Cerro Gordo County Iowa
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The Globe Gazette
[Section 8, Page 6] It is largely through the teachings of the church that such institutions as the
St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital in Mason City have developed. The initial building of the Mercy Hospital provided 120 beds.
It was opened Dec. 9, 1915, by Sisters from the Motherhouse in Dubuque, Mother Agnes coming with Sister Mary Vitalis,
Sister Mary Catherine and Sister Mary Stanislaus. The school of nursing was opened Sept. 27, 1916, in charge of
Sister Mary Thaddeus. The first graduation was held Dec. 12, 1918. The hospital has added to its equipment through
the years. The nurses residence and educational building was erected in 1925. A new wing was added to the hospital
in 1941, increasing the capacity to 211 patient beds and 54 new borns.
Transcription by Sharon R. Becker, January of 2015
Globe Gazette
Mercy celebrates 100 years in Mason City by Mary Pieper
MASON CITY — Mercy Medical Center-North Iowa was founded 100 years ago after an order of nuns responded to a request from Mason City residents and the medical community for a large, modern hospital.
The hospital has grown tremendously over the past century, but one thing has remained the same, according to CEO Dan Varnum.
“We continue to be a faith-based organization,” he said. “We are honored to carry on the legacy of the Sisters of Mercy.”
In 1913 Mason City Mayor Truman Addison Potter traveled to the mother house for the Sisters of Mercy in Dubuque, an order devoted to caring for the sick, to make the request for a hospital in his community.
Members of the order go wherever “there are needs to be met,” said Sister Corita Heid, who served as CEO at Mercy in Mason City from 1977 to 1981.
By 1913 the Sisters of Mercy had already established hospitals in Dubuque, Waverly, Fort Dodge and Cresco. They responded to the call from Mason City and agreed to establish a hospital here as well.
The building, originally called St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, opened in early 1914. Built for $200,000, the hospital measured 143 feet by 100 feet [and provided 120 patient beds].
Today the hospital operates two campuses in Mason City and employs 2,600 people across its network, which includes hospitals and health centers in Algona, Britt, Cresco, Emmetsburg, Hampton, Iowa Falls, New Hampton and Osage, as well as many clinics throughout North Iowa.
Last year Mercy admitted more than 12,000 patients and treated nearly 500,000 people as outpatients.
The emergency room at the Mercy East Campus in Mason City, which had just two rooms in 1916, now has 19 rooms. More than 30,000 people a year are treated in the ER.
The changes in health care over the years, including a “startling number” of new regulations, “always create new challenges for us,” Varnum said. “But with the changes come new opportunities as well.”
Today the emphasis in health care is on prevention, according to Varnum. He said Mercy now has 30 health coaches who work with people to help keep them out of the hospital.
Varnum, who has been the CEO at Mercy since September 2012, said the biggest challenge during his time at the hospital was the death of three colleagues in the Mercy Air Med helicopter crash near Ventura on Jan. 2, 2013.
The crash was “just devastating to the entire Mercy family,” he said.
Varnum said one exciting thing about Mercy people don’t know about is the graduate medical education the hospital does. Being an educational facility “keeps us on the leading edge,” he said.
Mercy currently has 18 family medicine residents. When it is full the internal medicine residency program has nine people. Mercy also has seven cardiology fellows.
“We are training doctors as well as practicing medicine,” Varnum said. Medical students from Des Moines University and the University of Iowa frequently are in the hallways at Mercy.
Heid said the educational programs take a huge commitment on the part of the Mercy physicians who provide the training.
Heid was the last Sister of Mercy to serve as CEO at the Mason City hospital. After that she served on the hospital’s board of directors, and is now on the regional board for Iowa Mercy hospitals.
She said employees are trained to follow the legacy of the Sisters of Mercy so their spirit will continue.
Varnum noted the Mason City market ranks 24th out of 306 health markets in the United States, according to the Commonwealth Fund, which does scorecards for health care performance.
“We are so blessed in a community of 28,000 people to have a health care organization with this size and stature and breadth of medical specialties and capabilities,” he said.
Mercy Medical Center-North Iowa is having a 100th anniversary celebration on Sept. 16.
The event will include an open house dessert reception and historical displays from 2 to 4 p.m. in the East Campus Auditorium at 100 Fourth St. S.W.
1916 — St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Mason City is completed [September 27]. The cost of the 120-bed facility is $200,000.
1923 — A separate residence for the St. Joseph Mercy School of Nursing is completed.
1941 — A new, six-story south wing is completed at a cost of $260,000, bringing the capacity of St. Joseph Mercy to 200 patient beds.
1956 — A new east wing is completed for $2 million.
1960 — McAuley Hall is built to accommodate 48 additional resident student nurses and modern teaching facilities.
1967 — St. Joseph Mercy’s School of Nursing closes after North Iowa Area Community College officials say the college would begin offering an associate degree in nursing program. 1976 — A major renovation project is completed. St. Joseph Mercy Hospital now has 312 beds and is updated with the most modern equipment. 1979 — The Forest Park Medical Building is completed on the St. Joseph Mercy campus. 1993 — St. Joseph Mercy Hospital merges with the North Iowa Medical Center on North Eisenhower Avenue, which was established as Park Hospital in 1908. The name of the merged hospital is changed to North Iowa Mercy Health Center. The former North Iowa Medical Center site is now Mercy’s West Campus. 1999 — North Iowa Mercy Health Center’s name is changed to Mercy Medical Center-North Iowa.
Photographs courtesy of Globe Gazette
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