Flood risk data provided by Fathom shows estimated flooding at four American hospitals. CAMC Memorial and Sherman Oaks Hospital officials said in statements that they were aware of their flood risk and had prepared by obtaining deployable flood barriers and elevating their infrastructure. Representatives for Peninsula Hospital and Kadlec Regional Medical Center declined to answer questions about flooding. (Hannah Norman and Brett Kelman/KFF Health News)
LOUISVILLE, Tenn. — When a big storm hits, Peninsula Hospital could be underwater.
At this decades-old psychiatric hospital on the edge of the Tennessee River, an intense storm could submerge the building in 11 feet of water, cutting off all roads around the facility, according to a sophisticated computer simulation of flood risk.
Aurora, a young woman who was committed to Peninsula as a teenager, said the hospital sits so close to the river that it felt like a moat keeping her and dozens of other patients inside. KFF Health News agreed not to publish her full name because she shared private medical history.
“My first feeling is doom,” Aurora said as she watched the simulation of the river rising around the hospital. “These are probably some of the most vulnerable people.”
Covenant Health, which runs Peninsula Hospital, said in a statement it has a “proactive and thorough approach to emergency planning” but declined to provide details or answer questions.
Peninsula is one of about 170 American hospitals, totaling nearly 30,000 patient beds from coast to coast, that face the greatest risk of significant or dangerous flooding, according to a …