Jump to content

Deborah Heart and Lung Center

Coordinates: 39°58′40″N 74°35′01″W / 39.97783173690289°N 74.58372437501801°W / 39.97783173690289; -74.58372437501801
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Deborah Heart and Lung Center
Road signage directing to Deborah Heart and Lung Center in Browns Mills, New Jersey, U.S.
Map
Geography
LocationBrowns Mills, Burlington County, New Jersey, United States
Coordinates39°58′40″N 74°35′01″W / 39.97783173690289°N 74.58372437501801°W / 39.97783173690289; -74.58372437501801
Organization
TypeSpecialist
Services
Beds89
Specialitycardiac, vascular, and lung disease
History
Opened1922
Links
Websitedemanddeborah.org
ListsHospitals in New Jersey

The Deborah Heart and Lung Center is located in Browns Mills, Burlington County, New Jersey, United States. It is the only hospital in the Delaware Valley region that focuses exclusively on cardiac, vascular, and lung disease.[1]

Deborah Heart and Lung Center has 89 beds with a full-service ambulatory care center. In March 2010, Deborah Heart and Lung Center opened an emergency department operated by Lourdes Medical Center of Burlington County. The emergency department offers ambulances and walk-in patients access to emergency care.

History[edit]

Dora Moness Shapiro established Deborah in 1922 as a tuberculosis sanitorium to provide care for those who could not afford it. Her motto was "There is no price tag on life!" Legend has it that Deborah's rural Burlington County location was the key to recovery because of its therapeutic Jersey Pine Barrens air. In reality, thousands of tuberculosis patients were medically treated and successfully cured by Deborah physicians.

In 1934, a woman named Clara Franks became a tuberculosis patient at Deborah. She was cured the next year. Following her discharge, she began to work for Deborah as a secretary and fundraising assistant. She began organizing community-based chapters to support Deborah, laying the foundation for the Deborah Hospital Foundation of today.

In the late 1940s, with the development of antibiotics that could arrest tuberculosis, Deborah began to shift emphasis to treating heart diseases. On July 28, 1958, pioneering heart surgeon Dr. Charles Bailey performed Deborah's first on-site heart surgery on three-year-old Bill DiMartino, followed by Dora Hansen, age 36.

In 1959, Deborah made an official name change to Deborah Hospital. In 1973, Deborah Hospital made another official name change to Deborah Heart and Lung Center, which still remains today.

Deborah Hospital Foundation[edit]

Founded in 1974, Deborah Hospital Foundation is the fund raising arm of Deborah Heart and Lung Center.

Services offered[edit]

  • Clinical Interventional Cardiology
  • Outpatient Pediatric Cardiology
  • Electromechanical Therapy Institute
  • Pulmonary Medicine
  • Institute for Sleep Medicine
  • Balance Center
  • Vascular and Endovascular Medicine
  • Vein Center
  • Thoracic and Cardiothoracic Surgery

References[edit]

  1. ^ "About Us, the Deborah Story". Deborah Heart and Lung Center. 13 July 2020. Retrieved December 10, 2020.