Loma Linda University Health Responds to the Coronavirus (Covid-19) Pandemic: An Important Link

Loma Linda University Health Responds to the Coronavirus (Covid-19) Pandemic: An Important Link

The featured image for this post was taken from the southwest area of the hill where the story of Loma Linda University Health began.

Disclosure: This website shares information including images, text, video, and content with Loma Linda University Health relating to the Campus Transformation Project (CTP). Should a visitor to this site have a question or need information regarding Loma Linda University Health and the Coronavirus (Covid-19), please go to the following link:

https://lluh.org/patients-visitors/health-wellness/coronavirus-information-and-updates#covid19_ban

The main entrance to the Medical Center is closed at the corner of Prospect Avenue and Anderson Street. The barricades went up on Sunday, March 22, 2020.


An Eerie Sight: With the dark clouds hovering over the campus, the closed main entrance to the hospital campus is an eerie sight — no vehicles, no valets, no one in sight: A stark reminder that the coronavirus (Covid-19) has altered our way of life.
One of the several solar traffic message boards around campus alerting the public that the front entrance to the Medical Center is closed.
The solar traffic message board sequences to a second message notifying the public that there are visitor restrictions. Patients and visitors must enter at the ER level or at the “A” level entrance where they will be screened.

To Find Information regarding Visiting Hours and to get Updates Click on the Following Link:

https://lluh.org/patients-visitors/health-wellness/coronavirus-information-and-updates#covid19_ban

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Dennis E. Park, MA
After graduate school Dennis accepted a position at Loma Linda University. He worked there for 42 years in the areas of administration and financial management, also teaching accounting and management to dietetic students at the School of Public Health. Through the years Dennis has chronicled the growth of the campus, including the construction of the Drayson Center and the Centennial Complex and the razing of Gentry Gym. He is the author of "The Mound City Chronicles: A Pictorial History of Loma Linda University, A Health Sciences Institution 1905 - 2005." dEp 09.30.2016 🔨