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Work is underway at new  Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at Rainbow.

University Hospitals unveiled the largest “Campus Transformation” in its 142-year history with a joint ceremonial groundbreaking of its new Cancer Hospital, Center for Emergency Medicine and Marcy R. Horvitz Pediatric Emergency Center, and Quentin & Elisabeth Alexander Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. These new, state-of-the-art facilities are key components of University Hospitals’ Vision 2010 strategic plan.

UH’s Vision 2010 strategic plan is a $1.2 billion investment in Northeast Ohio that will have tremendous impact on the economic health of Northeast Ohio. Construction activities associated with Vision 2010 are projected to create more than 5,200 jobs at the height of construction and generate more than $500 million in wages, salaries and benefits. At the completion of the first full year of operation for each of the Vision 2010 projects, UH anticipates that more than 1,200 new hospital-based jobs will be created. In addition, UH created a historic project labor agreement with the City of Cleveland and the Cleveland Building & Construction Trades Council to keep construction jobs local and to use minority- and female-owned firms

“We continue to celebrate Vision 2010, the largest endeavor that University Hospitals has undertaken in our history,” says Thomas F. Zenty III, CEO of University Hospitals. “The new construction and expansion of current services at UH Case Medical Center and throughout the entire UH health system exemplify our commitment to our patients, physicians and employees as well as the region. Vision 2010 will leave a lasting impression on our community and our health system for decades to come.”

“This Campus Transformation event is truly a celebratory occasion as we progress with the construction of these three instrumental building projects,” said Fred C. Rothstein, MD, President, UHCMC. “Vision 2010 has strengthened our 142-year history of caring for our community and underscored our unwavering commitment to our timeless mission – To Heal. To Teach. To Discover. This day represents the beginning of a new era in health care delivery for University Hospitals Case Medical Center, for our community and for our region. Most importantly, it marks a new day for our patients, whose lives will continue to be transformed each time they seek our care.”

Construction is underway on the new Level III, 82-bed Quentin & Elisabeth Alexander Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital. The NICU, due to open in early 2009, will bring together advanced technology, research and operative services in a homelike environment for newborns and their families.

“Our world renowned neonatologists and neonatal team are capable of caring for newborn babies with the most complex birth defects and other disorders in addition to their expertise with the tiniest preterm infants,” said Avroy Fanaroff, MD, Chairman of Pediatrics at Rainbow. “This new unit will further our longtime commitment to providing state-of-the-art care for all sick newborns in the presence of their families.”

The Difference is made by doctors, nurses and other specialized healthcare professionals who never stop looking for ways to improve lives.

It is where commitment, dedication and cutting-edge technology meet.

Our new Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.

Where the Difference is providing extraordinary care to newborns every day.

The University Hospitals Difference.

Rainbow is ranked #2 in the nation for neonatal care by both
U.S.News & World Report and Parents magazine.

Ranked #2 in the U.S. for neonatal care, Rainbow now has the facilities to match the outstanding care that our most fragile patients receive.

The NICU at Rainbow is widely regarded as an international leader in treating critically-ill babies and extremely low birth weight babies.

The Quentin & Elisabeth Alexander Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at Rainbow Babies opened in the spring of 2009.

The Rainbow NICU Level III unit is designed by the National Institutes of Health as a Neonatal Research Center.
 

The new, 38-bed NICU will bring together advanced technology, research and operative services in a homelike environment for newborns and their families.

Click to watch the NICU Video