New Lenox Village Board Graphic.1

Silver Cross Hospital Details Massive Emergency Room Process Overhaul Amid Surging Demand and State Behavioral Health Shortages

Spread the love

New Lenox Village Board of Trustees Meeting | April 27, 2026

Article Summary:
Silver Cross Hospital executives presented the New Lenox Village Board with an in-depth operational update, detailing how sweeping procedural changes have drastically reduced emergency room walk-outs despite nationwide trends of severe overcrowding. Hospital leaders emphasized the ongoing strain caused by long-term boarding of behavioral health patients and urged residents to utilize urgent care centers for non-life-threatening conditions.

Silver Cross Emergency Department Key Points:

  • Drastic Metric Improvements: The hospital’s “Left Without Being Seen” rate has plummeted from 6.9% down to 1.7%, well below the national benchmark of 3.0% for similarly sized hospitals.

  • Behavioral Health Bottleneck: During the meeting, 8 of the emergency department’s 33 available beds were occupied by behavioral health patients awaiting state placement, effectively crippling immediate capacity.

  • Throughput Innovations: The hospital has implemented dedicated “bed boards,” an ED Service Ambassador to communicate with the waiting room, and revised triage workflows to decompress patient surges.

  • Urgent Care Impact: Silver Cross urgent cares are now handling nearly half the volume of the main emergency department, capturing patients with lower-acuity needs and preventing complete hospital gridlock.

The New Lenox Village Board on Monday, April 27, 2026, received a comprehensive, data-driven presentation from the highest levels of Silver Cross Hospital leadership, outlining the facility’s aggressive strategies to combat emergency room wait times and patient backlog.

Silver Cross President and CEO Michael Mutter, alongside VP of Clinical Operations Mary Beth Anton, acknowledged that the hospital’s emergency department has faced heavy community criticism over wait times in recent years. Mutter noted the administration has spent the last 18 to 24 months hyper-focused on improving daily throughput metrics.

“We have had some bumps in the road over the past several years just from a perspective of utilization of the emergency department,” Mutter told the Board. “I’m a big data-driven geek. I feel like if you have data in front of you, you can make change based on the data that you see.”

Anton presented internal dashboard metrics revealing that the hospital evaluates between 150 and 230 emergency patients daily. The crux of the overcrowding issue, she explained, is a nationwide phenomenon known as “boarding”—where patients who are admitted to the hospital must wait inside an emergency room bed because the inpatient tower upstairs is completely full.

Despite these bottlenecks, Anton reported massive procedural victories. Since Fiscal Year 2023, the percentage of patients who “Left Without Being Seen” (LWBS)—meaning they registered but left before triage due to long waits—has dropped from 6.9% to a mere 1.7%. The national benchmark for hospitals handling 65,000 to 68,000 ED visits annually is 3.0%.

The hospital achieved this by implementing “Kaizen events” to rework triage and CT scan workflows, alongside the introduction of an ED Service Ambassador dedicated strictly to keeping patients in the waiting room informed of their status.

However, Anton provided the Board with a real-time snapshot of how factors outside the hospital’s control continue to strain capacity. While speaking at the podium, Anton checked her live executive dashboard, noting a current average wait time of six hours with 26 people in the waiting room.

The primary cause of the specific bottleneck that evening, Anton explained, was a severe lack of state mental health resources.

“We are holding eight behavioral health patients, which really renders our emergency department less eight beds,” Anton said, noting the facility has a total of 38 ED beds. “We have one patient that is probably going to be with us for about a week until we can place him… If you have a patient, especially somebody who isn’t funded, it really is just a waiting game until one of the state mental health hospitals either open up or we can convince a hospital that has an open bed.”

Mutter and Anton pleaded with the community to utilize the hospital’s affiliated urgent care centers in New Lenox, Mokena, Crest Hill, and Orland Park for minor ailments. Anton noted the urgent cares are now seeing patient volumes equal to nearly half of the main ED’s traffic.

Mayor Tim Baldermann praised the administration’s transparency and ongoing improvements.

