Denver (KDVR) – Thursday, Banner Health announced that it was The Makki Medical Center in Lovland At a hospital specializing in the North Colorado Medical Center, on which the Banner MD Anderson Cancer Center is based.
During the summer, Banner Health acquired the initial sponsorship network of Northern Colorado at Village Medical, along with 200 employees. The company said that the transition of the MCKEE Medical Center is the next stage of its plan for the new Banner North Colorado Medical Center.
The university campus will have medical and surgical services for internal and external patients, as well as the rehabilitation of outpatient clinics, the cardiac catheterization laboratory, and the rehabilitation of the heart and interventional radiology, according to Banner Health. The will is also mammogram and specialized care clinics.
Emergency services on the campus will end on November 5, but Banner Health indicated the available emergency services through its network in Greley, Fort Colins, Brush and Sterling. About 10 minutes from the road from the MCKEE Medical Center, there is a Uchealth Medical Center for Rockies in Loverland, which provides emergency services.
On November 5, Banner is also closing the existing emergency department and the urgent ivory center at Greley, pointing to similar signs services available in the North Colorado Medical Center and Banner Health Walking Clinic in Windsor.
The company said that OB/GYN is in its healthy clinic at Summitvief Medical Commons in Greley will also be transferred with the current Banner OB/Gyn services in Laarmer Province. The company’s obstetric service providers in the company will continue to exercise obstetric services at Grilli Hospital and will remain obstetric services at the Internal Patient Hospital in the North Colorado Medical Center.
“The transfer of Banner Maki is driven by societal demand. The sizes of the emergency room in Maki have decreased in all of the past four years and we use only 25 % of our hospital family,” Alan Cowles, CEO of North Colorado Hospitals said in the company’s announcement. “The vast majority – 88 % – of all surgeries that were performed there today are outpatient procedures. We respond to society and benefit from this facility better by setting the priorities of comfortable and accessible health care services.”
Hundreds of employees who must be demobilized in the health of the banner
Banner Health changes will affect 351 employees at the Banner Mckee Medical Center, According to the post warning notice By the state on Thursday. The notification said that the demobilization of workers will be permanent, but many employees will have “the opportunity to continue their work on other logo sites in North Colorado.”
The expected separation date is November 5.
Banner Health said that employees will have a priority to be considered in open positions in the organization, as well as professional advice and other support services. The company said it is employing more than 3,000 people in North Colorado and about 60,000 people across its entire system.
Banner Health said it plans to include new and expanded services and sites, with the details that will be announced in the coming months.
“The North Colorado societies are among the fastest growing growth in the country, and they are planning a banner to make major capital investments in the next three years to better meet health care needs in this region,” Tod Werner, President of Banner, President of Care Welfare, said in a Thursday announcement. “North Colorado is useful for a 10 -year strategic growth plan in Banner, which includes re -imagining a place and how we provide services to update care to use the latest technologies to improve access to costs.”