Carraway Methodist Medical Center is a medical facility in Birmingham, Alabama that was founded as Carraway Infirmary in 1908 by Dr. Charles N. Carraway. It was moved in 1917 to the Norwood neighborhood in Birmingham. The facility is separated by color for most of its history and, in one instance, the facility refused emergency treatment to James Peck, a wounded white civil rights activist who had been brutally beaten for being a Freedom Rider. The hospital is three miles from St. John's. Vincent's. It flourished in the 1950s and 1960s and experienced financial difficulties in the 2000s, declaring bankruptcy and closure in 2008.
Throughout its history, Carraway Methodist Medical Center is a speed controller. In the 1980s, the facility added the only Trauma Center Level 1, 3 LifeSaver Helicopters, a department of hyperbaric oxygen therapy, a wound care center, laser center, the first Sleep Center in this area, among many others. innovative addition. Lifesaver, the first medical helicopter service in Alabama, occurred because Carraway found many patients in 1978 could not go to Birmingham high-rise hospital. So in 1981, he brought Lifesaver along with a trauma center. The helicopter program carries 30,000 patients as part of Carraway hospital, and is one of only 5 percent of emergency flight programs in the country that puts doctors on every flight.
CN Carraway continued until the original organization was sold in bankruptcy. "When you get sick, you want the administration to be compassionate like nurses, caregivers, and doctors, so administration is not just about the bottom line," said Robert Carraway, grandson of CN Carraway.
Video Carraway Methodist Medical Center
History
Charles N. Carraway founded the hospital in 1908, at a home in Pratt City, now a neighborhood in Birmingham, with the capacity to care for 16 patients. Carraway is an innovator in many ways: "Carraway finances a new facility by inviting the Birmingham business to agree to pay $ 1 per month per employee, or $ 1.25 per family, for maintenance, which is managed care before managed care even has a name." In 1917, Carraway bought a lot at the corner of Sixteenth Avenue and Twenty-fifth Street, in the Norwood neighborhood, and moved the hospital, later called Norwood Hospital. In 1949, the hospital received $ 200,000 in federal money to add breastfeeding wings.
Son Carraway, Dr. Ben Carraway, took over in 1957, when it was called Carraway Methodist. He upgraded the hospital from 256 beds to 617. A Christmas star placed on the roof in 1958 became a famous Birmingham landmark.
The hospital had financial difficulties in the early 2000s. At that time, it was run by the founding grandson, Dr. Robert Carraway. According to The Birmingham News, two factors are responsible for the institution's financial decline: the environmental decay of Norwood and the "decade of decisions that support patient care on earnings." Hospital leaders make unsuccessful investments, do not adjust staffing or service placements to adjust for reduced patient volume, or adequately respond to the rapidly changing healthcare delivery environment of the day. It closed on October 31, 2008. In 2009, the facility was considered a new home for 340 patients at Bryce Hospital in Tuscaloosa.
In 2011, The Lovelady Center, a nonprofit women rehabilitation center, purchased a hospital property and named it "Metro Plaza."
Maps Carraway Methodist Medical Center
Famous incidents and patients
Much of Carraway's history occurs during segregation, which "dictates [almost] every element of the Birmingham race relationship." An important incident involving a separate hospital when it occurred in May 1961, when the staff refused entry to James Peck, a Freedom Rider who had been beaten by Clan members after getting off the Trailways bus, the second bus with Freedom Riders left Atlanta, Georgia; he was later admitted to Jefferson Hillman Hospital. The hospital segregational policy is also given in fictional prose, in Anthony Grooms 2001 novel Bombingham. In 1968, the hospital was racially integrated; a famous patient in 1968 was Robert Edward Chambliss, who was convicted in 1977 for the bombing of 16th Street Street Baptist 1963. In the 1970s, allegations of racial preference, such as hiring practices, were conducted against hospitals.
In April 1998, several Jefferson County F5 tornado victims were sent to Carraway and remained there until recovery.
Carraway has worked with Talladega Speedway for decades, providing medical care during car racing events such as Alabama 500 and Talladega 500.
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia