Local Hospitals and Urgent Care Clinics
Hospitals (Emergency Rooms)
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road |
503-494-8311 5.22 miles; driving time 16 min. |
Providence Portland Medical Clinic 4805 NE Glisan Street |
503-215-1111 4.04 miles; driving time 13 min. |
Providence Milwaukie Hospital 10150 SE 32nd Avenue, Milwaukie |
503-513-8300 3.16 miles; driving time 10 min. |
Adventist Medical Center 10123 SE Market Street |
503-257-2500 5.59 miles; driving time 15 min. |
Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital 1015 NW 22nd Avenue |
503-413-7711 5.64 miles; driving time 17 min. |
Legacy Emanuel Hospital 2801 N Gantenbein |
503-413-2200 5.95 miles; driving time 17 min. |
Kaiser-Sunnyside (Kaiser patients only) 10180 SE Sunnyside Road, Clackamas |
503-652-2880 6.73 miles; driving time 15 min. |
Urgent Care Clinics
*ZoomCare Woodstock (0.7 miles away) 4415 SE Woodstock Blvd. Portland, OR, 97206 503-608-3086 |
Monday–Friday 9am–7pm Weekends 9am-6pm |
*ZoomCare Lloyd Center 606 NE Grand Ave. Portland, OR, 97232 503-684-8252 |
Everyday 7am-12am |
*ZoomCare Sellwood (1.1 miles away) 6910 SE Milwaukie Ave. Portland, OR, 97202 503-608-3087 |
Monday–Friday 8am-6pm Weekends 9am-6pm |
ZoomCare Hawthorne (3 miles away) 3325 SE Hawthorne Blvd. Portland, OR 97214 971-998-1014 |
Monday–Friday 7am-12am Weekends 9am–6pm |
OHSU Walk-In 4212 SE Division Portland, OR 97206 503-494-1700 |
Monday–Friday 8am-8pm
|
**Kaiser Mt. Talbert 10100 SE Sunnyside Rd Clackamas, OR 97015 800-813-2000 |
Monday–Friday 9am-9pm |
**Kaiser Interstate South 3500 N Interstate Portland, OR 97227 800-813-2000 |
Monday–Friday 7am-11pm |
Gateway Providence 1321 NE 99th Ave. Suite 100 Portland, OR 97220 503-215-8800 |
Monday–Friday 8am-8pm |
*IV Fluids only available at Zoomcare Super locations. X-ray, ultrasound, and CT scan only available at Lloyd Center location.
**For Kaiser insurance only.
Please note that reimbursement at urgent cares and hospitals significantly vary. Please call the urgent care and ask about insurance before you go.
Urgent Care/Emergency Medical Attention FAQs
What do I do if I need emergency medical attention?
In the event of an life-threatening emergency, illness, or injury dial 911 to call an ambulance for transport (or 9-911 from a campus phone); notify Community Safety if you are on campus (0 from a campus phone); if an ambulance is called, Community Safety can guide it to your location.
How do I get to the hospital?
In the event of an life-threatening emergency, illness, or injury dial 911 (9-911 from a campus phone) to call an ambulance for transport; notify Community Safety if you did not use a campus phone to place the 911 call (503-788-6666); Community Safety can guide the ambulance to your location. All campus phones used to call 911 automatically notify Community Safety that the call has been made.
If the situation is not an emergency, but you need to go to the hospital, you can call Community Safety directly at 503-788-6666. They can arrange to have a cab pick you up and bill it to your student account. Community Safety also has maps to the local hospitals. You can also call Radio Cab yourself at 503-227-1212.
How do I decide whether to go to the hospital?
We always recommend that people make their health a priority. Sometimes that requires immediate medical care that can only be obtained at a hospital. If you have a life-threatening injury or illness, call 911 for an ambulance. If you use a personal cell phone, also call Community Safety at 503-788-6666 so that an officer can direct an ambulance to your location. If you are uncertain if immediate care is needed, call the HCC during business hours 503-777-7281 or Community Care line 800-607-5501 after hours for advice about appropriate treatment.
What should I expect when I get to the hospital?
Upon arrival at the emergency department (ED), you will be triaged based on the urgency of your medical need. Your wait to see a clinician will depend on the others who are waiting and the urgency of their medical needs. Be prepared to wait.
Once you've been assessed, you may be treated in the ED and released, admitted to the hospital, or sent to an observation unit where medical staff can monitor your status until it's clear that you should either be admitted or released. If admitted, you will most likely be moved out of the ED to one of the units in the hospital.
In order for the HCC to give and receive medical information (important for your treatment at the hospital and for follow up care) the hospital staff will ask for a release of information (ROI) for the HCC. They may also need an ROI in order to inform your family or other designated emergency contact of your presence and condition at the hospital.
What should I bring?
Bring your ID, insurance card and information, money, a change of clothes, important telephone numbers, your telephone and charger, your laptop, and something to do while you wait.
Can someone come with me?
Yes. It can be helpful to have someone who can advocate for you and who can help you remember medical instructions. That person can also call friends and family for you and keep those you care about you informed.
What happens after I am released?
The HCC will coordinate with the hospital to help you obtain appropriate follow-up care for your condition. That care may be provided at the HCC or by a community-based specialist to whom you have been referred. Remember to list the 果酱视频 Health and Counseling Center as your PCP so that we will be faxed records of your hospital visit.
Are there alternatives to the hospital?
The HCC can provide primary care services Monday–Friday, 9a.m.–5 p.m. during regular academic sessions. Local urgent care providers, like ZoomCare, can assess and treat many urgent, but not life-threatening, conditions. In general, it is most cost effective and fastest to go to an urgent care facility rather than going to the hospital.
Always remember to tell outside facilities that the 果酱视频 Health and Counseling Center is your home clinic and provide them with the name of the provider helping you so that your records are faxed to us.