Sixth floor to add 60 beds to Florida Hospital
The Florida Hospital Waterman location in Tavares is planning to add 60 more on its sixth floor when construction on that floor is completed within the next few weeks.
The Florida Hospital has its main campus in Orlando, Florida and additional locations in the counties of Osceola, Seminole and Orange. It is no doubt using flyer printing and poster printing to inform the local community, which grows when there is an influx of people to the area during the winter months.
According to president and CEO of Waterman, Kenneth R. Mattison, the hospital currently has 209 beds and, during the winter months, was often at full capacity. This enabled the hospital to make the requisite addition. Mattison added that the physicians, nurses, and technicians were able to provide input into the design of the addition, as they are the ones who work in the hospital on a daily basis and are most knowledgeable in its needs.
The project has taken nine months to complete at a cost of $13.2 million, says hospital vice president and chief operating officer Carrie Fish. The addition will be able to accommodate orthopedic patients and will have a four-bed in-patient dialysis unit.
The Tavares economic development director, Bill Neron, added that the expansion will help the growth and development of the many medical buildings that are across the street from the hospital. The site has seen the construction of a four-story medical complex and the current construction of a surgical center. This should help to bring good, high-paying jobs to the county.
The Florida Hospital has its main campus in Orlando, Florida and additional locations in the counties of Osceola, Seminole and Orange. It is no doubt using flyer printing and poster printing to inform the local community, which grows when there is an influx of people to the area during the winter months.
According to president and CEO of Waterman, Kenneth R. Mattison, the hospital currently has 209 beds and, during the winter months, was often at full capacity. This enabled the hospital to make the requisite addition. Mattison added that the physicians, nurses, and technicians were able to provide input into the design of the addition, as they are the ones who work in the hospital on a daily basis and are most knowledgeable in its needs.
The project has taken nine months to complete at a cost of $13.2 million, says hospital vice president and chief operating officer Carrie Fish. The addition will be able to accommodate orthopedic patients and will have a four-bed in-patient dialysis unit.
The Tavares economic development director, Bill Neron, added that the expansion will help the growth and development of the many medical buildings that are across the street from the hospital. The site has seen the construction of a four-story medical complex and the current construction of a surgical center. This should help to bring good, high-paying jobs to the county.