The hospital offers adult and pediatric
renal transplantation and adult
pancreatic transplantation; most of the time, adult, and especially, pediatric,
cardiac transplantation cases are referred to tertiary care academic medical transplantation centers in Chicago or St. Louis, though there are facilities and surgeons and physicians available for cardiac transplantation at the center's Heart Institute and at the Children's Hospital, and they have been performed there repeatedly. The hospital offers advanced burn care, hyperbaric, and debridement and grafting services for both children and adults, and sometimes, if need be, can transfer very severe cases to the certified state burn units in Springfield, Chicago or St. Louis. The center's new Jump Simulation & Education Center is used for bioengineering, biochemical research, research on new devices and tissues and grafts, and medical and nursing and bioengineering training. In 2024, a new Comprehensive (level I) adult and pediatric cancer center will be fully opened; it will be the largest between Chicago and St. Louis, and will have most or all of the latest therapies available, including proton beam treatments.
Organization The Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis (led by Sister Judith Ann Duvall, O.S.F.) is established as a non-profit organization and is the parent company of
OSF Healthcare, which in turn is the operator of the OSF Healthcare System. The religious order of nuns and the hospital is not considered a part of the
Roman Catholic Diocese of Peoria, but still works closely with it. The System consists of 13 facilities in Illinois, including the center, plus one in
Escanaba, Michigan. The center received a Lantern Award in 2013 for nursing care in the emergency department. The center is also the #1 hospital in the state of Illinois for organ recovery. In 2017, it was ranked fifth by
U.S. News & World Report in three-way tie for the state's top hospitals. == Children's Hospital of Illinois ==