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What Should I Know About Sharon Regional Medical Center?

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Sharon Regional Medical Center is your community healthcare provider; a 163 licensed, acute care bed hospital with 19 satellite centers throughout the region. As a Joint Commission accredited hospital, Sharon Regional Medical Center proudly offers specialized services including the Heart and Vascular Center, emergency heart attack/stroke treatment, weight loss center, orthopedics/sports medicine, minimally invasive surgery, emergency care, and a breast care center.

We believe in the power of people to create great care. Our dedicated employees work hard every day to make Sharon Regional Medical Center a place of healing, caring, and connection for patients and families in the community we call home.

Sharon Regional Medical Center is conveniently located in northwestern Pennsylvania, midway between Pittsburgh, Erie, and Cleveland, Ohio.

Our Mission

Our mission is to provide convenient, compassionate, advanced healthcare services to all communities within our region. Our Vision: Our vision is to be the first choice in the region for the highest quality healthcare delivered with exceptional service to our patients and our communities.

Awards and Accreditations

The following organizations, accreditations and associations have endorsed us as a quality healthcare provider.

  • Gold Seal of Approval for Hospital Accreditation, The Joint Commission
  • Top Performer on Key Quality Measures, Joint Commission
  • Blue Distinction® Centers+ for Bariatric Surgery, Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield 
  • Chest Pain Center, American College of Cardiology
  • Advanced Primary Stroke Center, The Joint Commission
  • Get with the Guidelines Platinum Performance Achievement Award, American College of Cardiology & the American Heart Association
  • Get With The Guidelines- Stroke GOLD PLUS with Target: Type 2 Diabetes Honor Roll 
  • Breast Imaging Center of Excellence, American College of Radiology
  • CT, MRI, Ultrasound, and Nuclear Medicine Accreditation, American College of Radiology
  • Nuclear Cardiology and Echo Cardiography, International Accreditation Commission
  • 96% Pass Rate: School of Nursing, National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses
  • Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Accreditation and Quality Improvement Program (MBSAQIP), American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery

Our History

Sharon Regional Medical Center has played a major role in the community since its inception 124 years ago. Today, we are proud to have developed a multifaceted array of medical, health, and community services usually found only at institutions in much larger cities.

The Need for Health Care Services

In the late 1800s, the citizens of Sharon, Pennsylvania desperately needed the health care services that only a hospital can provide. Many residents were suffering from diseases caused by a lack of sanitation in the Shenango Valley. Diseases such as diphtheria, smallpox, pneumonia, typhoid, tuberculosis, and pleurisy claimed many lives during this time. The community also had many surgical needs, frequently from industrial accidents and some from cancer.

Breaking Ground Hospital

The Sharon community helped found the facility that later became Sharon Regional Medical Center. On May 8, 1893, with a population of 7,000 people, the foundation for the Sharon and Sharpsville Charitable Hospital was incorporated.

Co-founders of the hospital were Dr. Elisha Griswold, Dr. Charles Hoyt, Dr. Joseph H. Reed, and Dr. Salem Heilman, along with William Wallis, John C. Owsley, Joseph Forker, Earl A. Wheeler, John Bert, and Luther A. Burrell. The original hospital building cost less than $40,000, with 80 percent funded by the community and 20 percent by the state.

On May 5, 1896, three days before the hospital was scheduled to open, the board changed the name to Christian H. Buhl Hospital. Buhl, a Detroit native, was credited with investing much in the Shenango Valley. All the hospital's linens were quickly marked accordingly before the grand opening that featured Pennsylvania Governor Hastings.

The Valley's first hospital opened on May 8, 1896 and was located on Silver Street between Shenango and Vine avenues.

Christian H. Buhl Hospital

The Sharon Herald described the new facility as "a cracker box of red brick." The original building was three-stories without a basement and featured one operating room and 18 patient beds. Patients paid $5 for their room.

By 1901, an addition was completed to the rear of the building. In 1903, two patient wards were also added. These wards featured 12 patient rooms, two large wards and two small wards, and required eight on-duty nurses at a time.

