Summary: University of Michigan Health-Sparrow Eaton has opened its newly renovated sleep center in Charlotte, Mich, offering expanded facilities and enhanced comfort for patients experiencing sleep disorders. The center now features additional private rooms with individual temperature control, new furniture, and a quieter setting for sleep studies. The sleep center provides comprehensive services for a range of sleep disorders, including sleep apnea, insomnia, and restless leg syndrome, offering care from consultation to follow-up.
Key Takeaways:
- Expanded Sleep Center: The renovated facility includes additional private rooms with individual temperature controls, enhancing patient comfort during sleep studies.
- Sleep Care: The center offers a full range of services for sleep disorders, including consultations, sleep studies, and follow-up care.
- Patient Experience: The sleep center’s new location on the hospital’s second floor provides a quieter environment with less interruption.
University of Michigan Health-Sparrow Eaton announced that its newly renovated sleep center is now open to patients who are among the many experiencing sleep issues.
The sleep center, located inside the Charlotte, Mich, hospital, now offers additional private rooms with individual temperature control and several other conveniences, like new furniture, to make the sleep study as comfortable as possible. Moving the center to the hospital’s second floor also creates a quieter space for less interruption.
“With these enhancements, we are prioritizing both comfort and privacy, ensuring that every patient receives a restful, personalized experience during their sleep study,” says Steve Dexter, director of operations at UM Health-Sparrow Eaton and Ionia, in a release.
The sleep center provides services for all types of sleep disorders like sleep apnea, insomnia, narcolepsy, restless leg syndrome, and more.
“We are proud to offer high-quality, compassionate sleep care in our facility within the UM Health-Sparrow Eaton campus. Our services include consultations, sleep studies and follow-up care, so that there are no gaps in total care of sleep disorders in our patients,” says Chandra M. Gera, MD FCCP, ABSM, University of Michigan Health-Sparrow Eaton Sleep Center medical director, in a release.
University of Michigan Health-Sparrow also has sleep centers at our hospitals in Lansing, Carson City, Ionia, and St. Johns.
Photo caption: Newly renovated sleep center room
Photo credit: University of Michigan Health-Sparrow Eaton
Leave a Reply