新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Health on Friday (Feb. 26) launched the planning and environmental review process to rebuild and expand 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Medical Center. The project would add beds and private rooms while addressing state earthquake safety mandates, removing facilities that no longer comply and replacing them with a 16-story hospital building and five-story pavilion.
Planning and design for the $3.75 billion project is expected to take three years, with early construction efforts starting in late 2021 and project completion in 2030.
新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis plans to solicit extensive community input on the planned California Tower, including surrounding open space areas and opportunities for neighborhood connectivity with the campus, through a university-led outreach process modeled on the one the city of Sacramento and 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis are jointly conducting for innovation district.
For Aggie Square, 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis and developer Wexford Science + Technology are in the final stages of negotiating with the city on an extensive agreement detailing the community benefits partnership that will spell out the ways that construction and operation of the $1.1 billion district will help people in the nearby communities.
The agreement will outline the commitments of 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis, Wexford and the city to provide jobs, job training, affordable housing, better transportation options and youth education. 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis plans to conduct similar outreach as part of the planning for the medical center project, including the creation of an advisory committee comprising neighborhood representatives.
鈥淲e will build on the partnerships emerging at Aggie Square with our city leadership and our neighbors,鈥 said Hendry Ton, associate vice chancellor for Health Equity, Diversity and Inclusion. 鈥淲e鈥檙e re-envisioning our role as a traditional health provider to one that encompasses the full context of health equity.鈥
Rooms of the future
When completed, the expanded hospital would contain 700 licensed beds, up from 625 today. But the hospital鈥檚 square footage would nearly double to accommodate more private rooms 鈥 approximately 400 in the new tower; single-patient rooms, officials said, enhance recovery and healing, and help reduce infection transmission.
Also, a greater number of rooms would be acuity-adaptable, meaning they would be designed as intensive-care-unit-capable rooms with air isolation so that they could be used to care for patients of any acuity level, should a surge in critical care cases arise, such as during a pandemic, massive wildfire or radiation leak.
In addition, rooms would be embedded with, and designed for, the latest technologies, easily enabling rooms to accommodate medical and surgery patients if needed. The adaptability of the patient rooms to meet a critical care surge means the new facilities 鈥 with the potential for creating 450 ICU rooms 鈥 would be positioned to meet regional needs for the next 50 years.
鈥楿nique planning鈥
鈥淲hile there is an overall reduction in the need for hospital beds across the region, we are uniquely planning for more beds,鈥 said David Lubarsky, CEO of 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Health and vice chancellor of Human Health. 鈥淚n the not-too-distant future, fewer people per capita will need to be hospitalized, due to evolving health technologies, same-day surgeries, telehealth visits and being able to remotely monitor a patient鈥檚 vital signs.
鈥淟ow-acuity care in the inpatient arena will virtually disappear over the next decade. However, those individuals who do require hospitalization will likely require longer stays for complex surgeries or other critical care services, such as trauma care, that we provide.
鈥淲e will continue to work with community hospital partners to increase the level and amount of care they provide locally while we concentrate on patients that require advanced technologies and coordinated subspecialists available in an academic center, and which leads to the superior outcomes we deliver in those cases.鈥
Officials noted 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Medical Center鈥檚 historic role in caring for underserved communities and the most vulnerable populations, especially in terms of providing specialty, in-patient hospital services. At this time, Medi-Cal patients comprise 41 percent of the medical center鈥檚 inpatient work.
The core of our everyday mission is to increase the health of the community overall. That includes ensuring a robust health care safety net for historically marginalized populations, officials said.
Planned footprint
The new tower would be built on existing parking areas at the corner of 45th and X streets, and would fit within the medical center鈥檚 planned footprint. Two helipads are planned for emergency cases and patient transfers, bringing to four the number of helipads at the medical center.
Part of the need for the new facilities is the forced closure and demolition of older portions of the medical center that do not meet the state鈥檚 2020 and 2030 seismic safety requirements. Demolition of the 1950s-era north and south hospital wings, whose nine-story profiles can be seen from Stockton Boulevard, is slated to be completed in 2030.
Health system officials expect the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Board of Regents to consider the project later this year. Some initial drawings have been created for illustration purposes, but design work is just now starting.
Improving health for all
Along with improving 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis鈥 workforce development programs and partnering with other businesses and community groups, the California Tower project is expected to create hundreds of prevailing wage construction jobs and thousands of new health care positions for the surrounding community, a benefit of being home to an anchor institution like 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Medical Center. the health system campus.
Place-based and mission-driven, anchor institutions represent stable, long-lasting centers of employment and services within the fabric of a city. These anchor institutions can leverage economic power alongside human and intellectual resources to improve the long-term health and social welfare of surrounding communities.
With the project creating hundreds of construction jobs, as well as tapping local vendors and suppliers for materials, California Tower will bring an economic boost to the Sacramento area. Once completed, the expanded medical center will permanently employ clinical professionals and skilled employees alike.
New job training programs for the local community are planned as part of the project 鈥 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Health has already added 1,500 mostly union jobs in just the last three years and is committed to making sure those employment benefits clearly extend to local applicants. The new jobs and local investment can help address historic impediments caused by poverty and discrimination, both of which are associated with reduced access to safe environments and good health.
鈥淲e recognize that significant disparities and inequities in health outcomes exist for Sacramento鈥檚 underserved communities,鈥 Lubarsky said. 鈥淭he new California Tower will clearly benefit hospital patients. But it also can help address the social determinants of health, inequities that have for far too long placed residents and families living in the neighborhoods near 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Medical Center at higher risk of poor health and fewer opportunities for improving their quality of life.
鈥淯plifting the economic trajectory of the people in the communities around us through this building project and its subsequent operation will provide resources necessary for those currently underserved to achieve better health鈥
More information
新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis released its notice of preparation Friday (Feb. 26), indicating the health system is preparing an environmental impact report, or EIR, for the California Tower project. A virtual forum is scheduled from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 17, to brief interested parties on the scope of the project and obtain the views of agency representatives and the public on the scope and content of the draft EIR and potentially significant environmental impacts related to the project.
新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Health will work with local government officials and community groups to host other public forums during the planning process.
Media Resources
Charles Casey, 916-734-9048, charles.casey@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu