AdventHealth Littleton


AdventHealth Littleton is a non-profit hospital campus in Littleton, Colorado, Arapahoe County, United States owned by AdventHealth. The medical facility is a tertiary, comprehensive stroke center, and psychiatric hospital that has multiple specialties. In April 2004, the hospital is designated a Level II trauma center by the Colorado Department of [Public Health and Environment] and it later was also recognized by the American College of Surgeons in October 2005.

History

In April 1989, Littleton Adventist Hospital became the very first hospital in Littleton, Colorado when it opened with 82 beds.
In 1996, Littleton Adventist Hospital became part of the joint venture Centura Health when it was founded by PorterCare Adventist Health System and Catholic Health Initiatives.
In August 2001, construction began on a 130,000-square-foot expansion for $40 million to add thirty-two beds, two operating theatres and an augment radiology department and to double the size of the emergency department.
On October 1, 2001, PorterCare Adventist Health System merged with Adventist Health System Sunbelt Healthcare Corporation after approval from the Federal Trade Commission.
On December 6, 2004, Littleton Adventist Hospital announced that it would expand for $38 million, by adding three stories to its south tower. It would be adding twenty-four intensive care unit beds and thirty-two surgical beds, increasing the hospitals beds to 231. The expansion would be 85,100-square-foot and have shell space for future expansion. Construction began in February 2005.
In early November 2014, there was a groundbreaking for a oncology center on campus. It is being built for Seavest Healthcare Properties, LLC.
In 2015, Little Adventist Hospital began a renovation and expansion project for $30 million. It renovated its lobby and its atrium. It also renovated and expanded its pre-operation and post-operation surgery rooms and interventional radiology.
In late 2017, the Colorado Senate passed a law requiring all hospitals to have their chargemaster on its website by January 1, 2018. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services also required all hospitals to do the same by January 1, 2021. In early August 2022, Littleton Adventist Hospital still had refused to comply. To force hospitals to comply the Colorado House of Representatives and Colorado Senate both passed laws forbidding hospitals from collecting debt by reporting patients to collection agencies.
By April 2019, the hospital had one million patients visit the emergency department, it delivered 50,000 babies, and performed 165,000 surgeries.
On February 14, 2023, Centura Health announced that it would split up. On August 1, Centura Health split up with Littleton Adventist Hospital rebranding to AdventHealth Littleton.
In early September 2023, construction began on a three story, 97,700-square-foot, heart and vascular tower for $100 million. It would add twenty-four bed coronary care unit, cardiac catheterization laboratories, cardiac diagnostic department, operating theatres, pre-and post-procedural rooms, two hybrid suites, electrophysiology and interventional cardiology suites. Later the size of the tower was changed to 143,000-square-foot and it opened for $150 million on August 27, 2025.
On May 15, 2024, AdventHealth Littleton announced that employees had found thirty-one cremains from miscarriages, they were later buried at a local cemetery.