Adventist Health

Adventist Health
Type Operates health care facilities in California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington
Location
  • Roseville, CA
Employees
28,600
Mission To share God's love by providing physical, mental and spiritual healing.
Website http://www.adventisthealth.org/

Adventist Health is a not-for-profit health care organization which operates facilities throughout the western U.S. states of California, Hawaii, Oregon, and Washington. Adventist Health operates in keeping with the values and health heritage of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

As of 2014, the system includes 20 hospitals, with headquarters in Roseville, California.[1]

Despite similar names, it is not affiliated with Maryland-based Adventist HealthCare, or the Florida-based Adventist Health System.

History

Adventist Health’s heritage dates back to 1866 when the first Seventh-day Adventist health care facility opened in Battle Creek, Michigan. There, pioneers promoted the “radical” concepts of proper nutrition, exercise and sanitation in a facility devoted not just to the healing arts but also to the prevention of disease. They called it a sanitarium, a place where patients and their families could learn to be well.[2]

More than a century after Battle Creek, the health care system sponsored by the Seventh-day Adventist Church operates 160 hospitals and nearly 500 clinics, nursing homes and dispensaries worldwide. From Michigan to California and throughout the West, this early vision to treat the whole person—mind, body and spirit—is the foundation for their approach to health care.[2]

Originally, Adventist hospitals were governed by regional church leadership. As health care became more complex, however, the need arose for more time and specialized expertise than church administrators could give. In the 1970s the Seventh-day Adventist Church authorized centralized control and operations of its health care institutions at the Union (multi-state) level.[3]

One-year later, regional divisions formed corresponding to the church’s infrastructure. These divisions were known in the North Pacific Union as Northwest Medical Foundation and in the Pacific Union as Adventist Health Services. In 1980, the two western entities joined to form Adventist Health System/West, now known simply as Adventist Health.[2]

Today, Adventist Health is a not-for-profit, faith-based health system operating in California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington. Founded on the Seventh-day Adventist principles of Christian health care, Adventist Health comprises 20 hospitals with nearly 3,000 beds, nearly 19,000 employees, many clinics and outpatient facilities. It operates the largest system of rural health clinics in California, 15 home care agencies and three joint-venture retirement centers.[2]

In 2009, Adventist Health secured $187 million in bond funding to pay for construction and improvements.[4]

Organizational structure

At Adventist Health, their facilities enjoy the benefits (pooled services, purchasing and bargaining power) of belonging to a larger system. The Adventist Health corporate office takes a leadership role in this process.[5]

Church affiliation

Adventist Health owes much of its heritage and organizational success to the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which is a promoter of prevention and whole-person care. Inspired by the belief in the healing power of Jesus Christ, they aim to bring physical, mental and spiritual health and healing. Every individual, regardless of his/her personal beliefs, is welcome in Adventist Health's facilities.[6]

Hospitals

Adventist Health oversees the operations of 20 hospitals:

See also

References

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