Mercy Celebrates Multispecialty Clinic in Springdale

Mercy co-workers and community members gathered to celebrate and bless the next-to-last piece in Mercy’s multiyear expansion, a 63,000-square-foot clinic featuring primary and specialty care and a 24-hour ER just off Interstate 49. The clinic is called Mercy Springdale.

Mercy has invested $47 million in the clinic, its largest in Northwest Arkansas, as part of a $277 million expansion announced in April of 2016. The last piece of the expansion is a seven-story tower at Mercy Hospital that will open in phases in October and November.

Mercy Springdale initially will add more than two dozen primary care and specialty physicians to an underserved area of Springdale, with more joining the clinic over time. Mercy determined the need for a medical campus in the area after a two-year study that looked at population trends, community health outcomes and limits in access to care.

The facility also includes a 22,000-square-foot emergency room featuring 12 exam rooms. In addition to a trauma room, the ER has two triage rooms, an isolation room (for infectious diseases or other issues) and three rooms to accommodate patients with behavioral health needs. A helipad on site will allow for critical care transports to Mercy Hospital Northwest Arkansas in Rogers and other facilities.

An imaging department will serve both the clinic and ER sides with X-ray, computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Mercy Hospital President Eric Pianalto said, “The people we will be caring for are my family, my friends, and neighbors. That makes the work very personal.”

Taking the reins at the facility is Kerry Harper, campus administrator, who has more than three decades of experience in healthcare at Mercy Hospital and its predecessor, St. Mary’s Hospital. Harper said the clinic will improve access to care, whether that’s for a routine visit or an emergency. “The growth in this area is phenomenal, and we’re ready to step up to provide health care to newcomers and to families that have been here for generations.”

The facility’s clinic side will feature 60-plus exam rooms, including 29 dedicated to primary care and 34 for specialty care. Specialties located permanently in the clinic include cardiology, endocrinology, neurology, and pulmonology, and there will be rotating specialties. Primary care providers will include internal medicine and pediatrics.

Some providers at the clinic are new to Mercy, while others will transfer from other Mercy locations.

-Cardiology: Dr. Kiran Kurichety

-Endocrinology: Dr. Johnathan Stringer and APRN Katiutschka Reyes

-Internal medicine: Dr. Marck Shelnutt

-Neurology: Dr. Ryan Kaplan and Dr. Steven Moon

-Pediatrics: Dr. Susan Sullivan and APN Rachel Angulo

-Primary care: Dr. Larry Schemel and APN Taylor Kelamis

-Pulmonology: Dr. Dan Paul

The Mercy Health Foundation has raised $2 million to support construction of Mercy Springdale, including a $1.5 million lead gift from the Shewmaker family and a $250,000 grant from the James M. Cox Foundation.

Other lead donors include the Sunderland Foundation, Schmeiding Foundation, Pete and Shirley Esch, and Northwest Arkansas Pathology Associates.

“We’re so grateful to all of our donors for their generosity in helping us open doors in a community in need of greater access to care,” said Clark Ellison, vice president of Mercy Health Foundation.

09/20/2019