Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children

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Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children
File:Kapiolani Medical Center Logo.jpg
Geography
Location Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii, United States
Organization
Care system Community
Hospital type Non-profit
Network Hawaii Pacific Health
Services
Emergency department Yes
Beds 207
History
Founded 1978
Links
Website http://www.kapiolani.org
Lists Hospitals in Hawaii
File:Kapiolani Neonatal ICU.jpg
The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at Kapiʻolani Medical Center

Kapiʻolani Medical Center for Women and Children is part of Hawaii Pacific Health's network of hospitals. It is located in Honolulu, Hawaii, within the residential inner city district of Makiki. Kapiʻolani Medical Center is Hawaii's only children's hospital with a team of physicians and nurses and specialized technology trained specifically to care for children, from infants to young adults. It is the state's only 24-hour pediatric emergency room, pediatric intensive care unit and adolescent unit.

The facility was originally founded by Queen Kapiʻolani as the Kapiʻolani Maternity Home in 1890 for which she held bazaars and luaus to raise $8,000 needed to start the Home. It has since changed its name several times. Kauikeolani Children’s Hospital opened in 1909 named for Emma Kauikeolani Napoleon Mahelona (1862–1931), the wife of Albert Spencer Wilcox (1844–1919).[1] In 1978, it merged with Kapiʻolani Hospital to become Kapiʻolani Medical Center for Women and Children.[2][3][4]

It is also notable as the birthplace of Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States.[5][6][7][8][9]

Historical timeline

File:A Woman with a Baby at the Kapiolani Maternity Home.jpg
A woman with a baby at the Kapiolani Maternity Home around the twenty-first anniversary in 1912
A new mother holds her baby who was born 10 weeks premature at Kapiʻolani Medical Center

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  • In 1884, Princess Kekaulike died and willed her home, Ululani, as the site of a proposed maternity home to help Hawaiian mothers.
  • In 1890, after the princess's sister, Queen Kapiʻolani, raised $8,000 through bazaars and luaus, she founded the Kapiʻolani Home of the Hoolu and Hoola Lahui Society (society to propagate and perpetuate the race), located at Beretania and Makiki streets, to provide a maternity home for Hawaiian women. The five-bedroom home was opened on June 14, 1890 by King Kalākaua and Queen Kapiʻolani. Only six babies were born at the home the first year, since local women remained suspicious of doctors and institutions.
  • In 1917, the society purchased the adjacent August Dreier property southeast of Ululani on Beretania Street.
  • In 1918, the home moved to a two-story house with 25 beds at 1538 S. Beretania Street, changed its name to the Kapiʻolani Maternity Home, and opened its doors to women of other than Hawaiian descent.
  • In 1927, the trustees purchased the property of Dr. John Whitney on the southeast corner of Punahou and Bingham streets to build a new maternity home.
  • In 1928, groundbreaking ceremonies for the new maternity home were held on June 28.
  • In 1929, the home moved on March 26 to a new larger building with 50 beds (in twenty-two private rooms, four 2-bedrooms and two wards) located on the southeast corner of Punahou and Bingham streets and expanded its functions to include non-infectious gynecological problems. The original Whitney home was converted to a nurses' home.
  • In 1931, its name was changed to the Kapiʻolani Maternity and Gynecological Hospital.
  • In 1939, after purchasing the adjacent Spalding property south of the hospital on Punahou Street, the Spalding home was converted into a nurses' home named the Kekaulike Nurses' Home.
  • In 1945, the hospital, at 1611 Bingham Street, finished construction of the two-story Ewa wing that doubled its capacity to 110 beds.
  • In 1957, the hospital completed a new and enlarged nursery.
  • In 1961 (August 4), President Barack Obama was born in the hospital.
  • In 1966, the hospital completed a new four-story Lani Ward Booth wing on Punahou Street, with the top two floors left as shells, capacity remained at 110 beds.
  • In 1970, the hospital finished the fourth floor of the Lani Booth wing on Punahou Street, capacity increased to 138 beds.
  • In 1971, its name was changed to Kapiʻolani Hospital.
  • In 1974, the hospital began a major rebuilding project, adding an eleven-story hospital and medical office tower on the southeast corner of Punahou and Bingham Streets, a three-story building, and a parking structure for a combined Kapiʻolani/Children's Medical Center.
  • In 1976, the new tower was dedicated and Kapiʻolani patients were moved to its second and fourth floors.
  • In 1977, a section of the original 1929 building was torn down and tiles from its roof were sold to commemorate the 145,000 babies born under it from 1929 to 1977.

Kauikeolani Children's Hospital[10]

  • In 1908, Albert Spencer Wilcox (1844–1919) gave $55,000 and other private subscribers gave an additional $50,000 to buy several acres of land and erect a two-story comparatively small, homelike children's hospital (with preference originally given to Hawaiian children) at 226 N. Kuakina Street, named after Wilcox's wife, Emma Kauikeolani Napoliean Mahelona (1862–1931). A maternity service was soon after added to the hospital.
  • In 1929, the maternity service at the hospital was discontinued.
  • In 1950, a new, modern two-story hospital building with a capacity of 100 beds replaced the original building.
  • In 1953, the Rehabilitation Center of Hawaii was established by the Kauikeolani Children's Hospital Foundation.
  • In 1969, the rehabilitation center was renamed the Pacific Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine.
  • In 1975, the rehabilitation center separated from Kauikeolani Children's Hospital to become the independent Rehabilitation Hospital of the Pacific, which expanded into the 1950 Kauikeolani Children's Hospital building after the latter relocated to Kapiʻolani/Children's Medical Center on September 15, 1978.

Kapiʻolani Medical Center for Women and Children[10]

  • In 1976, Kapiʻolani Hospital and Kauikenolani Children's Hospital began a protracted, decade-long merger.
  • In 1978, Kauikeolani Children's Hospital moved into the new eleven-story (226-bed, 108-bassinet) Kapiʻolani/Children's Medical Center tower located at 1319 Punahou Street on the southeast corner of Punahou and Bingham streets—initially with separate entrances for the pediatricians on Bingham Street and the obstetricians on Punahou Street.
  • In 1984, the medical staffs and board of directors of the two former hospitals were merged.
  • In 1986, the two former hospitals formally completed their merger.
  • In 1989, Kapiʻolani purchased for $76 million the new 116-bed Pali Momi Medical Center in Aiea, built by Health Care International, six months after it opened.
  • In 2001, Kapiʻolani Medical Center for Women and Children and Kapiʻolani Medical Center at Pali Momi in Aiea merged with Wilcox Memorial Hospital in Lihue on the Hawaiian island of Kauai (founded in 1938) and the Straub Clinic & Hospital (founded in 1921) on King Street, under a new parent company, Hawaii Pacific Health.

References

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External links