Carthage Area Hospital CEO Duvall will add CEO role at Claxton-Hepburn in Ogdensburg

CARTHAGE — The CEO of Carthage Area Hospital is set to add to his executive responsibilities by assuming a similar role at another hospital in the region.  Richard (Rich) Duvall, CEO of Carthage Area Hospital, will also become the next CEO of Claxton-Hepburn Medical Center in Ogdensburg, effective mid-October. Duvall will replace Claxton-Hepburn’s interim CEO, […]

Already an Subcriber? Log in

Get Instant Access to This Article

Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.

CARTHAGE — The CEO of Carthage Area Hospital is set to add to his executive responsibilities by assuming a similar role at another hospital in the region. 

Richard (Rich) Duvall, CEO of Carthage Area Hospital, will also become the next CEO of Claxton-Hepburn Medical Center in Ogdensburg, effective mid-October.

Duvall will replace Claxton-Hepburn’s interim CEO, Charles (Chuck) Gijanto, who is retiring from his current role, per a joint news release the hospitals issued Sept. 26.

“This is an exciting partnership between two North Country hospitals,” Duvall said. “Working together will only strengthen the services we offer to patients by taking a regional approach to health care in the North Country. Ideally, this will create efficiencies in the way we conduct business. This partnership is the next step in creating an integrated, system-wide approach to how our patients receive health care.”

The announcement “does not” represent a merger or acquisition, the organizations said. Both the Claxton-Hepburn and Carthage Hospital’s boards of directors approved Duvall’s appointment. 

Duvall has worked at Carthage Area Hospital since 2008, serving in various leadership capacities culminating with his appointment to CEO in 2014. He has a “strong” track record of improving operations and expanding health-care services throughout the community and will serve as CEO of both facilities, the release stated.

Officials from both health-care facilities have worked “collaboratively” since the announcement of their affiliation with Crouse Health in Syracuse in late 2017. Building on those initiatives, Crouse North was established this past spring to provide locally based planning and “increased access to care.”

“Rich’s familiarity of the challenges facing North Country health-care facilities and the importance of working together make him an ideal choice as our next CEO,” M. Sandra Lyons, chair of the Claxton-Hepburn board of directors, contended.

About the hospitals 

Claxton-Hepburn Medical Center is a 115-bed community hospital and regional referral center. Claxton-Hepburn’s inpatient services include intensive care, acute care, a birthing center, and a mental health center. The medical center also provides primary care to nearly 40,000 Ogdensburg residents and regional services to the 108,000 people of St. Lawrence County. 

Established in 1965, Carthage Area Hospital operates today as a 25-bed critical access hospital, serving about 83,000 residents across Jefferson, northern Lewis, and southern St. Lawrence counties.

In addition to establishing a clinical affiliation with Syracuse’s Crouse Health in 2017, the hospital also operates a network of community-based clinics, including the Philadelphia Medical Center, Carthage Family Health Center, Carthage Pediatric Clinic, and Women’s Way to Wellness.    

Eric Reinhardt: