An illustration of Lancaster General Health points to the emergency department’s new entrance. PHOTO PROVIDED
Lancaster General Hospital has closed its Duke Street emergency department entrance as it begins a multi-year, $182.5 million expansion to the department.
On Monday, the hospital opened a new, temporary entrance to the department on Lime Street as it begins an estimated 18 month expansion to the hospital.
The expansion will double the emergency department’s beds to 95 and will increase its capacity to serve 140,000 patients annually.
LG Health first announced that it would be considering an expansion to the department last year after seeing record rates of emergency department visits the year prior. In 2018, the emergency department reportedly saw nearly 118,000 patients – 28,000 over its capacity of 90,000.
The new 40,000-square-foot expansion is planned to open in the summer of 2022. Until then, patients seeking emergency care will enter the hospital through a designated drive along Lime Street, which leads to a short-term parking area beneath the hospital, LG Health wrote in a press release.
The department’s existing clinical services will remain in their current location within the hospital. In addition, ambulances will continue to access the emergency department via entrances along Frederick Street and Duke Street.
Dr. Susan Promes, chair of emergency medicine at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center explains the use of one of the hospital’s four new exam bays. (Photo: Ioannis Pashakis)
Penn State Health will be using the new space as its emergency department starting May 23 while it renovates the current department. The hospital system, based in Derry Township, plans to resume using both spaces by this time next year.
The expansion to the department began in late 2017. It created four initial-care rooms where physicians assess the care a patient may need, four exam bays for short-term examinations, six private treatment rooms for longer examinations, a new main entrance, a registration desk and an expanded waiting area.
The current emergency department has operated from its location in the hospital for 14 years and sees approximately 75,000 patients annually. The expansion and renovation are designed to improve treatment and patient flow.
“The expanded space in the emergency department will make it easier for our providers to give high-level care to patients in immediate need,” said Dr. Susan Promes, chair of emergency medicine. “Patients will get the same expertise they expect from Hershey Medical Center providers with an improved operational flow.”
Renovations to the current department, expected to be completed early next summer, will add four exam bays, two treatment rooms, a sexual assault exam area, and an expanded decontamination and infectious disease isolation area.
When completed, the entire department will total 24,000 square feet. The overall project cost is approximately $49 million.
At the same time, Penn State Health is renovating the second and third floors of the emergency department in a separate $20 million project aimed at modernizing operating rooms and creating clinical and research space for the center’s Cancer Institute.
The health system is also adding three floors to its children’s hospital in a $148.1 million project slated for completion in 2020.
Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health is looking into a number of expansions for Lancaster General Health. (Photo: Submitted)
Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health is looking at three possible expansions to Lancaster General Hospital that together would be the largest expansion in the Duke Street hospital’s history.
The hospital system’s Board of Trustees expects to make a decision next month if it will pursue the preliminary plans to double the hospital’s emergency department, update its food services and create a tower with private patient rooms.
The hospital is facing increasing rates of patient visits. In 2018, the Lancaster City hospital’s emergency department saw nearly 118,000 visits – 28,000 people over its capacity of 90,000. Lancaster General is now the last acute care hospital in the city with the closing of UPMC Pinnacle Lancaster this year, so the system expects those number to continue to increase.
“We’ve made great strides over the past five years enhancing access to our care while guiding people to the optimal settings for their medical needs, such as our urgent care center or outpatient facilities,” Jan Bergen, Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health President and CEO said in a press release. “Increasing demand, population growth and changes in the local provider landscape require a thoughtful expansion of Lancaster General Hospital.”
The project is still in its early phases and could change drastically as it moves through municipal review and the Board of Trustees. If the project is approved in its current form, construction could begin as early as winter 2020.
The first phase of the project would move the current food service department from the ground floor of the hospital to an announced new location. The new dining room and kitchen area is expected to offer a wider selection of foods with more of an emphasis on spaces in the dining area to sit and relax.
With the food service department moved from its location on the ground floor, the project calls for an additional 41 treatment bays in the emergency department. The expansion into the emergency department would add a permanent addition of 32,550 square feet to the existing 38,660-square-foot department for a total of 71,200 square feet.
After the expansion would be completed, the hospital would then renovate the original emergency department bays to the specifications of the new ones.
According to Penn Medicine, the cost of the expansions to both the dining area and the emergency department is estimated at around $115 million.
The final expansion is an inpatient tower that would increase the hospital’s current bed count of 537, while also allowing it to get rid of its oldest and smallest rooms which don’t hold up to current standards of larger single-patient rooms with space for family and added privacy.
“With so many resources devoted to building the new emergency department, kitchen and dining areas, it’s prudent to think about the efficiency of also replacing nursing units that have served us well for decades,” Bergen said. “By acting today, we could avoid returning in future years with another major and disruptive construction project.”
The patient tower at Duke Street does not yet have an expected cost, according to Penn Medicine. The entire project is expected to take up to three years to complete if it is approved.
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