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Wrangell Medical Center
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The City of Wrangell is located on the northern tip of Wrangell Island along the Inside Passage of Southeast Alaska. One of the oldest non-native settlements in Alaska, it is on the Stikine River, an historic trade route to the Canadian Interior. The community of Wrangell has worn many hats since its 1811 beginnings as a fur-trading settlement for the Russian-American Company. When the U.S. purchased the Alaska Territory in 1867, it became a military post. When the early gold rushes began, it became an outfitter for gold prospecting. And as the gold played out, Wrangell's focus shifted to fishing, fish processing, and the beginnings of a forest products industry. Four canneries and a cold storage were in operation when Bishop Rowe Hospital began receiving patients in 1926. Fueled by strong growth in fishing and forest products, the community continued to grow, driving the need for a new hospital at a new location. Wrangell Medical Center opened in 1968. By 1972, plans were approved for a skilled nursing home. Four years later the long-term care unit was opened. In 1989, Phase I of a remodeling and renovation project expanded and updated all departments of the hospital, setting the stage for the opening of the Stikine Family Clinic in 1993. The completion of Phase II in 1996 added a new storage building and maintenance. Although housed in the same building and sharing the services of physical therapy, x-ray, the laboratory and kitchen, the acute and long-term care units are separate, fully-licensed facilities. The acute care facility has 8 beds, and the long-term care facility, licensed for skilled nursing or intermediate nursing home care, has 14 beds. The hospital is owned by the City of Wrangell and governed by a board of directors appointed by the city council. An administrator is selected by the board to direct daily operations.
Direct questions or comments to Bob Shymanski at bshymanski@wmcmail.org
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