"Catholic healthcare is one of the great stories of the contribution of the
Catholic Church to the nation. This is an apostolic ministry of heroic
proportions that deserves our respect, our support and our applause."
- Most Rev. William F. Murphy, S.T.D.,
Fourth Bishop of Rockville Centre
The Catholic healthcare ministry on Long Island has a rich legacy. The
remarkable work of the women religious since the early 1900's continues to
inspire and nurture the healthcare apostolate of the Diocese of Rockville
Centre. Many of our healthcare providers originated as charitable
institutions under the auspices of religious sponsors.
St. Charles Hospital originated in 1907 as a home for the blind, crippled and
retarded children of the area, established by the Daughters of Wisdom. The
Daughters of Wisdom established Maryhaven Center of Hope in 1930 and Good
Samaritan Hospital Medical Center in 1959.
The Congregation of the Infant Jesus established the first Catholic hospital
in Nassau County, Mercy Medical Center, when they began to serve patients in a
converted sanitarium with 16 beds and 14 bassinets in 1913.
In 1922, the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary founded a summer camp for
inner-city children, some of whom were afflicted with rheumatic fever.From
these origins grew St. Francis Hospital.
The Sisters of St. Dominic founded Our Lady of Consolation Nursing &
Rehabilitative Care Center in 1894 as St. Catherine's Infirmary.
The Nursing Sisters of the Sick Poor in Brooklyn established Nursing Sisters
Home Care in 1905.
The Diocese of Rockville Centre became the sponsor of the hospitals, nursing
homes and Maryhaven in the late 1950's and early 1960's. In 1997 the Diocese
of Rockville Centre established Catholic Health Services of Long Island (CHS)
to oversee its healthcare organizations. In 1998, Nursing Sisters Home Agency
came under the auspices of the Diocese of Rockville Centre through CHS. Our
most recent addition is St. Catherine of Siena Medical Center and Nursing
Home, purchased from the Episcopal Health System in 2001.
In keeping with our mission of service to those people and communities whose
social condition puts them at the margins of society, CHS provides over $59
million a year in care for the poor, the uninsured, and underserved. While
much of this service is provided in emergency rooms and clinics, CHS also
provides hundreds of free or reduced-fee outreach programs to improve
individual and community health. Among programs targeted to low-income
communities, seniors, women, children, and others with special needs, are
health education screenings, support groups, counseling services, immunization
programs, nutrition, transportation, patient education, advocacy for the poor,
and blood drives.
Catholic healthcare on Long Island has built a distinguished tradition of
operating community-based hospitals and human service organizations. These
services have become widely valued for the high quality of their compassionate
care for people from all walks of life and of every religious belief and
ethnic group.