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Somerville Hospital

Coordinates: 42°23′24.0″N 71°6′33.7″W / 42.390000°N 71.109361°W / 42.390000; -71.109361
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is about the hospital, for the mental hospital see Somerville Asylum.

CHA Somerville Campus
Cambridge Health Alliance
Somerville Campus
Map
Geography
Location33 Tower Street, Somerville, Massachusetts, United States
Coordinates42°23′24.0″N 71°6′33.7″W / 42.390000°N 71.109361°W / 42.390000; -71.109361
Organization
TypeTeaching
Affiliated universityHarvard Medical School
Services
Public transit accessMBTA
History
Opened1891
Links
Websitewww.challiance.org/locations/somerville/cha-somerville-campus
ListsHospitals in Massachusetts

The CHA Somerville Campus is an outpatient medical center at 33 Tower Street in Somerville, Massachusetts - near Porter Square and Davis Square.

It is operated by Cambridge Health Alliance.

Services

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The main CHA Somerville Campus has a wide variety of health services, including:

  • Center of Inpatient Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
  • CHA Urgent Care
  • CHA Somerville Pediatrics
  • Somerville OB/GYN Center
  • Radiology and Imaging
  • GI Center
  • Eye Center
  • Medical and Surgery Specialty clinics

Service highlights

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  • Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
  • Urgent Care

National Accreditation:

Academics

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Cambridge Health Alliance is a teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School, Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, and the Tufts University School of Medicine.

CHA Primary Care, which is based at the hospital, is a main teaching location for the CHA Internal Medicine Residency Program.

History

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The hospital was first incorporated in 1891, and the first buildings were erected the following year. In 2009, the inpatient hospital beds were closed, but the emergency department remained open as a satellite emergency facility. In April 2020, the emergency department was converted to an Urgent Care Center.

In 2016, a Somerville woman named Laura Levis collapsed outside Somerville Hospital while unable to find an unlocked door to the emergency room during a severe asthma attack.[1] Her death led to the passage of a Massachusetts law, nicknamed "Laura's Law," to ensure clear and safe access to hospital emergency departments for pedestrians.[2]

References

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  • "Haskell's Historical Guide Book Of Somerville, Massachusetts" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-08-10. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  1. ^ DeMarco, Peter (3 November 2018). "Losing Laura". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Legislation ensuring safe access to emergency care soon to be law". The Somerville Times. 13 January 2021. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
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