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Community Hospital of the King’s Daughters

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Community Hospital of the King’s Daughters
NameCommunity Hospital of the King’s Daughters
LocationNorfolk, Virginia
CountryUnited States
FundingNonprofit
TypeTeaching
Beds437
Founded1896

Community Hospital of the King’s Daughters is a nonprofit tertiary care healthcare system based in Norfolk, Virginia and serving the Hampton Roads region. Founded in 1896 by faith-based and civic leaders, the institution has grown into a multi-campus medical center offering inpatient and outpatient care across Virginia Beach, Virginia, Portsmouth, Virginia, Chesapeake, Virginia, and surrounding communities. The hospital is affiliated with academic partners and participates in regional networks, forming part of the healthcare landscape that includes institutions like Eastern Virginia Medical School and Sentara Healthcare.

History

The hospital traces its origins to a group of women associated with the Episcopal Church and civic organizations who established a small facility in the late 19th century, contemporaneous with developments at Johns Hopkins Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital. Early expansions in the 20th century paralleled regional growth tied to the Norfolk Naval Shipyard and Naval Station Norfolk, prompting construction projects and the addition of nursing programs influenced by standards from American Nurses Association and accreditation trends set by The Joint Commission. Mid-century modernization linked the hospital to public health initiatives during the era of the Social Security Act and the growth of Medicare and Medicaid, while late 20th-century cardiology and trauma investments mirrored advances at centers such as Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic. In the 21st century, strategic affiliations with Eastern Virginia Medical School and participation in regional health networks responded to competitive dynamics involving Bon Secours Health System and HCA Healthcare.

Facilities and Campuses

The system operates a flagship acute care campus in Norfolk, Virginia with specialized units, satellite campuses in Virginia Beach, Virginia and Portsmouth, Virginia, and outpatient clinics across Hampton Roads. Facilities include an adult trauma center comparable in scope to regional centers like Riverside Regional Medical Center and specialty units modeled after programs at Children's Hospital of The King's Daughters and other pediatric institutions. The main campus houses surgical suites, intensive care units influenced by practices at Johns Hopkins Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital, and diagnostic centers equipped with imaging technologies similar to those used at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Moffitt Cancer Center for oncology services. The hospital’s infrastructure planning has engaged local stakeholders including Norfolk City Council and regional planners connected to Port of Virginia development.

Services and Specialties

Clinical services span cardiology, oncology, orthopedics, neurology, and women’s health, paralleling programs at centers like Cleveland Clinic and Brigham and Women’s Hospital. The institution operates emergency medicine and trauma services aligned with standards from American College of Surgeons and collaborates with pediatric providers including Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters for neonatal and pediatric care. Surgical specialties encompass minimally invasive procedures informed by device manufacturers and regulatory frameworks associated with the Food and Drug Administration, while outpatient services include primary care, behavioral health, and rehabilitation reflecting models from Kaiser Permanente and community clinics supported by United Way. Subsidiary services include radiology, laboratory medicine, and transplant-related care that coordinate with regional referral centers such as University of Virginia Medical Center and Duke University Hospital for complex cases.

Research, Education, and Affiliations

The hospital maintains educational partnerships with Eastern Virginia Medical School and nursing programs influenced by curricula at University of Virginia School of Nursing and Old Dominion University. Clinical training includes residency rotations and continuing medical education consistent with accreditation from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and licensure bodies like the Virginia Board of Medicine. Research collaborations have involved investigator-initiated studies and registry participation that connect to networks such as the National Institutes of Health and specialty consortia modeled after American Heart Association research networks. The institution participates in quality improvement collaboratives and data-sharing initiatives with regional peers including Sentara Healthcare and Riverside Health System.

Community Outreach and Public Health Programs

Community programs target population health priorities in Hampton Roads, including chronic disease management, maternal-child health, and behavioral health initiatives coordinated with local public agencies such as the Norfolk Department of Public Health and nonprofit partners like the United Way of South Hampton Roads. Outreach includes mobile clinics, vaccination drives tied to public health campaigns from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and partnerships with educational institutions including Norfolk State University and Tidewater Community College for workforce development. The hospital has participated in disaster response planning with the Federal Emergency Management Agency and regional emergency management authorities in exercises linked to Cooperative Agreement frameworks.

Awards, Recognition, and Accreditation

The hospital holds accreditation from The Joint Commission and certifications in specialty care programs consistent with standards from organizations such as the American College of Cardiology and Commission on Cancer. Recognition has come from regional healthcare quality assessments and local publications, and the institution has received awards for nursing excellence reflecting benchmarks from the American Nurses Credentialing Center. Performance metrics have been compared in state reports alongside systems like Bon Secours Health System and Sentara Healthcare, and the hospital participates in national benchmarking initiatives run by entities such as the Leapfrog Group and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

Category:Hospitals in Norfolk, Virginia