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Providence Holy Cross Medical Center

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Providence Holy Cross Medical Center
NameProvidence Holy Cross Medical Center
LocationMission Hills, Los Angeles, California
CountryUnited States
HealthcarePrivate
TypeAcute care, teaching
EmergencyLevel II
Beds377
Founded1961
Org/groupProvidence

Providence Holy Cross Medical Center Providence Holy Cross Medical Center is an acute care hospital located in Mission Hills, Los Angeles, with 377 licensed beds and a Level II trauma center designation. Established in 1961, the institution operates within the Providence health system and serves the San Fernando Valley and northern Los Angeles communities. The hospital maintains clinical partnerships and educational affiliations that link it to broader networks in California and the United States.

History

The hospital opened in 1961 amid regional growth in the San Fernando Valley, contemporaneous with developments at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Kaiser Permanente, UCLA Medical Center, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, and Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. Its founding reflected postwar suburban expansion similar to projects at St. Vincent Medical Center (Los Angeles), Good Samaritan Hospital (Los Angeles), Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center, Huntington Memorial Hospital, and Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center. Over decades the center adapted to healthcare trends influenced by regulatory milestones such as the Hill–Burton Act, policy shifts following the Medicare and Medicaid enactments, and regional population changes driven by factors linked to Interstate 405 (California), Interstate 5, and the growth of Los Angeles International Airport. The medical center navigated mergers and system consolidations akin to movements involving Dignity Health, Sutter Health, Tenet Healthcare, AdventHealth, and HCA Healthcare before becoming part of the Providence system. The institution expanded services in response to medical advances exemplified by procedures developed at Massachusetts General Hospital, research at Johns Hopkins Hospital, and clinical trials modeled after protocols from Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, and Stanford Health Care.

Facilities and Services

The campus comprises inpatient towers, an emergency department, intensive care units, surgical suites, and outpatient clinics, paralleling facilities found at UCLA Mattel Children's Hospital, Keck Hospital of USC, Stanford Hospital, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Mount Sinai Hospital (New York City). Diagnostic capabilities include advanced imaging modalities similar to units at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Dana–Farber Cancer Institute, and Tennessee Valley Healthcare System Medical Center. Surgical services incorporate minimally invasive and robotic platforms developed in collaboration with vendors and academic centers such as Intuitive Surgical, research at MIT, and surgical programs at Cleveland Clinic and Johns Hopkins Hospital. The emergency department serves as a regional hub analogous to high-volume centers like Los Angeles County+USC Medical Center, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Emergency Department, and Mount Sinai Beth Israel.

Patient Care and Specialties

Clinical programs emphasize cardiology, oncology, orthopedics, neurosurgery, obstetrics and gynecology, and emergency medicine, aligning services with standards set at Mayo Clinic Hospital, Cleveland Clinic Heart and Vascular Institute, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Orthopaedic Hospital (Los Angeles), and Barrow Neurological Institute. Cardiac care includes interventional cardiology procedures influenced by protocols from St. Francis Hospital (Hartford), electrophysiology modeled after Mayo Clinic, and cardiac surgery paralleled to programs at Cleveland Clinic. Oncology services coordinate with regional cancer networks and mirror multidisciplinary approaches used at UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, City of Hope, and MD Anderson Cancer Center. Obstetric services follow patient-safety frameworks used by American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists-aligned institutions and training sites like Cedars-Sinai and Children's Hospital Los Angeles. Rehabilitation and outpatient specialty clinics are comparable to offerings at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Shirley Ryan AbilityLab, and Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago.

Accreditation and Quality Measures

The hospital holds accreditation and licensing consistent with standards set by The Joint Commission, state regulators such as the California Department of Public Health, and federal programs tied to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Quality programs reference benchmarking systems used by National Quality Forum, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and measurement frameworks comparable to Leapfrog Group and Baldrige Performance Excellence Program participants. Performance metrics include readmission rates, infection control statistics, patient-safety indicators, and outcomes reporting in alignment with reporting systems utilized by CMS Hospital Compare and regional collaboratives modeled after Institute for Healthcare Improvement initiatives. Cardiac, stroke, and trauma programs conform to guidelines from American Heart Association, American Stroke Association, and American College of Surgeons verification processes.

Community Outreach and Education

Community programs focus on preventive care, screening, and health education coordinated with local agencies and nonprofits such as Los Angeles County Department of Health Services, American Cancer Society, American Heart Association, March of Dimes, and community clinics in the San Fernando Valley. The medical center partners with medical schools and residency programs comparable to affiliations with Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Keck School of Medicine of USC, and nursing programs at California State University, Northridge. Educational outreach includes public seminars, screening events, and community health fairs resembling initiatives led by Harvard Medical School affiliates and major urban hospitals. Volunteer and philanthropic activities engage foundations and donor networks similar to those supporting Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, City of Hope, and Children's Hospital Los Angeles.

Governance and Affiliations

Owned and operated within the Providence system, the medical center's governance aligns with networks that include academic partnerships and clinical affiliations similar to arrangements seen at Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center, Providence Little Company of Mary Medical Center, and other Providence hospitals. Executive leadership and medical staff governance follow structures present at integrated systems like Partners HealthCare, Kaiser Permanente, Sutter Health, and CommonSpirit Health. The hospital participates in regional emergency preparedness collaboratives and health information exchanges consistent with initiatives involving Los Angeles County Emergency Medical Services, California Health and Human Services Agency, and interoperability projects inspired by Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology.

Category:Hospitals in Los Angeles