Lankenau Medical Center
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox hospital
| Name = Lankenau Medical Center
| Org/Group = Main Line Health
| Image = Lankenau VI.jpg
| image alt =
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| Location = 100 E Lancaster Ave
| Region = Wynnewood
| State = Pennsylvania
| Country = US
| Coordinates = {{coord|39.988|-75.262|region:US-PA_type:landmark|display=title,inline}}
| HealthCare =
| Funding = Non-profit
| Type = Teaching
| Speciality =
| Standards = Joint Commission
| Emergency = Level II Trauma Center
| Helipad = {{Airport codes|||9PA9|p=n}}
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| Beds = 370
| Founded = 1850
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| Website = {{URL|https://www.mainlinehealth.org/lankenau}}
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Lankenau Medical Center, part of Main Line Health, is a 370-bed acute care, teaching hospital in Wynnewood, Pennsylvania.
Lankenau Medical Center's clinical areas include the Lankenau Heart Institute, the gastrointestinal and GI endoscopy program, cancer care services, pulmonology, orthopaedics, obstetrics and maternity, including and a level III neonatal intensive care unit, as well as minimally invasive and robotic surgery. The campus is also home to the Lankenau Institute for Medical Research and the Annenberg Center for Medical Education.{{Cite web |title=Lankenau Medical Center {{!}} Locations |url=https://www.mainlinehealth.org/locations/lankenau-medical-center |access-date=2022-04-05 |website=Main Line Health |language=en}}
History
Initially chartered in 1860 as the German Hospital of Philadelphia, the facility opened in 1866 on Morris Street in North Philadelphia. With the entry of the United States into World War I in 1917, many German institutions took new names. The German Hospital renamed itself Lankenau Hospital after John D. Lankenau, a German-born Philadelphia businessman who had been one of the hospital's first leaders.{{cite news |title=The man behind Lankenau Hospital |url=http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/TODAY-IN-PHILADELPHIA-HISTORY/The-man-behind-Lankenau-Hospital.html?arc404=true |work=Philadelphia Inquirer |date=August 30, 2013}}
The hospital moved to larger facilities at Girard and Corinthian Avenues in North Philadelphia in 1884. In December 1953, Lankenau moved to Wynnewood on the Main Line, occupying the site of the former Overbrook Country Club.
In October 1984, the hospital joined with Bryn Mawr Hospital and the Bryn Mawr Rehabilitation Hospital under a nonprofit umbrella organization, Main Line Health.{{cite news |last1=Ciccarelli |first1=Maura C |title=Meeting New Issues in Health Care |work=Philadelphia Inquirer |date=December 19, 1985|page=M.2}}
In 2010, Main Line began renovating the hospital, adding a 96-bed Heart Pavilion, dedicated to cardiovascular care, a parking garage, and a central utility plant. The expanded facilities were renamed Lankenau Medical Center.{{cite news |last1=Burling |first1=Stacey |title=Lankenau Hospital to start big expansion |url=http://www.philly.com/inquirer/business/20101025_Lankenau_Hospital_to_start_big_expansion.html |work=Philadelphia Inquirer |date=October 25, 2010}}
Notable births, hospitalizations, and deaths
=Births=
- Kobe Bryant, NBA basketball player, August 23, 1978
- Joan Jett, rock musician, September 22, 1958
- Dylan Mark, private credit financer, December 21, 1992
- Madeleine Ezell, international woman of mystery, April 20, 1993
- Jacqueline Susann, novelist, August 20, 1918
- Bryce Young, professional football player, July 25, 2001
=Deaths=
- Bootsie Barnes, jazz musician, April 22, 2020
- J. Pius Barbour, Baptist minister, January 5, 1974
- Tom Brookshier, professional football player, Philadelphia Eagles, January 29, 2010
- Leonard G. Carr, Baptist minister, June 17, 1976
- Joseph J. Hersch, Pennsylvania State Representative, October 17, 1968
- Hub, bassist and musician, December 16, 2021
- Howard Lassoff, American-Israeli basketball player, February 7, 2013
- Jack Ogden, professional baseball player, Cincinnati Reds, November 9, 1977
- David Smyrl, actor, March 22, 2016
- Sally Young, professional bridge player, February 27, 1970
- Flora M. Vare, Pennsylvania State Senator, May 27, 1962
Statistics
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://www.mainlinehealth.org/locations/lankenau-medical-center Lankenau Medical Center website]
- [https://www.mainlinehealth.org/ Main Line Health website]
{{Lower Merion}}
{{Pennsylvania Trauma Centers}}
{{authority control}}
Category:Hospital buildings completed in 1884
Category:Hospital buildings completed in 1953
Category:Hospitals in Pennsylvania
Category:Lower Merion Township, Pennsylvania
Category:Buildings and structures in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania