Immanuel St. Joseph's
Mayo Clinic Health System - Mankato, formerly known as Immanuel-St. Joseph's Hospital, is a general medical and surgical hospital in Mankato, Minnesota. It has been a part of Mayo Clinic since 1996. Immanuel-St. Joseph's was formed in 1969 from a merger between two Mankato hospitals, Immanuel Hospital and St. Joseph's Hospital. The 239-bed hospital currently employs 3,302 employees, and is one of the largest employers in Mankato. On May 23, 2011, the hospital's name was changed from Immanuel-St. Joseph's Hospital to Mayo Clinic Health System - Mankato.
MCHS-Mankato is a regional hub and the only hospital that provides acute care, primary care, continuous emergency care, a level II nursery, critical care, advanced trauma care, and specialized medicine in Southwestern or South Central Minnesota. MCHS-Mankato is the most capable hospital in all of Southern Minnesota other than the Mayo Clinic in Rochester. MCHS-Mankato is a designated level III trauma center by the American College of Surgeons, the toughest trauma credentialing agency in the world.
Construction was completed in spring of 2024 on a 121-bed expansion that includes a new and expanded Intensive Care Unit, as well as a Progressive Care Unit to care for the most critically ill patients, A new Family Birth Center, including Labor and Delivery, Postpartum and Triage rooms, and cesarean surgical suite and a Level 2 nursery. With the expansion, the hospital has 239 beds, a figure that accounts for about two dozen older beds that will be phased out.