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The one-time Victory Memorial Hospital has become a public relations nightmare with a litany of unhealthy dealings since Glendale, California-based American Healthcare bought it in July Illinois Department of Public Health officials said the hospital lacked essential medical services to be a Level II trauma facility, as well as a blood bank and a full-time trauma coordinator.
The designation was reinstated about a month later. Lake County Coroner Jennifer Banek β a certified registered nurse anesthetist who has practiced at the hospital β has also raised previous concerns after she said medical professionals were leaving Vista because they had not been paid. The circumstances surrounding the death preliminarily attributed to hypothermia of Chelsea Adolphus, 28, β who died about two days after checking herself into the hospital β remain hazy: Like how she got on the rooftop from her fifth-floor hospital room.
Why did staff on her floor fail to determine she was missing for about seven hours until she was discovered on the roof in her medical gown? The family of Adolphus has demanded answers to some of those questions and more. They deserve them, as the community does, and those who may find themselves future patients at the hospital. Banek has requested the Illinois Department of Public Health probe the cruel death, also asking that all evidence associated with the case be preserved.
Toxicology reports are pending. And there are discrepancies in what happened. Banek, who in the past has been critical of the hospital and its mission, said her office informed the police. Family members of Adolphus say Vista medical staff gave them three conflicting stories about how and where her body was found.
Once upon a time, Waukegan had two hospitals, both highly regarded. But time has taken its toll on both of them. It introduced a number of firsts in Lake County, including an intensive care unit, inpatient psychiatric care and rehabilitation units, along with a department of social work. History has not been kind to both medical centers. Saint Therese was closed years ago and its site, which included a heliport, at Washington Street and Keller Avenue, is being razed.