Kindred Hospital- Chicago (North Campus)

About Us

Kindred Hospital Chicago - North is a 164-bed long-term acute care hospital offering the same in depth care you would receive in a traditional hospital, but for an extended recovery period. We partner with your physician and offer 24-hour clinical care seven days a week so you can start your journey to wellness. To the benefit of our patients, families and visitors, we are located alongside the North Branch Chicago River and surround by the greenery of Horner, Welles and Revere Parks.

As the most acute level of care in Kindred’s continuum, we play a vital role in the recovery process for chronic, critically ill and medically complex patients who require acute care and rehabilitation over an extended period. We’re very proud of our clinical outcomes. In 2019, Kindred’s Long-Term Acute Care Hospitals discharged more than 66% of patients home or to a lower setting of care. 

In this setting, our caregivers:

  • Provide aggressive, specialized interdisciplinary care to medically complex patients who require extended recovery times
  • Deliver quality care and service to our highest acuity patients
  • Require high energy
  • Learn quickly and pay close attention to patient conditions that change daily
  • Collaborate well with the entire team for each care episode

Chicago is home to:

  • 26 miles of lakefront with 25 beaches.
  • More than 8,800 acres of green space and 600 parks; the Chicago Park District is the largest municipal park manager in the nation.
  • Over 200 miles of bike lanes, 19 miles of lakefront bicycle paths, and more than 13,000 bike racks and parking areas.
  • 580 Divvy bike share stations and 5,800 Divvy bikes across the Chicagoland area.
  • Art on theMART, the longest-running and largest permanent digital art installation in the world.
  • One of the largest collections of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings outside of Paris, housed at the Art Institute of Chicago.
  • More than 500 public works of art displayed in over 150 municipal facilities around the city as part of the City of Chicago’s Public Art Program. These works include installations by Picasso, Chagall, Miro, and Calder.
  • Approximately 60 museums, nearly 200 art galleries, and 20 neighborhood art centers.
  • More than 250 theatres, 225 music venues, and 200 dance companies.
  • More than 7,300 restaurants and 167 breweries in the Chicagoland area — the most breweries of any metropolitan area in the nation.
  • 369 landmarks and 59 historic districts
  • Seven free downtown and lakefront major music and dance festivals, more than 30 food festivals, over 400 neighborhood festivals, and more than 40 film festivals annually.
  • Nine downtown parades and 18 neighborhood parades annually.
    The starting point of “Historic Route 66” at Grant Park on Adams Street in front of the Art Institute of Chicago.
  • The Museum of Science and Industry is the largest museum of its kind in the Western Hemisphere. FYI: The museum is housed in the only remaining building constructed for the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition’s “White City.” It was originally built as the exposition’s Palace of Fine Arts.
  • Máximo the Titanosaur, the largest dinosaur known to man, and SUE, the largest and most complete T.rex specimen in the country, at the Field Museum of Natural History.
  • The Chicago Cultural Center, built in 1897, which originated as the city’s first public library, and became the first free municipal cultural center in the United States. FYI: The Center is home to the world’s largest stained glass Tiffany dome.
  • Lincoln Park Zoo, one of the oldest zoos in the country, and one of the few remaining free zoos in the U.S.
  • Willis Tower (formerly Sears Tower) is the second-tallest building in the Western Hemisphere. FYI: Willis Tower held first place until the construction of New York’s One World Trade Center in 2014. Also, the Willis Tower elevators are among the fastest in the world, operating at speeds as fast as 1,600 feet per minute.
  • Wrigley Field (1914) is the second oldest ballpark in Major League Baseball.
  • Approximately 16 examples of Frank Lloyd Wright designs in the city of Chicago, and a further 25 in nearby Oak Park. FYI: Frank Lloyd Wright’s Prairie School of architecture originated in Chicago.
  • McCormick Place, the largest convention center in the Western Hemisphere.

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