Kitchener-Waterloo

Grand River and St. Mary's hospitals look to merge by next spring

Grand River and St. Mary's hospitals are looking ahead at the future as they want to become one organization. The merger still has to be approved by the hospital boards and the ministry of health.

If approved, transition to one organization expected to take 1 year and could launch in spring 2025

The outside of a hospital building.
St. Mary's Hospital and Grand River Hospital are looking to merge into one organization. If approved, the transition could take up to a year. (Brian St. Denis/CBC)

Grand River Hospital and St. Mary's General Hospital have plans to merge.

The hospitals are in the process of putting together the details of the merger to discuss it with the province's Ministry of Health.

St. Mary's board of trustees chair Tim Rollins said the reason for the proposed merger is to provide patients with faster and better access to care.

"The population growth within the community and the aging population, they're going to continue to put pressures on the healthcare system that is already under pressure," Rollins told CBC News Wednesday.

"We believe coming together now will enable us to set the foundation for future innovation working together and ensure better care and better outcomes for this community for generations to come."

Grand River board chair Sandra Hanmer said the merger will combine the hospitals' strengths for healthcare workers to deliver better care. It will also help retain more staff.

"For the staff, it will give them additional supports. We are sorely needing healthcare practitioners within our community and by being together, we are hopeful this will help us attract and retain the best and the brightest in our community," she told CBC News.

photo of grand river hospital sign
Grand River Hospital and St. Mary's Hospital board members say merging combines hospitals' strength and will improve access to care. (CBC)

The hospitals currently have had joint collaborations including shared clinical support services, a shared information system and COVID-19 responses.

The two hospitals are also working together on a plan for a new regional hospital.

The hospitals received input from staff, physicians and patients last fall about a potential merger.

The merger of the hospitals still has to be approved by the Ontario Ministry of Health. Rollins and Hamner said the hospitals plan to submit a business plan to the ministry by September.

They said there will also be community consultation on the plan later this spring.

The name of the new organization is expected to be decided later in the planning process based on community and hospital staff input.

A spokesperson for St. Mary's General Hospital said the hospital will not be Catholic under the merger.

"The St. Mary's site will continue to provide acute care services under the governance of the planned merged organization, but not as a Catholic acute care hospital," the spokesperson said in an email to CBC News.

If approved, the beginning stages of transitioning to one organization is expected to take one year and could launch as early as spring 2025.

<p>Two hospitals in the region are looking to become one organization by next spring. We'll hear from officials with St. Mary's and Grand River Hospitals about why they want to merge and how this will improve patient care.&nbsp;</p>