On October 22, the Illinois Health Facilities & Services Review Board approved Cook County Health’s (CCH) Certificate of Need (CON) to build a modern and efficient inpatient and outpatient facility on a vacant parcel immediately west of and adjacent to the current Provident Hospital located at 500 E. 51st Street, Chicago. The new facility will include expanded outpatient services and downsized inpatient facilities.
“Provident Hospital has served as a beacon of hope since it first opened in 1891 as an African-American hospital,” said Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle. “A new modern facility will allow CCH to help close the health equity gap by providing the community with high-quality health care close to where they live.”
The new facility will include a smaller replacement hospital with 42 medical/surgical beds and 6 ICU beds; 8 operating suites as well as 70 outpatient exam rooms for the provision of comprehensive outpatient primary and specialty care, laboratory, diagnostic, dental, behavioral health and pharmacy services. A comprehensive emergency department with 18 bays is also planned. CCH expects the new facility will reduce the number of Provident patients having to travel to the Stroger campus for services not currently provided on the Provident campus. The new eight-story facility will cost approximately $240M. The debt service on the new facility will be paid for by the health system through patient revenues not local tax dollars.
“With this project we are coming closer to realizing our future as a modern, integrated person-centered health system, providing expert care while fulfilling our historical mission to care for all,” said Dr. Jay Shannon, CEO, CCH. “By improving access to care and community wellness, we can ultimately better the health of patients, reduce unnecessary health care costs and provide the greatest benefit to the whole of Cook County.”
In 2018, Provident Hospital provided more than $20M in charity care, a number that has been on the rise for the last several years despite declining local taxpayer support. CCH continues to generate more than 95% of its operating revenues.
CCH’s strategic plan, IMPACT 2020, laid out two critical strategies – the long overdue need to update, upgrade and even rebuild facilities to ensure that CCH is providing state-of-the-art care to its patients and the need to attract new, insured patients to ensure CCH can remain true to its historic mission. To that end, CCH recently opened a new outpatient facility on its central campus as well as a new community health center in Arlington Heights. Later this year, new community health centers will open in North Riverside and Blue Island. CCH recently broke ground on a new facility in the Belmont-Cragin neighborhood expected to open in late 2020.
In addition to the expansion of high-quality inpatient and outpatient services, the new Provident facility is expected to maintain 450 full-time jobs and add as many as 90 new jobs when it is fully operational.
Provident has served as an anchor in Chicago’s South Side community since it first opened its doors as a privately owned community hospital in 1891. The private owners closed the facility in 1987. In 1991, Cook County purchased the hospital and reopened it in 1993 as a public hospital serving the community.