Does Your Doctor Make House Calls?
March 1st, 2009 categories: Real Estate News

Life is full of regrets. However, my years in uniform aren’t one of them.
Military health care has taken its share of criticism over the years, but, it has always been there when needed. Unexpected hospital visits have been challenging to say the least. Like most families, every now and then, someone in the family has a minor emergency (you know, cut, scrape, broken ankle….skateboard mishap) that requires immediate medical attention. Often, these occur after normal business hours, or more often than not, on a weekend. Unfortunately, as a military retiree, we don’t have the option of the base hospital/clinic to turn to any longer. So, for emergencies, until recently, the closest local hospital was the only local hospital, Mary Washington Hospital in Fredericksburg.

Friday morning, the new Stafford Hospital Center opened its doors. It just so happens that its first patient, Mary Grey, 75 years of age, was already in the parking lot awaiting the opening of the doors for entry. According to Mrs. Grey, she was having abdominal pains and waited for the opening instead of driving the fifteen miles to the nearest hospital. Located on Route 1, just South of Interstate 95, Exit 140, the new North Stafford facility is part of the Medicorp Health System, just like its neighbor to the South, Mary Washington.
The 100-bed facility, offering all the services of any fully equipped medical facility, is just the first of two scheduled to open within the next two years. The other, the Spotsylvania Regional Medical Center, currently under construction, will be located a couple of minutes South of Fredericksburg’s Massaponax exit. The 140-bed, acute care facility is scheduled to open its doors in June, 2010.

For those of us making the drive to Mary Washington Hospital for years for emergency care, the new kids on the block are just what the doctor ordered.




