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Salem Township Hospital President Jim Timpe says all the hurdles have been cleared to allow construction to begin on the renovation of the emergency and operating rooms at the hospital as well as an addition to the rear of the hospital to handle sterilization of equipment.

Timpe expects construction to be underway within a month.

“The Illinois Department of Public Health has approved all four phases of our project and then we’ve received our building permit from the city, so we are ready to go right now.” Timpe said. “We’re just coordinating with our vendors as they order the supplies they need. Once we have a timeline of those coming in, they can schedule their colleagues, and we can get a groundbreaking ceremony in place. Then we’ll kick off our construction. It should be in the next several weeks.”

Timpe says the walls have all been removed from the former Rural Health Center area.   He notes while there were a number of posts, they will creatively be enclosed in new walls so that the public does not see them.

Timpe reported that the hospital’s new radiology group, Sol, took over on Wednesday.   He says they are doing quick turn arounds on reading radiology film, and he anticipates great customer service.  Sol is based in California but serves a number of Illinois hospitals.  The hospital’s old radiology service dissolved.

Timpe told the board he is continuing to build on a relationship with Deaconess Hospital, which operates Crossroads Hospital in Mt. Vernon, and SSM Health, which operates Good Samaritan in Mt. Vernon and St. Mary’s in Centralia.

“Both of those entities are very interested in working with local constituents like us to get patients in our local zip codes back home for things like swing beds or therapy, those kinds of things. We’ve been working closely with them over the last year. We have a great relationship now where we’re seeing our patients come back home after they go to the higher level of care.”

Timpe says the results are good for everyone, as the larger hospitals get penalized for longer stays, while Salem Hospital, as a critical access hospital, benefits by being able to provide recovery services.

Timpe announced the hospital has earned a bronze award from the American Heart Association for following its guidelines and has been declared a Stroke Ready Hospital by the Illinois Department of Public Health.