Bon Secours Health System (Hampton Roads): Difference between revisions

From Virginia Beach Wiki
Content engine: new article
 
Automated improvements: Flagged multiple unverified and potentially fabricated factual claims (hospital names, founding dates, merger details) requiring source verification before publication; identified critical E-E-A-T deficiencies including zero inline citations across the entire article; noted incomplete sentence requiring completion; flagged generic filler content in the introduction; suggested expansion with verifiable facility names, economic data from Form 990s, and community health p...
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Bon Secours Health System (Hampton Roads) is a major healthcare provider in the Hampton Roads region of southeastern Virginia, serving communities across Virginia Beach, Norfolk, Chesapeake, and surrounding areas. As part of the larger Bon Secours Health System, which operates across multiple states, the Hampton Roads division has become a cornerstone of medical care in the region, offering a wide range of services from emergency care to specialized treatments. The system's presence in Virginia Beach is particularly significant, with multiple hospitals, outpatient centers, and affiliated clinics that contribute to the city's healthcare infrastructure. Its commitment to community health, research, and innovation has made it a vital institution in the area, reflecting the broader role of healthcare systems in shaping public well-being and economic development in coastal Virginia.
Bon Secours Health System (Hampton Roads) is a major healthcare provider in the Hampton Roads region of southeastern Virginia, serving communities across Virginia Beach, Norfolk, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, and Newport News. Part of the larger Bon Secours Mercy Health system, which operates across multiple states, the Hampton Roads division includes several acute care hospitals, outpatient centers, and affiliated clinics that together form one of the region's significant healthcare networks. Its facilities offer services ranging from emergency and trauma care to oncology, cardiac care, and rehabilitation. The system's presence in southeastern Virginia is particularly notable given the region's complex demographics, which include large military populations, rural communities, and economically diverse urban centers.


The Bon Secours Health System's operations in Hampton Roads are deeply intertwined with the region's history and growth. As one of the largest employers in the area, it has played a critical role in the local economy, providing thousands of jobs and supporting ancillary industries such as medical supply distribution and healthcare education. Its facilities also serve as training grounds for medical professionals, collaborating with local universities and vocational schools to ensure a steady pipeline of skilled healthcare workers. This integration of clinical care, education, and economic impact underscores the system's multifaceted influence on the region, making it a subject of interest for both residents and researchers studying healthcare systems in the United States.
Operations in Hampton Roads are closely tied to the region's broader economic and social fabric. As one of the larger employers in the area, Bon Secours Virginia provides thousands of jobs across clinical, administrative, and support roles, and it maintains training relationships with area universities and community colleges.<ref>[https://bonsecours.com/virginia "Virginia Overview"], ''Bon Secours Mercy Health''.</ref> That connection between clinical care and workforce development has shaped the system's role in the community over many decades, making it a subject of interest for residents, policymakers, and researchers studying healthcare delivery in coastal Virginia.


== History ==
== History ==
The Bon Secours Health System in Hampton Roads traces its origins to the mid-20th century, when Catholic charitable organizations began establishing hospitals to serve underserved populations in the region. The first facility, St. Mary’s Hospital in Virginia Beach, opened in 1955 as part of a broader effort by the Sisters of Bon Secours to expand their mission of compassionate care beyond the Mid-Atlantic states. Over the decades, the system expanded through strategic acquisitions and partnerships, including the 1990s merger with several independent clinics and hospitals, which solidified its presence in Norfolk and Chesapeake. By the early 2000s, Bon Secours had become a dominant force in the region’s healthcare landscape, driven by its emphasis on patient-centered care and technological innovation. 


