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Medical City Dallas is a hospital located at 7777 Forest Lane, just west of
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), in
north North is one of the four compass points or cardinal directions. It is the opposite of south and is perpendicular to east and west. ''North'' is a noun, adjective, or adverb indicating direction or geography. Etymology The word ''north ...
Dallas Dallas () is the List of municipalities in Texas, third largest city in Texas and the largest city in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, the List of metropolitan statistical areas, fourth-largest metropolitan area in the United States at 7.5 ...
,
Texas Texas (, ; Spanish: ''Texas'', ''Tejas'') is a state in the South Central region of the United States. At 268,596 square miles (695,662 km2), and with more than 29.1 million residents in 2020, it is the second-largest U.S. state by ...
(
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). It is operated by
Hospital Corporation of America HCA Healthcare is an American for-profit operator of health care facilities that was founded in 1968. It is based in Nashville, Tennessee, and, as of May 2020, owns and operates 186 hospitals and approximately 2,000 sites of care, including sur ...


History

Medical City opened its doors after Dr. Frank Seay cut the ribbon that opened Medical City Dallas Hospital to the residents of the community on October 2, 1974. Developer
Trammell Crow Fred Trammell Crow (June 10, 1914 – January 14, 2009) was an American real estate developer from Dallas, Texas. He is credited with the creation of several major real estate projects, including the Dallas Market Center, Peachtree Center in Atla ...
and his partners chose to locate the hospital and medical office tower on a 250-acre plot in the Park Central area of Dallas partly because preliminary research showed that as of 1972 when the development was planned, 85 percent of all MDs in Dallas County lived within 15 minutes'driving of the new complex.(Unnamed author.) "Medical City Dallas will be strictly '20th century'," ''The Dallas Morning News'', 30 April 1972, page 14. Retrieved from NewsBank 30 April 2016. Estimates of the cost at the announcement of the project on April 6, 1972, were that the complex would cost $20 million(Unnamed author.) "Medical City Dallas cost: $20 million," ''The Dallas Morning News'', 7 April 1972, page 10. Retrieved from NewsBank 30 April 2016. ($113 million in 2015 dollars). Surveys as of early 1972 showed that prior to the opening of the hospital, Dallas had six hospital beds per 1000 people, while eight cities of comparable size averaged just over 9.1 beds per 1000 people. The 14-story, 367-bed hospital had 78 physicians on the medical staff and enough staff to care for an 85 percent occupancy rate. In describing the original plan, co-managing partner Robert J. Wright touted the updated 20th-century concept of combining hospital-related facilities on the same site with the hospital itself: "For too long, many doctors have had to practice 20th century medicine in 19th century facilities, with their offices at one location, their hospital at another, lab, X-ray and other vital services at still another, and all at great distances from each other and from their homes." Additional features of the design included separate entrances for patients and for doctors to facilitate doctors' ability to "from their entrance, go directly to ancillary services or make rounds in the hospital, and then proceed to their offices," as well as the location of doctors' offices nearest to the most relevant department for their specialties, such as locating the cardiologists' offices next to the
ECG Electrocardiography is the process of producing an electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG), a recording of the heart's electrical activity. It is an electrogram of the heart which is a graph of voltage versus time of the electrical activity of the hear ...
and stress laboratories."(Unnamed author.) "Medical City Dallas to open," ''The Dallas Morning News'', 22 September 1974, page 5. Retrieved from NewsBank 30 April 2016. A second phase of construction commenced in 1977 with the building of an additional 9-story tower called Medical City II, enabling the doubling of the physician-tenant population.(Unnamed author.) "Medical City enters new phase," ''The Dallas Morning News'', 16 April 1977, page 5A. Retrieved from NewsBank 30 April 2016. The hospital complex served as home to Dallas' first
Health Maintenance Organization In the United States, a health maintenance organization (HMO) is a medical insurance group that provides health services for a fixed annual fee. It is an organization that provides or arranges managed care for health insurance, self-funded heal ...
(HMO), a set-fee medical program established through a joint HMO venture between the Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program and
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.Little, Linda. "First set-fee medical program scheduled for opening," ''The Dallas Morning News'', 2 December 1978, page 1D. Retrieved from NewsBank 30 April 2016. The initial facility for the HMO program cost $1 million when it opened in 1979.(Unnamed author.) "$1 million health facility to open Friday," ''The Dallas Morning News'', 31 May 1979, page 4A. Retrieved from NewsBank 30 April 2016. In 1982, a 3-alarm fire originating in the linen room caused smoke to travel up a laundry chute and fill the top three floors. Although 70 patients were evacuated, there were no injuries reported and only $50,000 damage done to the facility thanks to the fire being brought under control within approximately 15 minutes.Holowinski, Carol. "Hospital fire forces evacuation of patients - smoke from linen-closet blaze fills hallways of top three floors," ''The Dallas Morning News'', 31 August 1982, page 11A. Second and third buildings were added in the 1980s, Buildings B and C, with Building B at 4 stories, and Building C at 8 stories, and Medical City was renamed as the South Tower, and Medical City II was renamed as the North Tower. A 7-story building, Building D was added in the late 1980s-early 1990s. A 6-story tower opened in 2005 as CareTower E and is home to the hospital's emergency department. Between 2014 and 2016, 8 more floors were added to the top of the building. A 7-story, children's hospital building was built on the pad of the former main entrance of Medical City and opened in 2010. 5 more floors were added to CareTower D in 2018 as the Medical City Women's Hospital Dallas


Funding and ownership

All entities in the facility, including the hospital, physician offices, retail areas and other services are tenants of the Limited Partnership formed at Medical City's inception. The initial construction was to be paid completely from private capital as opposed to public donations or tax monies. This funding source became somewhat controversial in the early 1980s when MCD joined twelve other private hospitals in north Texas requesting to participate in a tax-exempt bond program "to finance the purchase of X-ray equipment, surgical tools and other medical equipment";Schulte, Joann. "13 private hospitals seek tax-exempt bonds," ''The Dallas Morning News'', 25 April 1983, pages 8A and 18A. administrators in public hospitals in other cities objected to participation by private hospitals "that care for few or no charity patients" and the U.S. Treasury Department opposed use of such programs to finance private ventures, estimating that such programs "cost the government $100 million to $300 million in lost tax revenue annually."


References

{{authority control Hospital buildings completed in 1974 Hospitals established in 1974 Hospitals in Dallas HCA Healthcare Trauma centers