MGH campus transformation
MGH’s campus transformation continues with major renovation work. Patients and visitors can expect to experience noise, hallway closures and detours around the hospital. Learn more about our campus transformation.
MGH’s campus transformation continues with major renovation work. Patients and visitors can expect to experience noise, hallway closures and detours around the hospital. Learn more about our campus transformation.
The Medicine Program at Michael Garron Hospital (MGH) provides patient-centered, high-quality care to patients and their families. The program consists of a wide range of services, including:
General Internal Medicine
In-patient Units
Cardiac Critical Care
Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
Outpatient Clinics
MGH is proud to have one of the few progressive weaning centres in Ontario. This patient-focused program applies state-of-the-art care to wean many patients off ventilators and support recovery from prolonged critical illness. Our program accepts applications from critical care units around the province.
Our interprofessional teams provide excellent care to acutely ill patients followed by a safe and timely transition to the next level of care.
Our teams consist of a wide range of health professionals, including:
Registered nurses and registered practical nurses
Personal support workers
Clinical resource leaders
Nurse practitioners
Physicians and physician assistants
Pharmacists
Dietitians
Physiotherapists (PT) and PT assistants
Occupational therapists (OT) and OT assistants
Respiratory therapists
Transition navigators
Speech language pathologists
T9 – Respirology (Chest Centre), Nephrology (kidney care), and Provincial Prolonged-Ventilation Weaning Centre of Excellence
T8 – Nephrology (brain and stroke care), acute care for the elderly, and telemetry
T7 – General Internal Medicine and Oncology (cancer care)
A3, B3 – General Internal Medicine
J2 - Critical Care and Cardiac Critical Care
Remote Care Monitoring (for frail elderly and respiratory patients)
MGH2Home
There may be occasions where your care requirements need to be delivered at another hospital in the Greater Toronto Area. In these cases, MGH will send you to another hospital to receive this specialized care or treatment.
Once you no longer need specialized care but aren’t quite ready to go home yet, you may need to return to MGH: this is called repatriation. Each hospital has a process to manage repatriations. Your care team will tell you if you will be transferred back to MGH and will support this transition. Learn more about repatriation in Ontario.