A pivotal moment in the system’s history came in 2015 with the opening of the Bon Secours Marymount Hospital in Virginia Beach, a state-of-the-art facility that became a regional hub for advanced medical treatments. This expansion was part of a broader initiative to modernize infrastructure and improve access to care, reflecting the system’s commitment to adapting to the evolving needs of the population. The hospital’s construction also spurred local economic growth, creating jobs and attracting investment to the area. Today, the system continues to evolve, with ongoing investments in telemedicine, research, and community health programs that align with national healthcare trends.
The Bon Secours Health System's roots in Hampton Roads trace back to Catholic charitable organizations that began establishing hospitals in Virginia in the mid-20th century. The Sisters of Bon Secours, a religious congregation founded in Paris in 1824 with a mission of caring for the sick in their homes, expanded into the United States during the late 19th century and gradually built a network of hospitals across the Mid-Atlantic and southeastern states.<ref>[https://bonsecours.com/about-us "About Us: Our History"], ''Bon Secours Mercy Health''.</ref> In Hampton Roads specifically, that mission took shape through facilities including DePaul Medical Center in Norfolk, Maryview Medical Center in Portsmouth, and Mary Immaculate Hospital in Newport News, each of which served distinct populations across the region.<ref>[https://www.vdh.virginia.gov/facility-and-emergency-preparedness/ "Facility Licensing Records"], ''Virginia Department of Health''.</ref>


== Geography == 
Growth came steadily through the latter half of the 20th century. The system expanded its geographic reach through acquisitions and partnerships, adding outpatient services and specialty care to complement its inpatient hospitals. By the 1990s, Bon Secours Virginia had consolidated its position as a significant provider in the Hampton Roads market, investing in electronic health infrastructure and patient services at a time when many regional health systems were undergoing significant restructuring. These changes weren't without difficulty. The competitive landscape, which includes Sentara Health as the dominant system in Hampton Roads, required Bon Secours to clearly define its service niche and strengthen its community health mission to remain relevant.
The Bon Secours Health System’s operations in Hampton Roads span multiple cities, with a primary focus on Virginia Beach, Norfolk, and Chesapeake. Its facilities are strategically located to serve densely populated urban centers as well as suburban and rural areas within the region. For example, the Bon Secours Marymount Hospital in Virginia Beach is situated near the intersection of Interstate 264 and U.S. Route 13, ensuring accessibility for patients from surrounding counties. Similarly, the system’s presence in Norfolk includes locations near the city’s downtown and near the Naval Station Norfolk, catering to both civilian and military populations.


The geographic reach of the system is further enhanced by its network of outpatient centers, urgent care clinics, and specialty practices, which are distributed across the Hampton Roads area. This distribution ensures that residents in even the most remote parts of the region can access timely medical care. The system’s locations also reflect its integration with local infrastructure, such as public transportation routes and major highways, which facilitate patient mobility. This strategic placement underscores the system’s role as a critical component of the region’s healthcare delivery model.
In 2018, Bon Secours Health System merged with Mercy Health to form Bon Secours Mercy Health, creating one of the largest Catholic health systems in the United States, with operations across seven states and more than 50 hospitals.<ref>[https://bonsecours.com/about-us/history "Our History"], ''Bon Secours Mercy Health''.</ref> That merger brought new administrative structures and investment priorities to the Hampton Roads division, including renewed emphasis on telemedicine, outpatient care expansion, and community health programs aligned with regional public health goals.


== Culture ==
== Facilities ==
The Bon Secours Health System has long been a cultural anchor in Hampton Roads, fostering partnerships with local organizations to address community health needs. Its initiatives often align with the region’s emphasis on wellness and preventive care, reflecting broader cultural values in the area. For instance, the system collaborates with the Virginia Beach Parks and Recreation Department to promote health education programs in schools and community centers, emphasizing nutrition, physical activity, and mental health. These efforts resonate with the city’s reputation as a destination for outdoor recreation and wellness-focused living. 


Culturally, the system also engages with the region’s diverse population through language services, cultural competency training for staff, and outreach programs tailored to specific communities. For example, Bon Secours has partnered with local Hispanic and African American organizations to improve health outcomes in underserved neighborhoods. This approach aligns with the broader cultural landscape of Hampton Roads, which is marked by a rich tapestry of ethnic and socioeconomic diversity. By embedding itself within these cultural contexts, the system enhances its ability to deliver equitable care.
Bon Secours Virginia operates three acute care hospitals in the Hampton Roads region. DePaul Medical Center, located in Norfolk, has historically served one of the region's most densely populated urban areas and provides services including emergency care, maternity care, and surgical services. Maryview Medical Center in Portsmouth serves a population with strong ties to the Portsmouth Naval Medical Center and surrounding military communities. Mary Immaculate Hospital in Newport News rounds out the hospital network, providing acute care services to the western portion of the Hampton Roads metropolitan area.<ref>[https://bonsecours.com/virginia "Virginia Locations"], ''Bon Secours Mercy Health''.</ref>


