SYRACUSE, N.Y. — It’s now just a matter of days before Crouse PromptCare finishes operations at the CNY Medical Center and moves across Irving Avenue to the renovated and expanded emergency-services department at Crouse Hospital. PromptCare will remain open for patients through 11 p.m. on Oct. 22, at which point it will close and all […]
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — It’s now just a matter of days before Crouse PromptCare finishes operations at the CNY Medical Center and moves across Irving Avenue to the renovated and expanded emergency-services department at Crouse Hospital.
PromptCare will remain open for patients through 11 p.m. on Oct. 22, at which point it will close and all walk-in patient flow will shift to the main emergency room (ER) and what is now called “CrousExpress.”
Crouse Health on Oct. 4 formally opened the newly completed final phase of the $38 million emergency-services and expansion project at Crouse Hospital.
The final phase involves the relocation of the PromptCare service.
The two-phase project was partially opened in July 2017, with completion of the 21,000-square-foot main (ER).
After more than 40 years of service, the hospital’s emergency services facility was in “need of renovation and expansion,” Crouse Health said in a release.
The project’s final phase also includes an additional 7,000 square feet of space and 16 new patient rooms, up to seven of which will be dedicated for CrousExpress walk-in patients. The project also includes a new front entrance for ambulatory (walk-in) patients and visitors.
With more than 82,000 patient visits in 2017, Crouse contends its emergency-services department is “the busiest in the area.” During the last decade, patient visits to the ER and PromptCare increased nearly 52 percent, per the release.
Kimberly Boynton, president and CEO of Crouse Health, said that Crouse Health sees its emergency department as the “front door” to the hospital. Some 54 percent of Crouse’s overall patient admissions come from the ER.
“The opening of the last phase of this project, coupled with a rapid evaluation process that quickly directs patients to the appropriate level of treatment, will allow us to treat patients sooner and more efficiently,” Dr. David Mason, medical director of Pomeroy Emergency Services, said.
Naming gift
The naming gift for the overall project is from the William G. Pomeroy Foundation. Other significant financial support comes from Syracuse residents Darlene and Eric Coons, in memory of relatives from the Makowski, Parkerson, and Wadowiec families, Crouse Health said.
Donations from both the Pomeroy Foundation and the Coons family were made as part of the Crouse Health Foundation’s CrouseCares Campaign, “the largest comprehensive campaign in Crouse Health history.”
To date, donors have committed nearly $15 million in annual and capital donations since the campaign launched in 2015, largely to the Pomeroy Emergency Services project.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com