This is a list of hospitals in Connecticut, sorted by hospital name.[1] The American Hospital Directory listed 51 hospitals in Connecticut in 2020.[2]
List
editName | Network | City, town, or neighborhood | County | Emergency Department?
(Trauma Level) |
EMS Region | Opened-Closed | Status / Type / Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Backus Hospital | Hartford HealthCare | Norwich | New London | Yes
(Level III) |
IV | 1893–present | Active |
Bridgeport Hospital | Yale New Haven Health | Bridgeport | Fairfield | Yes
(Level II) |
I | 1878–present | Active |
Bristol Hospital | Bristol Health | Bristol | Hartford | Yes | III | Active | |
Cedarcrest Hospital | Department of Mental Health | Newington | Hartford | No | III | 1910–2010[4] | Closed - Originally named Hartford County Home for the Care and Treatment of Persons Suffering from Tuberculosis. Renamed in 1912 as Hartford State Sanatorium. Renamed in 1976 to Cedarcrest Regional Hospital.[4] |
Charlotte Hungerford Hospital | Hartford HealthCare | Torrington | Litchfield | Yes | V | 1916–present | Active |
Connecticut Children's Medical Center | Hartford | Hartford | Yes
(Level I Pedi) |
III | 1898–present | Active - Pediatric hospital. Originally named Newington Home for Incurables. Renamed in 1968 to Newington Children's Hospital. Relocated and named Connecticut Children's Medical Center in 1996. | |
Connecticut Colony for Epileptics | Mansfield | Tolland | IV | 1910–1917 | Succeeded - Merged with the Connecticut Training School for the Feebleminded at Lakeville in 1917, forming the Mansfield Training School and Hospital. | ||
Connecticut Hospice | Branford | New Haven | No | II | Active - Hospice and palliative care hospital | ||
Connecticut Training School for the Feebleminded at Lakeville | Lakeville | Litchfield | V | 1860–1917 | Succeeded - Originally named the Merged with the Connecticut Colony for Epileptics in 1917, forming the Mansfield Training School and Hospital. | ||
Connecticut Valley Hospital | Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services | Middletown | Middlesex | No | III | 1868–present | Active - State-run behavioral health hospital |
Danbury Hospital | Nuvance Health | Danbury | Fairfield | Yes
(Level II) |
V | 1885–present | Active |
Day Kimball Hospital | Day Kimball Healthcare | Putnam | Windham | Yes | IV | 1894–present | Active |
Elmcrest Hospital | Hartford Hospital | Portland | Middlesex | III | 1942–c. 2006 | Closed - Behavioral health hospital | |
Gaylord Hospital | Gaylord Specialty Healthcare | Wallingford | New Haven | Yes | II | Active | |
Greenwich Hospital | Yale New Haven Health | Greenwich | Fairfield | Yes
(Level III) |
I | 1903–present | Active |
Griffin Hospital | Griffin Health | Derby | New Haven | Yes | II | 1909–present | Active |
Hartford Hospital | Hartford HealthCare | Hartford | Hartford | Yes
(Level I) |
III | 1854–present | Active |
Hospital for Special Care | Independent | New Britain | Hartford | No | III | Active | |
The Hospital of Central Connecticut – Bradley Memorial Campus | Hartford HealthCare | Southington | Hartford | Yes
(Level III) |
III | Active | |
The Hospital of Central Connecticut – New Britain General Campus | Hartford HealthCare | New Britain | Hartford | Yes | III | Active | |
The Institute of Living | Hartford HealthCare | Hartford | Hartford | No | III | 1824–present | Active - Behavioral health hospital. Originally named Connecticut Retreat for the Insane, later named Hartford Retreat. |
Johnson Memorial Hospital | Trinity Health of New England | Stafford Springs | Tolland | Yes | III | Active | |
Lawrence+Memorial Hospital | Yale New Haven Health | New London | New London | Yes | IV | 1912–present | Active |
Manchester Memorial Hospital | Prospect Medical Holdings | Manchester | Hartford | Yes | III | 1920–present | Active |
Mansfield Training School and Hospital | Mansfield | Tolland | IV | 1917–1993 | Closed - Formed in 1917 from merger of Connecticut Training School for the Feebleminded at Lakeville and Connecticut Colony for Epileptics. | ||
Meriden–Wallingford Hospital | Meriden | New Haven | II | XXXX–1991[5] | Succeeded - Merged with the World War II Veterans Memorial Hospital in 1991, forming the Veterans Memorial Medical Center. | ||
Middlesex Hospital | Independent | Middletown | Middlesex | Yes | III | 1904–present | Active |