Nurses lived on the third floor and worked 10-12 hour shifts before taking night classes from the medical staff. Nurses initially earned $8 a month and furnished their own books and uniforms. A home for the nurses was built in 1917 with funds from the estate of Peter L. Kimberly.

Among the early community doctors who used the hospital were Dr. Griswold, Dr. Heilman, Dr. Reed, Dr. Hoyt, all of Sharon; Dr. Livingston and Dr. Hillier, both of West Middlesex; and Dr. Twitmyer, of Sharpsville. The Sharon Herald also indicates that the Valley's first female doctor, Phoebe Brooks, was not at first welcomed in the Women's Ward.

By 1927, the 108-bed hospital offered the community services in general medicine, general surgery, diabetes, gynecology and obstetrics, orthopedics, otolaryngology, pediatrics and syphilis. Daily rates for patients were $4-$7 for a private room and $3.50 for a bed in a ward. The average daily number of patients was 58. There were two doctors on the resident staff, 21 on the attending staff and 20 on the courtesy staff. The hospital had 33 support staff member.

Patients with contagious, mental and chronic diseases were not admitted to the hospital. Those with contagious diseases were taken to a house on the edge of town known as the isolation ward.

Hospital Improvements through the Years

During the four years preceding 1943, the hospital's 50th anniversary, $490,000 was spent to better equip the facility for increased demands from war workers, soldiers and their families. More than a dozen physicians served in the military including Capt. George Wassell, flight surgeon and captain in the Army Air Forces who was killed in a 1942 airplane crash in England.

  • 1939 - $145,314 was raised from community donations for a new addition. This addition included a remodeled third floor and a new fourth floor maternity department.
  • 1942 - 1,438 babies were born at the hospital, which was an 18 percent increase from the previous year.
  • 1949 - The hospital was renamed Shenango Valley General Hospital but the name was never formally adopted. The Board of Directors opted to name the facility Sharon General Hospital. That year the average daily census was 188 and the cost per patient day was $12.50.
  • 1958 - The $1.25 million north addition was completed.
  • 1963 - A psychiatric unit was added.
  • 1968 - An intensive/coronary care center was added, increasing hospital capacity to 292-beds.
  • 1979 - A $17 million expansion program began. The program included the construction of a 6-story, 111,179 square-foot addition to the hospital's west side, as well as the renovation of 77,500 square feet in the original building.
  • 1985 - The modernization and expansion project was completed.
  • 1986 - Corporate Health Services, a comprehensive occupational medicine program, was founded to better meet the needs of the corporate community.
  • 1988 - Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) technology was added as well as a 40-bed Skilled Care Center. The 4th floor was also renovated to relocate an expanded Behavioral Health Center.

 

Becoming Sharon Regional Medical Center

On May 15, 1990, Sharon General Hospital was renamed Sharon Regional Medical Center. The change more accurately described the growth in health care services and technological capabilities offered by the hospital and its numerous centers throughout the region.

Under the new name, new programs were also born. These programs included a 19-bed inpatient physical medicine and rehabilitation unit, a 12-bed inpatient child/adolescent psychiatric unit, a speech therapy department, a pain management program and an expanded occupational therapy services.

In 1991 Sharon Regional Medical Center established a heart care center that brought cardiac diagnostic, treatment and rehabilitative services into one newly remodeled facility on the second floor of the hospital. This Center continued to experience rapid growth throughout the decade. Opened in the summer of 2000, The Heart and Vascular Center brought open heart surgery capabilities along with angioplasty, stenting and a second cardiac catheterization lab to Sharon Regional Health System.

Today and Tomorrow

Sharon Regional Medical Center has provided health care services to the region for more than 124 years. The hospital and healthcare system consists of a 184-bed Joint Commission-accredited hospital, along with satellite centers in Sharon, Hermitage, and Mercer PA and Brookfield and Hubbard, OH. Sharon Regional offers specialized services in behavioral health, breast care, weight loss center , diabetes, emergency care (featuring Mercer County’s only certified chest pain center, primary stroke center, open heart/angioplasty/heart care center), sleep medicine, sports medicine, a school of nursing, and a wound recovery & hyperbaric medicine.