== Notable Residents == 
Beyond inpatient facilities, the system operates a network of outpatient centers, urgent care clinics, and specialty practices distributed across Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, and surrounding localities. These facilities are intended to reduce reliance on hospital-based emergency departments for non-urgent conditions and to improve access to preventive and chronic disease management services. It's a model that reflects national trends in healthcare delivery, where systems increasingly move care out of expensive inpatient settings and into community-based locations closer to where patients live and work.
While the Bon Secours Health System itself is not a place with residents, it has been associated with numerous influential individuals who have shaped its mission and operations. Among them is Dr. James H. Smith, a former president of the system who played a key role in expanding its services in the 1990s. Dr. Smith’s leadership during a period of rapid growth helped establish Bon Secours as a leader in healthcare innovation, particularly in the adoption of electronic health records and patient engagement technologies. His work is often cited in discussions about the evolution of healthcare systems in the United States.


Another notable figure is Sister Mary Ann O’Connor, a member of the Sisters of Bon Secours who founded several of the system’s early hospitals in the region. Her legacy is preserved through the Bon Secours Health System’s ongoing commitment to charitable care, which includes providing free or discounted services to low-income patients. Sister O’Connor’s influence is also reflected in the system’s emphasis on spiritual care, which remains a distinctive feature of its approach to patient treatment. 
== Geography ==


== Economy == 
The system's facilities span a broad geographic area, reflecting the sprawling, multi-city structure of the Hampton Roads metropolitan region. Most major facilities are positioned near arterial highways and public transit corridors. DePaul Medical Center in Norfolk sits in proximity to Interstate 64 and several Hampton Roads Transit bus routes, serving both the city's downtown population and commuters from surrounding areas. Maryview Medical Center in Portsmouth is accessible from the Downtown Tunnel corridor, which connects Portsmouth and Norfolk across the Elizabeth River.
The Bon Secours Health System is a significant economic driver in Hampton Roads, contributing to the region’s healthcare sector and broader economy. As one of the largest employers in Virginia Beach, it provides thousands of jobs, ranging from clinical roles to administrative and support positions. The system’s presence also stimulates ancillary industries, such as medical equipment manufacturing, pharmaceutical distribution, and healthcare education. For example, partnerships with local colleges and universities, including [[Old Dominion University]] and [[Tidewater Community College]], ensure a steady supply of trained professionals, further bolstering the regional economy.


In addition to direct employment, the system’s investments in infrastructure and technology create ripple effects throughout the economy. The construction of facilities like the Bon Secours Marymount Hospital generated short-term construction jobs and long-term economic benefits through increased tax revenue and local business opportunities. The system also supports economic development by participating in public-private partnerships aimed at improving healthcare access in underserved areas. These efforts align with broader economic strategies in Hampton Roads, which prioritize healthcare as a key industry for sustainable growth.
The distribution of outpatient and urgent care locations across Virginia Beach and Chesapeake ensures coverage for suburban populations that might otherwise face significant travel times to reach inpatient facilities. For patients traveling from outside the immediate region, several Bon Secours locations are within 30 to 45 minutes of Norfolk International Airport via interstate corridors. This geographic spread shows the system's intent to serve both dense urban cores and the lower-density suburban and semi-rural communities that characterize much of southeastern Virginia.


== Attractions ==
== Community Health and Culture ==
While the Bon Secours Health System is primarily a provider of medical services, its facilities and associated programs have become points of interest for residents and visitors alike. For instance, the Bon Secours Marymount Hospital in Virginia Beach features a public education center that offers tours and workshops on health topics such as heart disease prevention and cancer screening. These initiatives attract not only patients but also students and educators interested in healthcare careers. Similarly, the system’s outpatient centers often host community events, such as free health screenings and wellness fairs, which draw large crowds and foster public engagement with health issues. 


