Ireland Army Community Hospital

The earliest hospital at Fort Knox Kentucky, was a World War I cantonment building, constructed in 1918 on the site of the Lindsey Golf Course. When the facility burned in 1928, medical services moved to the World War I guesthouse on Bullion Boulevard until a brick hospital was built in 1934 on E Street. In 1940, two mobilization hospitals were constructed along Dixie Street, and were used until the current multi-storied concrete structure opened in 1957.[2]

Ireland Army Community Hospital
Ireland Army Community Hospital Distinctive Unit Insignia[1]
Active1957 - Present
CountryUnited States
AllegianceUnited States of America
BranchUnited States Army
Motto(s)"Because We Care"
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel Robert S. Cornes

The current hospital facility was named in honor of Major General Merritte W. Ireland, a surgeon and U.S. Army Surgeon General from October 30, 1918, to May 31, 1931.

The hospital today is a 462,000-square-foot (42,900 m2), 76-bed JCAHO-accredited facility. Major services include general medical and surgical care, adult and pediatric primary care clinics, specialty clinics, clinical services, wellness and prevention services, and a VA clinic. Remote on-post clinics include the Aviation Medical Clinic, One Stop Medical, Nelson Troop Medical Clinic, Reception Medical Processing, and the RCF Clinic.

The activity is the center of a larger area of responsibility which serves an isolated active duty population in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin. Off-post clinics in this six-state area include Bluegrass Army Depot, Camp Atterbury Troop Medical Clinic, Fort McCoy Troop Medical Clinic, Rock Island Health Clinic, and Selfridge Health Clinic.

The hospital was slated to lose its inpatient facilities as a result of BRAC 2005, but was removed from the list when panel members raised concerns about the distance soldiers and their families would have to travel to receive inpatient medical care. It is reorganizing in 2017 without a hospital and instead become a super clinic. It will not have ER, inpatient or surgery services but it will have many specialty clinics and will maintain its family health clinics.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-07-03. Retrieved 2007-04-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "History of IRACH". Archived from the original on 2007-06-24. Retrieved 2007-04-26.

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