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128:, and the Kiefer naturally provided their polio patients with rehabilitation. It was also the site of the Metropolitan Detroit Polio Foundation, which merged with the Rehabilitation Institute in 1953. These two partners soon realized they needed a building of their own to house all their services. As a result, in 1958, the Rehabilitation Institute moved to a newly built hospital at the
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The hospital was the primary health care facility of the City of
Detroit from its founding to closure. During its 75 years it treated the poorest citizens of the city. For the first 35 years most patients had infectious diseases. In 1953 a 250-bed addition was added to treat tuberculosis. By the end
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The first public health facility on the site was opened in 1886 as a smallpox hospital on the outskirts of the city. In 1892 it burned down in a fire deemed "suspicious.". Over the next twenty years several "tent" hospitals were constructed on the site, each dedicated to treating a specific
152:, decided that the one million dollar maintenance cost of the aging building could not be afforded. Bing closed the hospital, transferring its public health services to a private nonprofit which operated throughout the city from neighborhood facilities. Under
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in Neo-Romanesque
Revival style, was 424,000 square feet, and had 500 beds in single, or double, rooms, instead of the, then standard, 10 bed wards. This new building opened in December 1928. By 1932 it had 1,200 beds.
113:. In 1928 there were 1,756 deaths from infectious diseases, in 1969 there were under 100. During 1970s, the patient population changed to the very old, the indigent, and those who had social problems.
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In June 2015, plans were announced for the redevelopment of the building, and other buildings in the complex, into a mixed use residential, business, and commercial center.
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infectious disease—scarlet fever, diphtheria and tuberculosis. In 1909, six more tents were added, causing plans to begin to build a permanent structure.
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The first permanent structures, pavilions, designed by architect George Mason, opened in 1911. By the mid 1920s
Detroit voters approved a $ 3-million
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By the early 21st century the Kiefer was acting almost entirely as a public health facility, dispensing free
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was founded at Herman Kiefer
Hospital. The Kiefer Hospital was the main treatment facility for
213:"Herman Kiefer Health Complex in Detroit offered for new use | Detroit Free Press"
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Redevelopment of massive empty Herman-Kiefer building in
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issue, to build a brick and cement hospital. This building, designed by
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in
Detroit, which was rampant at that time. Polio patients are often
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of the sixties, the era of infectious diseases was over due to
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and now operates essential local public health services.
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hospital; to combat rampant infectious diseases, such as
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391:Hospitals disestablished in 2013
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381:1928 establishments in Michigan
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386:Defunct hospitals in Michigan
277:Austin, Dan (June 17, 2015).
44:was a city-owned hospital in
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158:Detroit Health Department
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257:"Herman Kiefer Hospital"
347:42.377806°N 83.090833°W
130:Detroit Medical Center
42:Herman Kiefer Hospital
22:Herman Kiefer Hospital
352:42.377806; -83.090833
325:—MLive, June 18, 2015
376:Hospitals in Detroit
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215:. Archive.freep.com
259:. Detroiturbex.com
162:Dr. Abdul El-Sayed
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154:Mayor Mike Duggan
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338:83°05′27.0″W
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303:. Retrieved
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142:vaccinations
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57:tuberculosis
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111:antibiotics
97:Albert Kahn
365:Categories
305:2021-03-25
263:2015-06-18
219:2015-06-18
188:References
150:David Bing
146:bankruptcy
61:diphtheria
126:paralyzed
176:See also
104:Hospital
49:Michigan
16:Building
136:Closure
83:History
73:measles
46:Detroit
122:polio
69:mumps
156:The
93:bond
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