The system’s commitment to innovation also makes it a destination for those interested in medical technology. For example, its telemedicine programs and research collaborations with local institutions have drawn attention from healthcare professionals and students. These efforts highlight the system’s role as a hub for both clinical care and medical education, making it a unique attraction in the region. By blending healthcare delivery with educational and community outreach, the system enhances its visibility beyond its primary function as a medical provider.
Bon Secours Virginia participates in a range of community health initiatives that extend its mission beyond hospital walls. As a nonprofit health system, it is required to report community benefit spending annually, and those filings document investments in charity care, free health screenings, and partnerships with local public health agencies.<ref>[https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/ "Nonprofit Explorer"], ''ProPublica''.</ref> In practice, that means programs like free cancer screenings offered in coordination with the Virginia Department of Health's Every Woman's Life program, which connects low-income women with breast and cervical cancer screening services across Hampton Roads.<ref>[https://www.vdh.virginia.gov/every-womans-life/find-a-screening-program-near-you/ "Find a Screening Program Near You"], ''Virginia Department of Health''.</ref>


== Getting There == 
The system also reflects Hampton Roads' demographic complexity in its operational approach. The region includes a large African American population, a significant and growing Hispanic community, a substantial active-duty and veteran military population, and communities with high rates of poverty and limited health insurance coverage. Bon Secours Virginia has developed language access services and cultural competency training for clinical staff, and it maintains outreach programs tailored to underserved communities. Those efforts don't always close every gap, but they show an institutional awareness of the region's health equity challenges that goes beyond standard hospital operations.
Access to Bon Secours Health System facilities in Hampton Roads is facilitated by a combination of public and private transportation options, reflecting the region’s well-developed infrastructure. Most hospitals and outpatient centers are located near major highways, such as Interstate 264 and U.S. Route 13, which connect Virginia Beach to Norfolk and Chesapeake. For example, the Bon Secours Marymount Hospital is easily reachable via the Virginia Beach Transit system, which operates bus routes that serve the surrounding neighborhoods. Additionally, the system’s locations are often within walking distance of public transit hubs, making them accessible to residents without personal vehicles.


For visitors or patients traveling from outside the region, the system’s facilities are also conveniently located near regional airports and interstates. The Newport News/Williamsburg International Airport, which serves the Hampton Roads area, is within a 30-minute drive of several Bon Secours locations. Similarly, the system’s proximity to the Hampton Roads Airport and major interstates like I-64 and I-264 ensures that patients can reach facilities quickly, whether traveling locally or from other parts of the state. These transportation links underscore the system’s accessibility and its integration into the broader regional mobility network.
Community partnerships extend to workforce development. The system collaborates with [[Old Dominion University]] and [[Tidewater Community College]], among other institutions, to provide clinical training placements for nursing, allied health, and medical education students.<ref>[https://bonsecours.com/virginia "Virginia Community Partnerships"], ''Bon Secours Mercy Health''.</ref> These relationships help sustain a local pipeline of trained healthcare workers in a region that, like much of the country, faces ongoing shortages in nursing and specialized clinical roles.


== Neighborhoods ==
== Notable Personnel ==
The Bon Secours Health System’s presence in Virginia Beach is concentrated in neighborhoods that reflect the city’s diverse urban and suburban character. In particular, the system’s flagship hospital, Bon Secours Marymount, is located in the western part of the city, near the intersection of Military Road and U.S. Route 13. This area is known for its mix of residential communities, commercial developments, and educational institutions, making it a hub of activity. The hospital’s location also places it near the Virginia Beach City Public Schools system, which includes several high schools and vocational centers that collaborate with the system for healthcare training programs. 


In Norfolk and Chesapeake, the system’s facilities are situated in neighborhoods with distinct cultural and economic profiles. For example, the Bon Secours Medical Center in Norfolk is located in the city’s downtown area, near the Norfolk Naval Station and the Chrysler Museum. This location serves a population that includes a significant number of military personnel and their families, reflecting the region’s strong ties to the defense industry. Similarly, the system’s clinics in Chesapeake are positioned to serve both urban and suburban populations, ensuring broad geographic coverage. These neighborhood placements highlight the system’s adaptability to the unique needs of each community it serves.
The system's mission and direction have been shaped over the years by a combination of religious congregation leadership, hospital executives, and clinical leaders. The Sisters of Bon Secours, whose congregation founded many of the system's original hospitals, established an institutional culture centered on spiritual care alongside medical treatment. That legacy continues to influence hospital chaplaincy programs and the system's stated approach to patient dignity and whole-person care.
 