MidState Medical Center | Hartford HealthCare | Meriden | New Haven | Yes | II | 1991–present[5] | Active - Formed in 1991 from the merger of the Meriden–Wallingford Hospital and the World War II Veterans Memorial Hospital. Originally named the Veterans Memorial Medical Center.[5] |
Milford Hospital | Yale New Haven Health | Milford | New Haven | Yes | II | 1920–present | Active |
Mount Sinai Rehabilitation Hospital | Trinity Health of New England | Hartford | Hartford | No | III | 1923–present | Active - Rehabilitation hospital |
Natchaug Hospital | Hartford HealthCare | Mansfield Center | Tolland | No | IV | Active - Behavioral health hospital | |
New Milford Hospital | Nuvance Health | New Milford | Litchfield | Yes | V | 1921–present | Active |
Norwalk Hospital | Nuvance Health | Norwalk | Fairfield | Yes
(Level II) |
I | 1893–present | Active |
Norwich State Hospital | Department of Mental Health | Preston, Norwich | New London | IV | 1904–1996 | Closed | |
Park City Hospital | Bridgeport | Fairfield | I | Closed | |||
Rockville General Hospital | Prospect Medical Holdings | Vernon | Tolland | Yes | III | Active | |
Saint Francis Hospital & Medical Center | Trinity Health of New England | Hartford | Hartford | Yes
(Level I) |
III | 1897–present | Active |
Saint Joseph's Medical Center | Stamford | Fairfield | I | Closed | |||
Saint Mary's Hospital | Trinity Health of New England | Waterbury | New Haven | Yes
(Level II) |
V | 1907–present | Active |
Saint Vincent's Medical Center | Hartford HealthCare | Bridgeport | Fairfield | Yes
(Level II) |
I | 1903–present | Active |
The Seaside | Waterford | New London | IV | Closed | |||
Sharon Hospital | Nuvance Health | Sharon | Litchfield | Yes | V | Active | |
Silver Hill Hospital | New Canaan | Fairfield | No | I | 1931–present | Active - Behavioral health hospital | |
Stamford Hospital | Stamford Health | Stamford | Fairfield | Yes
(Level II) |
I | 1896–present | Active |
UConn John Dempsey Hospital | UConn Health | Farmington | Hartford | Yes | III | 1961–present | Active |
Uncas-on-Thames Hospital[6][7] | Norwich | New London | IV | Closed | |||
Waterbury Hospital | Prospect Medical Holdings | Waterbury | New Haven | Yes
(Level II) |
V | Active | |
West Haven VA Medical Center | VA Connecticut Healthcare System | West Haven | New Haven | Yes | II | Active | |
Windham Hospital | Hartford HealthCare | Willimantic | Windham | Yes | IV | 1933–present | Active |
Winsted Memorial Hospital | Hartford HealthCare | Winsted | Litchfield | Yes | V | Active - Formerly inpatient, now only provides emergency services. | |
World War II Veterans Memorial Hospital | Meriden | New Haven | II | XXXX–1991[5] | Succeeded - Merged with the Meriden–Wallingford Hospital in 1991, forming the Veterans Memorial Medical Center.[5] | ||
Yale New Haven Children's Hospital | Yale New Haven Health | New Haven | New Haven | Yes
(Level I Pedi) |
II | 1993–present | Active - Pediatric hospital |
Yale New Haven Hospital | Yale New Haven Health | New Haven | New Haven | Yes
(Level I) |
II | 1826–present | Active |
Yale New Haven Hospital – Saint Raphael Campus | Yale New Haven Health | New Haven | New Haven | Yes | II | 1907–present | Active - Originally named the Hospital of Saint Raphael. Acquired by Yale New Haven Hospital in 2012, becoming a campus of that hospital. |
Yale New Haven Psychiatric Hospital | Yale New Haven Health | New Haven | New Haven | No | II | Active - Behavioral health hospital |
References
edit- ^ a b "Membership Listing". Connecticut Hospital Association.
- ^ a b "Connecticut Hospitals". American Hospital Directory. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
- ^ "LICENSE LOOKUP: Search for License, Permit, Certification, or Registration". CT.gov. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
- ^ a b "Cedarcrest Hospital". Atlas Obscura. June 30, 2020. Archived from the original on April 8, 2024. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e Cruz, Pamela (January 8, 2013). "Horwitz and MidState". MidState Medical Center. Archived from the original on December 10, 2023. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
- ^ Mazzocca, D'Ann (February 7, 1994). "RE: Uncas-on-Thames Hospital". CT.gov. Archived from the original on September 2, 2024. Retrieved September 2, 2024.
- ^ "Uncas-on-thames Hospital Closing, A Victim Of Medicine's Changing Face". The Hartford Courant. 3 January 1995. Retrieved 16 September 2018.