Olean General Hospital

Olean General Hospital is a 186-bed hospital in Olean, New York. it is part of the Upper Allegheny Health System (UAHS).UAHS provides care to a service area with more than 160,000 individuals in southwestern New York and northwestern Pennsylvania.

Olean General Hospital
Upper Allegheny Health System
Map
Geography
LocationOlean, New York, United States
Coordinates42°05′26″N 78°25′40″W / 42.090429°N 78.427804°W / 42.090429; -78.427804
Organization
TypeGeneral
Services
Beds186
Links
Websitewww.ogh.org
ListsHospitals in New York State

Facilities edit

The Olean General Hospital campus consists of the hospital and three additional buildings. The main hospital consists of 186 inpatient beds and comprehensive ancillary and support programs and services. The hospital campus includes the Outpatient Surgery Center, The Dialysis and Primary Care Center building, the Gundlah Dental Center, the Marie Lorenz Dialysis Center, the Center for Wound Healing and Hyperbaric Medicine, and physician offices. The final campus building is the Louis A. Magnano Olean General Hospital Mercy Flight Center which provides space for Mercy Flight of Western New York helicopters and staff.

Off campus facilities include the Mildred Milliman Radiation Medicine Center, a care network site of Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, in Olean.[1] The Center includes a linear accelerator, CT simulator, and patient examination and treatment space and physician offices. A hospital facility in Franklinville, New York houses a lab collection station and physician offices.

UAHS also operates a primary care center and laboratory collection station in Salamanca, New York and a primary care center and dental center in Delevan, New York.

In 2013, UAHS was forced to notify 1,915 Olean General patients that "they may have been exposed to HIV, hepatitis B or hepatitis C through the improper sharing of insulin pens."[2]

References edit

  1. ^ "Upper Allegheny Health System". Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center. Retrieved May 14, 2021.
  2. ^ "Second N.Y. hospital warns of HIV infection risk from insulin pens". January 24, 2013. Retrieved November 30, 2019.

External links edit