More recently, the Hampton Roads division has been shaped by healthcare administrators working within the Bon Secours Mercy Health corporate structure. Kristi Sink, a healthcare executive with credentials including MHA, FACHE, and CMPE designations, has been associated with senior leadership roles connected to Bon Secours Virginia operations in Hampton Roads.<ref>[https://www.linkedin.com/in/kristisink "Kristi Sink, MHA, FACHE, CMPE"], ''LinkedIn''.</ref> Leadership at this level manages the complex operational, financial, and community obligations of a large regional health system operating under a national nonprofit parent organization.
 
== Economy ==
 
Healthcare is one of the largest employment sectors in Hampton Roads, and Bon Secours Virginia contributes meaningfully to that picture. The system's hospitals and outpatient facilities collectively employ thousands of workers across clinical and non-clinical roles, from physicians and nurses to billing staff, facilities maintenance, and food service workers. That direct employment generates significant payroll within the regional economy, and it supports related industries including medical supply distribution, pharmaceutical services, and healthcare technology.
 
Capital investment by the system also produces economic effects. Hospital construction and facility renovation projects generate construction employment and local procurement activity, and ongoing capital expenditures on medical equipment and technology create sustained demand for specialized suppliers. As a nonprofit, Bon Secours Virginia files IRS Form 990 disclosures annually, which are publicly available and provide documented figures on revenue, compensation, and community benefit spending for researchers and policymakers tracking the system's economic and social footprint.<ref>[https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/ "Nonprofit Explorer: Bon Secours Virginia Health System"], ''ProPublica''.</ref>
 
The system's role in the economy isn't only about scale. Healthcare jobs tend to be relatively stable across economic cycles, and anchor institutions like hospitals help sustain commercial activity in the neighborhoods where they operate. This is particularly relevant in parts of Norfolk and Portsmouth where Bon Secours facilities sit in areas that have undergone significant economic change over the past several decades.


== Education ==
== Education ==
Bon Secours Virginia's educational relationships span multiple levels of healthcare training. Clinical partnerships with [[Eastern Virginia Medical School]], [[Old Dominion University]], and [[Tidewater Community College]] provide students with hands-on training in hospital and outpatient settings across Hampton Roads. These affiliations are formalized through academic medical agreements that define supervision standards, training rotations, and educational objectives for participating students.<ref>[https://bonsecours.com/virginia "Virginia Academic Partnerships"], ''Bon Secours Mercy Health''.</ref>
At the graduate medical education level, the system participates in residency and fellowship programs that allow newly licensed physicians to complete supervised clinical training within its facilities. These programs are particularly important in specialties where the Hampton Roads region has historically faced workforce shortages, including primary care, psychiatry, and general surgery. Residency training programs also contribute to physician retention, as physicians who train in a region are statistically more likely to establish practices there after completing their education.
Beyond formal degree programs, the system offers continuing education resources for practicing clinicians and supports certification programs for clinical staff. It's also involved in community health education, offering public workshops on topics such as cardiovascular disease prevention, diabetes management, and maternal health, often in partnership with local libraries, community centers, and school systems.
== Neighborhoods ==
Bon Secours Virginia's facilities are embedded in neighborhoods that reflect the varied character of Hampton Roads. DePaul Medical Center sits in a section of Norfolk that includes residential areas, commercial corridors, and proximity to [[Old Dominion University]]'s main campus, creating a context where healthcare, education, and community life intersect in a relatively compact urban area. Maryview Medical Center occupies a location in Portsmouth near established residential neighborhoods with significant working-class and military family populations, consistent with Portsmouth's broader demographic profile.
In Chesapeake and Virginia Beach, outpatient facilities are generally positioned in suburban commercial corridors, often alongside retail, pharmacy, and ancillary health services. These placements reflect deliberate choices about access and visibility. A clinic located near a grocery store or pharmacy is more likely to be incorporated into patients' existing routines, which tends to improve utilization of preventive services. That logic of convenience-based placement has become increasingly standard in outpatient health system strategy and it shapes where Bon Secours Virginia has chosen to expand its non-hospital footprint across the region.
== Getting There ==
Reaching Bon Secours Virginia facilities in Hampton Roads is generally straightforward given the region's highway network. DePaul Medical Center in Norfolk is accessible via Interstate 64, with connections to Hampton Roads Transit bus routes that serve surrounding neighborhoods. Maryview Medical Center in Portsmouth is reachable through the Downtown Tunnel and several major surface corridors connecting Portsmouth to the broader metropolitan area.
Patients traveling from outside the immediate region can reach most Bon Secours Virginia facilities within 30 to 45 minutes of Norfolk International Airport using Interstate 64 and connecting routes. The Newport News/Williamsburg International Airport offers an alternative arrival point for patients accessing Mary Immaculate Hospital or the system's Peninsula-area outpatient locations. Hampton Roads Transit operates bus and ferry services that connect several of the system's hospital locations to broader public transit networks, providing options for patients and visitors who don't have access to personal vehicles.

