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Contribuer aux commentairesMy wife was admitted to the hospital after having received fever in the cancer clinic chemo. I would like to thank all nurses, case managers, nurses, doctors and all those who took part in their care. they were all amazing. she received the best care we ever get from a sick house. you have worked tirelessly to ensure that she was comfortable and received the best medication for her condition. the collaboration between the doctors, case managers and nurses working in their name was incredible. when the species of the blood platelets was less available, they encountered any precautions by contacting the st luke presbyterian hospital in denver. they had no available bets at the time, but the sick house convinced to make space for them so that they continued to care that she needs. they were targeted for caravans and out of the hospital and were taken by air caravans and flew after them. I was sometimes overwhelmed, but the loving care she received. it was like family. I pray that st. luke’s can meet their standards. thank you from heart bottom. sincere joseph ferraro
I don't usually write reviews, but after my experience, I felt the need to give a review. My father had to be taken to the ER while I was here visiting from out of town so this of course was my first and only experience here at Montrose Regional, but certainly not my first visit to a hospital. I was extremely happy with the staff and the doctors and was much more at ease when we had to leave my Dad overnight as I knew he was in good hands. All we encountered were so nice and seemed to genuinely care. They were very accommodating and always willing to answer any questions. The hospital was also clean and even the food was a high five. Our experience here was nothing but positive.
Dr Garza was fantastic! I needed a few stitches in my face after an ice climbing incident and Dr Garza did an exceptional job. Staff was friendly. I hear the food is good there, too.
My family and I just moved to Montrose and we had to use the Emergency Department and they were absolutely awesome! The physicians and caregivers made us feel safe and we received high quality care. You could tell they were really busy but they did not make you feel that way. They are a bunch of great caregivers and we are happy to have that in our new community.
My daughter had been vomiting for nearly 24 hours and was severely dehydrated. She finally agreed to let me take her to the ER. I’ve not had good experiences with this hospital, but it was the closet. I dropped my daughter off at the entrance and left to park the car. When I got inside, she was barely able to stand and forced to fill out documents and sign. She was so weak. We sat down and started to wait. It’s been my experience that vomiting for that length of time can cause severe dehydration leading to the organs shutting down. I finally got up and asked the gal if triage was going to check her. She had zero idea and didn’t bother to find out. Instead, instructed me to use the red phone to call and ask. A nurse answered and said she would check. Another individual named John picked up the phone. I repeated my question, and he rudely responded that it could be 5, 10, 15 minutes or a half hour before a triage nurse could check on my daughter adding that only the worst cases would be checked. How the hell would they know how bad she if triage isn’t checking her? I stepped outside and called Delta hospital. They said they were busy, but to bring her right away. I went back in and asked my daughter if they had checked her yet. Nope. I barely got her to the car, she could barely walk. I got to Delta, a half hour away, and triage checked her right in. Why? Because it was effing serious. They immediately hooked her to an IV and started checking her organs. Something Montrose should have done. This isn’t the first time we’ve had to leave this hospital for another. A nurse named John (coincident was rude to my ill husband and refused care for him, insisting he only need oxygen and sent him away. By the way, my husband died 3 weeks later of lung cancer, a disease they neglected to find by repeatedly telling him he had an infection. This use to be a great hospital. It’s obvious the hostile takeover of the hospital has not fared well for the community.