with the State of Illinois a letter of intent to close by the end of 2008. And on September 28, 2008, the hospital filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Healthcare Business News reported on September 29, 2008, that the hospital owed $6.6 million to its landlord (Medline Industries), $4.7 million to gas, electric, and water utilities, $2.3 million to the University of Illinois Medical Center, and more than $860,000 in county and state taxes. When the hospital closed patients were transferred to Mercy Medical Center And Hospital.[10]

Demolition progress and preservation efforts

Portions of the hospital campus were over 100 years old and believed by some preservationists to hold historic value. The older buildings were constructed in an ornate style. The Rothschild Nurses' Residence was built in extensive detail and ornate styling, with molded ceilings, arched double windows, solid hardwood floors, and extensive woodwork throughout. The oldest portion of the main hospital building, which was shuttered in 1997 and soon fell into disrepair, also had significant detail and ornate styling in the auditorium and common areas. Although small-scale preservation efforts were made, both buildings were eventually demolished.

A series of newer buildings were completed after a 1946 plan created by Walter Gropius, the first director of the Bauhaus in Germany. These buildings, built from 1946 to 1959, were designed by Chicago firms based in part on the Gropius plan. In addition, the landscaping on the campus was designed by modernist landscape architect Hideo Sasaki,[11] a colleague of Gropius's at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.

Preservation Magazine reported in June 2009 that "according to [Molly] Sullivan in the city's Community Development department, the original 1907 Prairie-style building designed by Schmidt, Garden & Martin will be preserved, but the rest of the 29-building campus is not "feasible to save," she says. "Our intention is to utilize the main Michael Reese building, but everything in addition to that, including the Gropius buildings, needs to be cleared from the area." [12] However, the original hospital building, which had been neglected since 1997 and was in poor condition, was later demolished after repeated break ins and acts of looting and vandalism, and due to lack of interest in redevelopment.

Initial demolition began in 2009 and continued through 2010. By 2012, all buildings with the exception of a small former administration building had been cleared from the site.

Construction and demolition work was complicated in August 2009 by the discovery of radioactive contamination of soil on the site.[13] A radium separation company had previously operated on site in the early 1900s and was purchased by the hospital to supply radium for medical procedures. The US Environmental Protection Agency has mandated a cleanup of the site to remove contamination.

Planned use for 2016 Olympics

The Chicago 2016 Olympic organizing committee had advocated a plan to construct the Olympic Village on the Michael Reese site as a reuse project, should Chicago be awarded the Games.[14] The city had originally planned to build an Olympic Village above the truck yards south of McCormick Place, but focused their planning on the Michael Reese campus after the hospital announced its planned closure. Under the new plan, the City would borrow $85 million to buy the Michael Reese Hospital campus from its then owner, Medline Industries. Medline would have received $65 million because the company agreed to make a $20 million charitable contribution back to the city. The city would then have used that $20 million to pay up to five years of interest on its $85 million debt, demolish the hospital, and clean up the 48 acre site. Then sometime in the next couple years it planned to sell the site for at least $85 million to a developer or developers, who in turn would build a complex big enough to house about 15,000 Olympians. After the games the developer would then sell or rent out the units.[15]

Instead, demolition and cleanup costs were projected at $32 million and rising; as a result Medline agreed to raise its charitable contribution to $32.5 million.[16] The site was purchased in early July 2009 for $86 million after Medline agreed to the changes in the contract. However, after Chicago's Olympic Bid failed, the Olympic Village plan was abandoned.

Current status

The site is currently vacant, with the exception of the Singer Pavilion building (formerly the psychiatric institute), and is fenced off. Proposals circulated to use the site for the Barack Obama Presidential Library and Museum should the library be located in Chicago. However, the site was not considered, as other sites with university partnerships are being proposed instead.[17]

References

  1. http://fcvs.fsmb.org
  2. "Federation Credentials Verification Service (FCVS)| Closed Residency Programs". FSMB. Retrieved September 28, 2012.
  3. http://www.asppb.net/?page=ClosedRecord
  4. Humana Takes Over At Michael Reese
  5. Humana Bets All on Managed Care
  6. $3-Billion, 99-Hospital Merger Near : Health care: Columbia and Galen sign accord to create the nation's second-largest such management company.
  7. COLUMBIA HEALTHCARE-HCA MERGER IS COMPLETED
  8. Jachimowicz,Elizabeth. “Remember the Nurses: Michael Reese Hospital School of Nursing, 1890-1981.”Chicago History 10 (1981): 96-98.
  9. Doctors to Buy a Stake and Run 2 Chicago Hospitals
  10. "Michael Reese Hospital files for Chapter 11". Modern Healthcare. Retrieved September 28, 2012.
  11. "Welcome to www.savemrh.com". Savemrh.com. Retrieved 2012-09-28.
  12. "An Olympic Battle". Preservationnation.org. June 1, 2009. Retrieved September 28, 2012.
  13. "Memorandum" (PDF). United States Environmental Protection Agency. p. 2. Retrieved 19 July 2012.
  14. Spielman, Fran (June 13, 2008). "Olympic Village might replace Michael Reese". Chicago Sun-Times.
  15. Joravsky, Ben (2008-07-24). "Magic Beans: The mayor's new Olympic Village plan would bet taxpayer dollars on risky real estate speculation.". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 2008-08-04.
  16. Spielman, Fran (2009-07-23). "MCommission awards contracts to begin demolition of Michael Reese Hospital to build Olympic Village". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2009-07-27.
  17. Harris, Melissa; Glanton, Dahleen (September 12, 2014). "2 longshot South Side sites out of running for Obama library". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 26, 2015.

External links

Coordinates: 41°50′29″N 87°36′49″W / 41.84138°N 87.61356°W / 41.84138; -87.61356

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