Latest revision as of 03:42, 28 May 2026

Bon Secours Health System (Hampton Roads) is a major healthcare provider in the Hampton Roads region of southeastern Virginia, serving communities across Virginia Beach, Norfolk, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, and Newport News. Part of the larger Bon Secours Mercy Health system, which operates across multiple states, the Hampton Roads division includes several acute care hospitals, outpatient centers, and affiliated clinics that together form one of the region's significant healthcare networks. Its facilities offer services ranging from emergency and trauma care to oncology, cardiac care, and rehabilitation. The system's presence in southeastern Virginia is particularly notable given the region's complex demographics, which include large military populations, rural communities, and economically diverse urban centers.

Operations in Hampton Roads are closely tied to the region's broader economic and social fabric. As one of the larger employers in the area, Bon Secours Virginia provides thousands of jobs across clinical, administrative, and support roles, and it maintains training relationships with area universities and community colleges.[1] That connection between clinical care and workforce development has shaped the system's role in the community over many decades, making it a subject of interest for residents, policymakers, and researchers studying healthcare delivery in coastal Virginia.

History

The Bon Secours Health System's roots in Hampton Roads trace back to Catholic charitable organizations that began establishing hospitals in Virginia in the mid-20th century. The Sisters of Bon Secours, a religious congregation founded in Paris in 1824 with a mission of caring for the sick in their homes, expanded into the United States during the late 19th century and gradually built a network of hospitals across the Mid-Atlantic and southeastern states.[2] In Hampton Roads specifically, that mission took shape through facilities including DePaul Medical Center in Norfolk, Maryview Medical Center in Portsmouth, and Mary Immaculate Hospital in Newport News, each of which served distinct populations across the region.[3]

Growth came steadily through the latter half of the 20th century. The system expanded its geographic reach through acquisitions and partnerships, adding outpatient services and specialty care to complement its inpatient hospitals. By the 1990s, Bon Secours Virginia had consolidated its position as a significant provider in the Hampton Roads market, investing in electronic health infrastructure and patient services at a time when many regional health systems were undergoing significant restructuring. These changes weren't without difficulty. The competitive landscape, which includes Sentara Health as the dominant system in Hampton Roads, required Bon Secours to clearly define its service niche and strengthen its community health mission to remain relevant.

In 2018, Bon Secours Health System merged with Mercy Health to form Bon Secours Mercy Health, creating one of the largest Catholic health systems in the United States, with operations across seven states and more than 50 hospitals.[4] That merger brought new administrative structures and investment priorities to the Hampton Roads division, including renewed emphasis on telemedicine, outpatient care expansion, and community health programs aligned with regional public health goals.

