Early years Scarborough’s first general hospital opened at Lawrence Avenue East and McCowan Road in 1956, established by local physicians and the Sisters of Misericorde to meet the needs of a fast-growing suburb. A second general hospital, later known as Centenary, opened on 1 July 1967, its name marking the 100th anniversary of
Canadian Confederation. In 1984
The Salvation Army opened Scarborough Grace Hospital in north Scarborough, later renamed Birchmount Hospital.
Irene Stickland, a Salvation Army officer, served as CEO of Scarborough Grace from 1989 to 1999.
1990s amalgamations In 1998 the Salvation Army merged administration of Scarborough General and Scarborough Grace as The Scarborough Hospital, creating a two-campus organization. In the same year Centenary joined the Ajax and Pickering hospital to form the
Rouge Valley Health System (RVHS), where Centenary became the Scarborough campus of that system.
2016 realignment and renaming In 2016 the province directed the dissolution of RVHS and the transfer of the Centenary campus to The Scarborough Hospital, while the Ajax and Pickering campus moved to
Lakeridge Health. The new three-site corporation took effect on 1 December 2016 with the interim name Scarborough and Rouge Hospital, and in 2018 it adopted the name
Scarborough Health Network.
Program consolidation and local response On 24 January 2019 the SHN board approved integration of the Women’s and Children’s program at the Centenary and General hospitals, which shifted inpatient
obstetrics and inpatient
pediatrics away from Birchmount. SHN stated that Birchmount would remain open and continue to provide acute care. The decision drew a local campaign, Save the Grace, advocating for services in north Scarborough.
Jim Karygiannis, a
Toronto city councillor, was among the public advocates for maintaining services at Birchmount.
Redevelopment In 2023 the province supported SHN’s redevelopment program in Scarborough, including a major expansion plan at Birchmount. SHN describes the Birchmount project as the largest redevelopment in its history, with a new tower, expanded
emergency department, additional
operating rooms, inpatient beds, and diagnostic imaging.
SARS In 2003 the first patient with
SARS in
Toronto was treated at the Scarborough Grace Hospital, now Birchmount. SARS in Canada reported 44 deaths in Ontario and more than 330 people infected. ==Philanthropy==