Future of Mission Hospital Laguna Beach not expected to include ER, acute services

Operators expect to close the emergency room and stop offering acute care services on site as they consider the future of Providence Mission Hospital Laguna Beach.

Seth Teigen, chief executive of Providence Mission Hospital, updated the Laguna Beach City Council during a recent workshop on discussions the health-care system is having about the hospital, which would need to complete a $300 million retrofit to its nearly 70-year-old tower by 2030 to comply with Californiaโ€™s seismic safety mandates.

โ€œWe have no intention of leaving Laguna Beach, but the hospital will look different,โ€ Teigen said, adding that Providence would also need to pay another $50 million to replace the facilityโ€™s original plumbing and electrical systems.

โ€œThe real key point and something weโ€™ve never come out and said publicly, is that the plan does not include running an acute care hospital,โ€ he told the council. โ€œThat plan is going to be doing healthcare at a very different way for Laguna Beach.โ€

Teigen explained that acute care includes inpatient care beds and the hospitalโ€™s emergency department. No timeline was given for potential changes.

The option for a standalone emergency room โ€” something San Clemente officials and residents had hoped to keep when the community hospital there was shuttered by MemorialCare in 2016 โ€” doesnโ€™t exist, Teigen said, adding that such a facility requires additional services, such as radiology, surgery suites and laboratories, to accompany the emergency room.

โ€œI think we recognize that of greatest interest to this community is how they access urgent or emergent care,โ€ he told the council. โ€œWe hope youโ€™ll allow us to come back as we get through this first phase of planning to unveil how we think weโ€™re going to be able to deal with that patient population in a non-traditional model. A model that will really meet the needs of the community members in the city and the surrounding coastal cities as well.โ€

In 2025, as of Nov. 17, 950 people had been taken by the Fire Department to the Laguna Beach emergency room โ€” of those 517 were residents.

Laguna Beach Fire Chief Niko King said Friday that his primary concern about not having an ER in town would be his departmentโ€™s ambulances being out of town, driving a patient to another area hospital, when theyโ€™re needed.

โ€œA critical patient treated in the back of an ambulance, be it theyโ€™re not breathing, their heart stopped, we have just about every technology they have in an emergency room,โ€ he said. โ€œWhether or not itโ€™s going to be a 15 to 20 minute drive to a hospital Code 3 or a five-minute ride, itโ€™s not that significant because weโ€™ve made the intervention already.โ€

โ€œThe concern for me and for the fire service here is that right now I have two ambulances that are in service 24/7,โ€ he said. โ€œWhen they transport to Laguna hospital, itโ€™s a five-minute transport time. They drop the patient off, do the paperwork, and theyโ€™re listening to the radio the whole time, so if another critical call comes in, theyโ€™re right back in the ambulance responding; theyโ€™re never leaving the community.โ€

โ€œIf theyโ€™re leaving, they donโ€™t have the option to come back into service,โ€ he added. โ€œThey can monitor the radio, but theyโ€™re going to have to fight traffic to get back in. Their turnaround time is significantly higher. How often are we going to find ourselves with zero ambulances to respond in the city of Laguna Beach?โ€

Residents hearing the update at the recent council meeting told city leaders they were concerned about those suffering an emergency.

A woman who identified herself as an emergency room nurse for 30 years described for council members an incident in which her sonโ€™s best friend experienced shortness of breath just blocks away from the Laguna Beach hospital, but was taken to the Mission Viejo hospital instead and died of cardiac arrest just as they arrived.

โ€œThe transport time to get to Mission is 30 minutes, Hoag is 35 minutes and Saddleback is 31 minutes, and thatโ€™s just to get there,โ€ she said. โ€œThatโ€™s not counting the time you need to extract them from their house. Then to get back into the city.

โ€œThere are two ambulances, two emergencies and youโ€™ve got nothing,โ€ she said. โ€œIf you have a heart attack, if you have an aneurysm, if you have anything, you have zero help.โ€

Another man who said he was a doctor rallied the community to step up and say, โ€œThis is not something we want.โ€

And, former Laguna Beach councilmember and mayor Toni Iseman reminded people of why the hospital was founded.

โ€œWhat we know is the former chief of police was shot, and he died, and we got a hospital,โ€ she said. โ€œWe need to think about what weโ€™re doing for the residents. To even consider leaving everyone in Laguna Beach vulnerable, have you looked at the traffic? How far is it to Hoag, Big Mission? Itโ€™s our obligation to our community. We have to do everything we can to make sure the hospital stays.โ€

Councilmembers Bob Whalen and Alex Rounaghi, who are the cityโ€™s hospital subcommittee, have been meeting with Teigen and other hospital officials for more than a year and said they will continue to do so. Teigen is also expected to return in the second quarter of the year to update the council as Providence further considers its plans.

Teigen on Friday said the presentation to the council is part of a โ€œthoughtful, multi-year planning process to understand community needsโ€ in which Providence will design a โ€œmore responsive, future-focused modelโ€ to best serve Laguna Beach residents for years to come.

โ€œBeyond seismic requirements, the current 1959 facility does not reflect the long-term needs of the community โ€” for example, on average, 80% of the hospitalโ€™s licensed beds sit unused every day,โ€ he said in an email. โ€œTransitioning away from acute care services will happen over time through thoughtful planning and coordination, to ensure continuity of care for the Laguna Beach community.โ€

Original source: us