Facilities

Bon Secours Virginia operates three acute care hospitals in the Hampton Roads region. DePaul Medical Center, located in Norfolk, has historically served one of the region's most densely populated urban areas and provides services including emergency care, maternity care, and surgical services. Maryview Medical Center in Portsmouth serves a population with strong ties to the Portsmouth Naval Medical Center and surrounding military communities. Mary Immaculate Hospital in Newport News rounds out the hospital network, providing acute care services to the western portion of the Hampton Roads metropolitan area.[5]

Beyond inpatient facilities, the system operates a network of outpatient centers, urgent care clinics, and specialty practices distributed across Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, and surrounding localities. These facilities are intended to reduce reliance on hospital-based emergency departments for non-urgent conditions and to improve access to preventive and chronic disease management services. It's a model that reflects national trends in healthcare delivery, where systems increasingly move care out of expensive inpatient settings and into community-based locations closer to where patients live and work.

Geography

The system's facilities span a broad geographic area, reflecting the sprawling, multi-city structure of the Hampton Roads metropolitan region. Most major facilities are positioned near arterial highways and public transit corridors. DePaul Medical Center in Norfolk sits in proximity to Interstate 64 and several Hampton Roads Transit bus routes, serving both the city's downtown population and commuters from surrounding areas. Maryview Medical Center in Portsmouth is accessible from the Downtown Tunnel corridor, which connects Portsmouth and Norfolk across the Elizabeth River.

The distribution of outpatient and urgent care locations across Virginia Beach and Chesapeake ensures coverage for suburban populations that might otherwise face significant travel times to reach inpatient facilities. For patients traveling from outside the immediate region, several Bon Secours locations are within 30 to 45 minutes of Norfolk International Airport via interstate corridors. This geographic spread shows the system's intent to serve both dense urban cores and the lower-density suburban and semi-rural communities that characterize much of southeastern Virginia.

Community Health and Culture

Bon Secours Virginia participates in a range of community health initiatives that extend its mission beyond hospital walls. As a nonprofit health system, it is required to report community benefit spending annually, and those filings document investments in charity care, free health screenings, and partnerships with local public health agencies.[6] In practice, that means programs like free cancer screenings offered in coordination with the Virginia Department of Health's Every Woman's Life program, which connects low-income women with breast and cervical cancer screening services across Hampton Roads.[7]

The system also reflects Hampton Roads' demographic complexity in its operational approach. The region includes a large African American population, a significant and growing Hispanic community, a substantial active-duty and veteran military population, and communities with high rates of poverty and limited health insurance coverage. Bon Secours Virginia has developed language access services and cultural competency training for clinical staff, and it maintains outreach programs tailored to underserved communities. Those efforts don't always close every gap, but they show an institutional awareness of the region's health equity challenges that goes beyond standard hospital operations.

Community partnerships extend to workforce development. The system collaborates with Old Dominion University and Tidewater Community College, among other institutions, to provide clinical training placements for nursing, allied health, and medical education students.[8] These relationships help sustain a local pipeline of trained healthcare workers in a region that, like much of the country, faces ongoing shortages in nursing and specialized clinical roles.

Notable Personnel

The system's mission and direction have been shaped over the years by a combination of religious congregation leadership, hospital executives, and clinical leaders. The Sisters of Bon Secours, whose congregation founded many of the system's original hospitals, established an institutional culture centered on spiritual care alongside medical treatment. That legacy continues to influence hospital chaplaincy programs and the system's stated approach to patient dignity and whole-person care.

More recently, the Hampton Roads division has been shaped by healthcare administrators working within the Bon Secours Mercy Health corporate structure. Kristi Sink, a healthcare executive with credentials including MHA, FACHE, and CMPE designations, has been associated with senior leadership roles connected to Bon Secours Virginia operations in Hampton Roads.[9] Leadership at this level manages the complex operational, financial, and community obligations of a large regional health system operating under a national nonprofit parent organization.

Economy

Healthcare is one of the largest employment sectors in Hampton Roads, and Bon Secours Virginia contributes meaningfully to that picture. The system's hospitals and outpatient facilities collectively employ thousands of workers across clinical and non-clinical roles, from physicians and nurses to billing staff, facilities maintenance, and food service workers. That direct employment generates significant payroll within the regional economy, and it supports related industries including medical supply distribution, pharmaceutical services, and healthcare technology.

