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Health & Fitness

Rogers Behavioral Health System Adds Third Hospital in Brown Deer

Rogers Behavioral Health System announced plans to add a third Rogers Memorial Hospital location and expand outpatient services in Brown Deer, Wis., following two recent property acquisitions. Anticipated opening for the additions to Wisconsin’s largest non-for-profit psychiatry and addiction services hospital is summer 2015.

“We’re pleased to bring greater access and more resources for mental health to Brown Deer and the surrounding communities,” Pat Hammer, system president and CEO, said in announcing the expansion for the northeast Milwaukee region.

The two facilities acquired by Rogers encompass approximately 110,000 square feet. The building at 4600 West Schroeder Drive was originally built as an 80-bed psychiatric hospital and outpatient center. For the past nine years, Rogers has leased space at the location for its child and adolescent day treatment program. With the purchase, Rogers intends to spend approximately $12 million to restore the building to a 56-bed facility (single and double rooms) with inpatient services for children, teens and adults. Work will include a complete interior renovation and roof renovation.

Additionally, Rogers has purchased an adjacent building at 4555 West Schroeder Drive. Interior remodeling is planned starting in spring 2014. Once completed, the building will be home to Rogers’ child and adolescent day treatment program and Rogers InHealth, a key corporation focused on reducing stigma surrounding mental health care. This location will further support the inpatient programs at the hospital through future growth in partial, day treatment and intensive outpatient services.  

Rogers anticipates a staff size of 300. Specific programming at each location is not determined, but will match Rogers’ current specialties in obsessive-compulsive and anxiety disorders, eating disorders, depression and mood disorders and addiction. “We plan to work with the community to ensure a mix of services that meet with local needs,” Hammer said.
 

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