“There’s nothing more important than healthcare, [and] I think that’s really critical for people to know that going to the emergency room is not your best bet,” Baldermann said regarding low-acuity illnesses. “Bringing you guys here was the best thing we ever did to this community… We’re very, very fortunate to have you here.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

New-Lenox-School-122.3

Meeting Summary and Briefs: New Lenox School District 122 Board for December 16, 2025

New Lenox School District 122 Board Meeting | December 16, 2025 The New Lenox School District 122 Board of Education met on Tuesday evening at Liberty Jr. High. In addition...
Will County Finance Logo

Will County Treasurer’s Investment Strategy Yields $6 Million in Income

Finance Committee Meeting | February 3, 2026 Article Summary: County Treasurer Tim Brophy and investment managers from Stifel presented a detailed review of the county’s investment portfolio to the Finance...
Screenshot 2026-02-04 at 2.02.55 PM

Lobbyists Outline Strategy for Federal Funding and Grundy County Expansion

JJC Trustees Workshop Meeting | January 28, 2026 Article Summary: Representatives from Point of Difference Strategies updated the JJC Board on efforts to secure state and federal funding for key...
Will County Board Graphic.04

Capital Imp Committee Debates ‘Human Factor’ in Drafting New Artificial Intelligence Policy

Will County Capital Improvements & IT Committee Meeting | Jan. 6, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board Capital Improvements and IT Committee launched a comprehensive discussion on creating a...
New Lenox Township.3

Meeting Summary and Briefs: New Lenox Township Board for December 11, 2025

New Lenox Township Board Meeting | December 11, 2025 The New Lenox Township Board of Trustees met on Thursday to address changes in leadership and annual financial ordinances. The meeting...
new-lenox-fire-district-stations.2

Meeting Summary and Briefs: New Lenox Fire Protection District for Dec. 15, 2025

New Lenox Fire Protection District Meeting | Dec. 15, 2025 The New Lenox Fire Protection District Board of Trustees convened on Monday, December 15, 2025, to close out district business...
HBO MAX

HBO Max Orders Cop Drama Pilot ‘American Blue’ to Film in Joliet

Article Summary: HBO Max has ordered a pilot for a new police drama titled "American Blue," with production scheduled to begin in Joliet and Chicago this April. Starring Milo Ventimiglia...
New-Lenox-School-122.5

Parent Pushes for Expanded Music Curriculum During Board Meeting

New Lenox School District 122 Board Meeting | December 16, 2025 Article Summary: During public comment, a district parent advocated for the choir program to be integrated into the school...
Screenshot 2026-02-04 at 2.02.55 PM

JJC Administration Proposes Tuition Increase Amidst Future Budget Concerns

JJC Trustees Workshop Meeting | January 28, 2026 Article Summary: Joliet Junior College (JJC) administration presented a three-year financial plan that relies on a proposed $3 per credit hour tuition...
Will County Board Graphic.03

Will County Public Works Advances $1.9 Million Improvement for Wilmington-Peotone Road

Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | February 3, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee has authorized a nearly $2 million contract for Phase I...
First lady meets with former Oct. 7 hostages

First lady meets with former Oct. 7 hostages

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square American citizen and Chapel Hill, N.C. native, Keith Siegel and his wife Aviva focused their meeting with First Lady Melania Trump on hope and a...
Supreme Court declines challenge to California's congressional map

Supreme Court declines challenge to California’s congressional map

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge to California's redistricting bid that would add more Democrat-majority districts in the state. In November, California...

Candidate: $243 million in unlawful spending is example of ‘Preckwinkle’s mismanagement’

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A candidate for Cook County board president says county spending of $243 million in violation of Illinois’...
GOP lawmakers urge Thune to tweak filibuster rules to pass voter ID bill

GOP lawmakers urge Thune to tweak filibuster rules to pass voter ID bill

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Dozens of Republicans are demanding that the U.S. Senate take up House-passed legislation implementing election security reforms – and they’re willing to restructure filibuster rules...
Illinois housing crunch sees prices rising, units dwindling

Illinois housing crunch sees prices rising, units dwindling

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – With Illinois facing a housing shortage fueled by dwindling availability and rising prices, Illinois Policy Institute...