At Washington Adventist Hospital, a Century of Service
Washington Adventist Hospital was started by Seventh-day Adventist Church leaders in 1907 as the Washington Sanitarium and Hospital.
(Photos Courtesy Of Washington Adventist Hospital)
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Montgomery County's first hospital, Washington Adventist, is celebrating 100 years of providing local health care. Administrators of the 285-bed acute-care hospital in Takoma Park recently announced plans to relocate to the White Oak area and keep the existing site. They must receive approval from state officials. Montgomery County officials say they are studying the impact the move might have on residents.
Jere Stocks, the hospital's president, writes about its history and its future.
Imagine celebrating your 100th birthday and anxiously waiting to see what the next 100 years has in store.
That's what we are doing this year at Washington Adventist Hospital as we mark our first 100 years of providing health care for a growing community. At the same time, we are creating a vision of how we can serve the community for our next 100 years.
Founded as the Washington Sanitarium and Hospital on June 13, 1907, by Seventh-day Adventist Church leaders, Montgomery County's first hospital had 40 beds and provided care in a tranquil setting. At the time, Takoma Park was a resort community with homes dotted among trees. One of the hospital's first major investments was the purchase of a local dairy farm to obtain fresh milk for patients.
The hospital has been first in many ways. It was first to emphasize the importance of wellness and the dangers of smoking. It was the first in the county to offer a complete cardiac care center, which now performs 600 open-heart surgeries and more than 8,000 heart catheterizations each year.
The hospital, our community and health care have changed over the years. The hospital provided training for nurses and medics during World War I and introduced ambulance services in 1924.
In each of the past four decades, the hospital has made significant investments to expand, increase the bed capacity and introduce new technologies and services to meet the growing health-care needs of the region. Although health care has changed in the past 100 years, the mission of the hospital and our commitment to quality of care have been constant.
Today, our hospital's 2,000 employees and more than 600 physicians remain focused on our mission to deliver excellent health care to all, regardless of ability to pay.
Our 285-bed hospital stands on the grounds on which our first hospital was built. We have opened our doors to patients and families for generations and watched as our region has grown.
In 2005, the hospital initiated a strategic vision to improve access to health care and provide for enhanced facilities and services. One step we took to ensure that this Vision for Expanded Access ( http:/

