Queens Chronicle
Five hundred guests attended a groundbreaking ceremony Friday to
celebrate the $150 million expansion of Jamaica Hospital Medical
Center’s Emergency Department, which will double in size to accommodate
more than 150,000 patients annually.
The funding is a grant from the Statewide Health Care Facility Transformation Program.
Despite
having to attend a funeral later that day of a former first responder
who died because of a 9/11-related illness, Gov. Hochul made a keynote
speech at the Level 1 trauma center in Richmond Hill because she wanted
to emphasize that the time of disinvestment in Southeast Queens has
ended.
“This
is a day of a new beginning,” Hochul said at the June 16 event. “For so
many years and decades ... people thought that the people of this
community didn’t have political clout to make real transformative
changes. That time is over, my friends. With this new beginning, we say
that this community matters. This hospital matters.”
Hochul
thanked the doctors, nurses, staff and other healthcare workers for
their efforts in saving the lives of people who suffer from mental
health issues, along with those who fall victim to fentanyl and opioids
or contract Covid-19.
“We are going to enhance our psychiatric
services, because my God, people are going through so much right now,”
Hochul said. “All the work to save lives from overdoses ... we are doing
that in real time. We have so much more to do.”
The governor said
that the new facility was delayed a bit because of the pandemic, but
the commitment of the hospital to get the expansion done while taking
care of patients during the height of the spread of coronavirus further
highlighted the need for safety-net hospitals.
“There were a lot
of hopes and dreams and then in the middle of it all there was a
pandemic,” she said. “This demonstrated the compassion and incredible
resiliency of this organization and so many of your members, from nurses
to doctors to the people who worked in the kitchens, the custodial
staff, the doulas and everybody else [who] pulled together to save this
community.”
Bruce Flanz, JHMC’s president and CEO, said the
hospital was at the epicenter of the pandemic, but with the new funding
it will be able to serve more people.
“When completed, the Emergency Department will double in size,” Flanz said.
The
hospital will go from having one trauma bay to four major trauma bays,
from one isolation room to 22, and the number of treatment areas will
nearly triple, he said. There will also be two new intensive care units:
a 12-bed neuro-ICU and a 10-bed ICU.
“When the project is
complete we will have a total of 48 intensive care unit beds,” Flanz
said. “The project will also add much needed space to our mental health
program and to our CPAC,” or chest pain center.
Flanz said the
improvements are not just necessary to the community, but to its
uniformed officers, who say JHMC is their preferred choice for
treatment.
Officer Brett Boller, who was shot earlier this year in Jamaica, shared the sentiment.
“I
had multiple surgeons and multiple teams work on me,” Boller told the
Queens Chronicle. “They communicated well to my family about what was
going on and the recovery process. They made me and my family
comfortable.”
Lindsey Boller, the officer’s sister, told the Chronicle she was grateful for the care her brother received.
“I’m
studying to be a nurse one day and it was just really inspiring to see
how great all the nurses and all the doctors were to him,” said the
aspiring healthcare professional.
NYPD Chief Kevin Williams, commanding officer of Patrol Borough Queens South, shared their sentiments.
“I’m
grateful for their care and the services for our members in the
service,” Williams told the Chronicle. “When they come to get treated
it’s first-class and we appreciate it.”
U.S. Rep. Greg Meeks (D-Jamaica) said it was a 10-year journey to get here.
“I want to say thank you to all the providers,” Meeks said. “What do we have in life if we don’t have health?”
Meeks’ 700,000 constituents look to JHMC for treatment, said the congressman.
“If it wasn’t for the members of the state Legislature doing their part, this wouldn’t have happened,” he said.
Assemblywoman
Alicia Hyndman (D-Springfield Gardens) told the Chronicle that
Springfield Gardens doesn’t have a hospital so the constituents in her
area look to JHMC for help.
“I don’t have any hospitals in my
district,” Hyndman said. “While growing up, everyone knew if you had a
car accident, if you were hurt on your bicycle, if there was a shooting,
this is the place to come. The chances of you surviving was high
because this is a Trauma 1 Center.”
Hyndman’s godson, who was wounded after falling through shower glass, was treated at JHMC.
Borough President Donovan Richards, who was born at the hospital in 1983, was also in attendance.
“We’ve
been talking for many years now about the need to invest in healthcare
especially coming out of this pandemic,” Richards said. “Today we are
changing that. Like the congressman said, it’s about ensuring that no
matter what your socioeconomic status is, no matter who you love, no
matter what your immigration status is, at Jamaica Hospital, you are
welcomed.”
We could have built 4 more hospitals with the money that went to that Bills stadium.