Current Issue Past Issues Search Articles
The Buzz Problem Solver Business Basics Real Estate Shop Talk Marketing/Money Matters Front & Center After Hours
Introduction Communities Business Resources & Groups Transportation & Utilities Hospitals & Higher Education Media Government
Gulfshore Business Update Address/Phone Gulfshore Business Daily
   e-newsletter
Gulfshore Business
About the Magazine Contact Us Employment
/ Home / Articles / Gulfshore Business / 2004 / 03 /
search
 
 
 

 
Tools

Printer-Friendly Print this page
Email This Email to a Friend
Digg This Digg This Article
Subscribe to Gulfshore Business Subscribe to Gulfshore Business
 
eBrochures
» View all eBrochures

Good Medicine

By: Phil Borchmann


Cape Coral Hospital Answers the Community's Health-Care and Economic Needs

A view of Cape Coral Hospital provides a picture of community health. The white, five-story building on Del Prado Boulevard visually distinguishes itself as a major medical and economic presence, offering a sense of security for those who pass by.

"It gives the community an anchor and access to health care," says Wendy Piascik, the hospital's vice president of patient care services. "People believe it's their hometown hospital."

Cape Coral Hospital opened in 1977 as a private, not-for-profit organization spearheaded by community leaders and local physicians. They felt residents of the Cape, North Fort Myers and Pine Island needed a hospital closer by, on the west side of the Caloosahatchee River, where growth was obviously headed.

The hospital's organizational structure lasted until about eight years ago when it was bought, following a period of financial difficulty, by Lee Memorial Health System in Fort Myers. Today, the operation is stronger than ever, and that's good news for patients.

The 281-bed, acute-care facility provides an array of ser-vices, including rehabilitation, pediatrics, obstetrics, oncology, general surgery, urology, endocrinology and gastroenter-ology. The hospital has the area's largest and busiest emergency department, and it is a state-designated, primary hospital to provide care in the case of a weapons of mass destruction event. She hopes it's never used in response to a major catastrophe, but it's there, says Piascik, "protecting the citizens of the community."

Aside from its health-care role, Cape Coral Hospital contributes to the economy. There are 1,355 employees, with an annual payroll of $51.3 million, making it the third largest employer in the Cape, behind the school system and the city.

Several medical-related service businesses have opened near the hospital and other Cape locations. And as the population grows, the hospital is expected to follow suit through expansion or new construction, Piascik says.

Beyond the dollars the facility funnels into the community, it's also an asset when it comes to promoting Cape Coral. "When we have a new investor or resident coming in, that's one of the necessary incentives," says Mike Quaintance, president of Cape Coral's Chamber of Commerce. "Without it, I think, Cape Coral would not be as successful."

There was a time when Cape Coral Hospital almost went away, at least in name. And that created quite a stir in town, Quaintance says. It was on the sale block and people feared it would be purchased by a chain operation and then re-branded.

But Lee Memorial dashed those fears when it purchased the operation.

Piascik, who started with the hospital a few years ago, was won over by its presence when she looked into the job. "The thing that impresses me is the very strong sense of community and people that the hospital have," she says. "It has maintained its compassionate feel for people coming here."

-Phil Borchmann