Catholic Health Initiatives

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File:CHI Building.jpg
This is the Catholic Health Initiatives headquarters in Inverness, CO.
File:Living Our Mission.jpg
This collection of images and text describes how we live our mission every day at Catholic Health Initiatives.
File:Legacy Tapestry.jpg
This Legacy Tapestry was created in 2010 by Lynda Teller Pete using Navajo symbols. The tapestry represents Catholic Health Initiatives' mission.

Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) is a national nonprofit health system with headquarters in Englewood, Colorado. CHI is a nonprofit, faith-based health system formed in 1996 through the consolidation of four Catholic health systems. It is one of the nation’s largest healthcare systems.

History

CHI began operation July 1, 1996.

The founding systems were the following:

  • Catholic Health Corporation of Omaha, NE
  • Franciscan Health System of Aston, PA
  • Sisters of Charity Health Care Systems of Cincinnati, OH

In September 1997, The Sisters of Charity of Nazareth Health System, Nazareth, KY, consolidated with Catholic Health Initiatives, adding nine acute care facilities in three states to the system.

Scope and size

Colorado-based CHI is one of the nation’s largest health systems, operating in 19 states and comprising 105 hospitals, including four academic health centers and major teaching hospitals and 30 critical-access facilities; community health-services organizations; accredited nursing colleges; home-health agencies; and other facilities that span the inpatient and outpatient continuum of care.

In fiscal year 2014, CHI provided $910 million in charity care and community benefit - a nearly 20% increase over the previous year - for programs and services for the poor, free clinics, education and research. Charity care and community benefit totaled more than $1.7 billion with the inclusion of the unpaid costs of Medicare. The health system, which generated revenues of almost $13.9 billion (FY 2014), has total assets of $21.8 billion.

Controversy

In January 2013, the hospital provoked controversy by arguing in a defense to a wrongful death lawsuit that unborn fetuses should not be classed as persons, contradicting official Catholic doctrine.[1] The hospital association does not have any active priests on its board and the president of the board, Fr. Thomas Kopfensteiner, has argued positions tolerant of abortion against Catholic teaching in the past.[1]

Divisions

  • St. Vincent Infirmary, Little Rock, Arkansas
  • Centura Health, Englewood, Colorado (partnership with Adventist Health System)
  • Mercy Health Network, Des Moines, Iowa (partnership with Trinity Health))
  • KentuckyOne Health, Louisville, Kentucky
  • Minnesota hospitals
    • Lakewood Health Center, Baudette, Minnesota
    • St. Francis Medical Center, Breckenridge, Minnesota
    • St. Joseph's Area Health Services, Park Rapids, Minnesota
    • St. Gabriel's Hospital, Little Falls, Minnesota
  • CHI Health, Omaha, Nebraska
  • Saint Claire's Health System, Denville, New Jersey
  • North Dakota hospitals
  • Premier Health Partners, Dayton, Ohio (partnership)
  • Sylvania Franciscan Health, Toledo, Ohio
  • TriHealth, Cincinnati, Ohio (partnership with Bethesda Inc.)
  • Oregon hospitals
  • Pennsylvania hospitals
  • Memorial Hospital, Chattanooga, Tennessee
  • St. Luke's Health, Houston, Texas
  • CHI Franciscan Health, Tacoma, Washington

References

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External links