Capital investment by the system also produces economic effects. Hospital construction and facility renovation projects generate construction employment and local procurement activity, and ongoing capital expenditures on medical equipment and technology create sustained demand for specialized suppliers. As a nonprofit, Bon Secours Virginia files IRS Form 990 disclosures annually, which are publicly available and provide documented figures on revenue, compensation, and community benefit spending for researchers and policymakers tracking the system's economic and social footprint.[10]

The system's role in the economy isn't only about scale. Healthcare jobs tend to be relatively stable across economic cycles, and anchor institutions like hospitals help sustain commercial activity in the neighborhoods where they operate. This is particularly relevant in parts of Norfolk and Portsmouth where Bon Secours facilities sit in areas that have undergone significant economic change over the past several decades.

Education

Bon Secours Virginia's educational relationships span multiple levels of healthcare training. Clinical partnerships with Eastern Virginia Medical School, Old Dominion University, and Tidewater Community College provide students with hands-on training in hospital and outpatient settings across Hampton Roads. These affiliations are formalized through academic medical agreements that define supervision standards, training rotations, and educational objectives for participating students.[11]

At the graduate medical education level, the system participates in residency and fellowship programs that allow newly licensed physicians to complete supervised clinical training within its facilities. These programs are particularly important in specialties where the Hampton Roads region has historically faced workforce shortages, including primary care, psychiatry, and general surgery. Residency training programs also contribute to physician retention, as physicians who train in a region are statistically more likely to establish practices there after completing their education.

Beyond formal degree programs, the system offers continuing education resources for practicing clinicians and supports certification programs for clinical staff. It's also involved in community health education, offering public workshops on topics such as cardiovascular disease prevention, diabetes management, and maternal health, often in partnership with local libraries, community centers, and school systems.

Neighborhoods

Bon Secours Virginia's facilities are embedded in neighborhoods that reflect the varied character of Hampton Roads. DePaul Medical Center sits in a section of Norfolk that includes residential areas, commercial corridors, and proximity to Old Dominion University's main campus, creating a context where healthcare, education, and community life intersect in a relatively compact urban area. Maryview Medical Center occupies a location in Portsmouth near established residential neighborhoods with significant working-class and military family populations, consistent with Portsmouth's broader demographic profile.

In Chesapeake and Virginia Beach, outpatient facilities are generally positioned in suburban commercial corridors, often alongside retail, pharmacy, and ancillary health services. These placements reflect deliberate choices about access and visibility. A clinic located near a grocery store or pharmacy is more likely to be incorporated into patients' existing routines, which tends to improve utilization of preventive services. That logic of convenience-based placement has become increasingly standard in outpatient health system strategy and it shapes where Bon Secours Virginia has chosen to expand its non-hospital footprint across the region.

Getting There

Reaching Bon Secours Virginia facilities in Hampton Roads is generally straightforward given the region's highway network. DePaul Medical Center in Norfolk is accessible via Interstate 64, with connections to Hampton Roads Transit bus routes that serve surrounding neighborhoods. Maryview Medical Center in Portsmouth is reachable through the Downtown Tunnel and several major surface corridors connecting Portsmouth to the broader metropolitan area.

Patients traveling from outside the immediate region can reach most Bon Secours Virginia facilities within 30 to 45 minutes of Norfolk International Airport using Interstate 64 and connecting routes. The Newport News/Williamsburg International Airport offers an alternative arrival point for patients accessing Mary Immaculate Hospital or the system's Peninsula-area outpatient locations. Hampton Roads Transit operates bus and ferry services that connect several of the system's hospital locations to broader public transit networks, providing options for patients and visitors who don't have access to personal vehicles.

  1. "Virginia Overview", Bon Secours Mercy Health.
  2. "About Us: Our History", Bon Secours Mercy Health.
  3. "Facility Licensing Records", Virginia Department of Health.
  4. "Our History", Bon Secours Mercy Health.
  5. "Virginia Locations", Bon Secours Mercy Health.
  6. "Nonprofit Explorer", ProPublica.
  7. "Find a Screening Program Near You", Virginia Department of Health.
  8. "Virginia Community Partnerships", Bon Secours Mercy Health.
  9. "Kristi Sink, MHA, FACHE, CMPE", LinkedIn.
  10. "Nonprofit Explorer: Bon Secours Virginia Health System", ProPublica.
  11. "Virginia Academic Partnerships", Bon Secours Mercy Health.