The University of Mississippi Medical Center’s $180 million pediatric expansion may be building on the progress of the past, but the tower, now reaching its full seven-story height, is built with the future in mind.
“This expansion is for families that haven’t been made yet and for children who haven’t been born yet,” said Sanderson Farms CEO and board chairman Joe Sanderson during Growing Up Together, a recent event celebrating the tower’s halfway point.
Philanthropy is fueling the project. The Sandersons launched the campaign in 2016 with a $10 million personal donation, followed soon after by a $20 million commitment from Friends of Children’s Hospital. Since then, the Campaign for Children’s of Mississippi has raised more than 74 percent of its $100 million goal.
“The fact that we have come this far in the three years since the campaign’s launch shows how much Mississippians value children and their health and how generous the people of Mississippi really are,” Sanderson said.
The 355,303-square-foot structure will house 88 state-of-the art private neonatal intensive care rooms, additional pediatric intensive care unit rooms and surgical suites and an imaging center designed for children. The Children’s Heart Center, representing the Medical Center’s pediatric cardiovascular program, will also call the new building home.
A pediatric outpatient specialty clinic bringing experts in cardiology, neurology, oncology, hematology, urology, orthopaedics, pulmonology and more in one location. A convenient parking garage will be located nearby.
“UMMC has always been a beacon for children’s health care,” said Dr. LouAnn Woodward, vice chancellor for health affairs and dean of the School of Medicine. The Medical Center opened its first children’s hospital in 1968, with the opening of Batson Children’s Hospital following in 1997.
Since the expansion’s planning stage, Woodward has called it “transformative,” noting that it will more than double the square footage devoted to pediatric care at UMMC.
“With this tower, UMMC will continue to be a source of hope and healing for children and their families,” she said.
Sanderson, who, with wife Kathy chairs the Campaign for Children’s of Mississippi, the $100 million philanthropic drive to bring the tower to completion, said the project is also a boost to the state’s economic health.
“This will ensure better outcomes for children, but also better research now and research that hasn’t even been thought of yet,” he said. “It will bring more doctors to the state, and more jobs.”
Children’s of Mississippi leaders anticipate recruiting 30-40 new physicians as the facility is built and after it is opened, since it will provide additional capacity. At a minimum, about 50-75 staff positions, not including physicians, would be added after construction.
Jim Gorrie, CEO of Brasfield & Gorrie, the project’s general contractor, said state businesses are profiting from what is the largest construction project underway in Mississippi.
“More than 90 percent of the work you see here has been done by local contractors,” he said. “We have about 350 people working on the site. It’s an incredible thing to see.”
Dr. Mary Taylor’s first day as UMMC’s chair of the Department of Pediatrics was the day ground was broken on the project. Since then, she’s watched as work has moved from excavation to the pouring of massive steel-reinforced piers that form the tower’s strong foundation.
“We deliver world-class care here today,” said Taylor. “Our pediatric care team achieves outcomes that rival the best children’s hospitals in the country, and soon, we will have a facility that matches their skills.”
Families around the state will benefit from this expansion whether their children are hospital inpatients or seeing a team of experts at the new outpatient clinic, said Holly Armstrong of Oxford, whose daughter Aubrey, 14, represents the state as its 2019 Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Champion.
Tara Cumberland of Meridian also hailed the project. Her daughter, Sybil, 7, a pediatric cardiology patient, dances competitively following surgery during infancy and follow-up care since.
“This will be great for us when we go in for check-ups,” she said, “but this is for the families whose children will need care here in the future, too. It will be an even better experience for them.”
Mississippi Commissioner of Higher Education Dr. Alfred Rankins said the hospital expansion will be a place where physicians are trained and research is conducted, but it will also be an investment in the state’s children.
“The trustees of the state’s Institutions of Higher Learning and I can think of no better investment than in the health of our children, because they are the future of Mississippi.”
To support the University of Mississippi Medical Center, contact Natalie Hutto, chief development officer, at 601-984-2300 or nhutto@umc.edu.
By Annie Oeth, UMC Public Affairs