Seattle Children’s, Virginia Mason partner to expand in Kitsap

Seattle Children’s Hospital on Jan. 8, 2021. (Dorothy Edwards/Cascade PBS)
This article originally appeared in the Kitsap Sun.
Virginia Mason Franciscan Health has entered a “strategic affiliation” with Seattle Children’s Hospital, the company announced Tuesday, hoping to bring services from the renowned pediatric hospital directly to patients on the Kitsap Peninsula and other areas around Puget Sound.
Virginia Mason Franciscan operates 10 Puget Sound hospitals, including two on the Kitsap Peninsula.
Through the affiliation, access to perinatal, neonatal and related specialty services will expand across VMFH Birth Centers, the company says.
Right now, Virginia Mason Franciscan–owned hospitals — which deliver 10% of Washington's births — send 25 vulnerable newborns per day to Seattle Children’s Hospital. Many of these families travel to their North Seattle campus or to a clinic in Federal Way. Embedding Seattle Children’s physicians across the Virginia Mason Network is expected to reduce those barriers.
“Our goal is to keep every mother and baby together in their home community whenever possible, and any kid with a specialty need that otherwise would have to drive up to Seattle home, by bringing Seattle Children's doctors down physically or using technology into VMFH sites of care,” said Mark Salierno, Children’s senior vice president and chief strategy and business development officer.
The specifics of how physicians will be deployed at VMFH sites and how many staff could be hired are still being worked out, Salierno said. A strategic oversight committee, with representatives from both organizations, will guide the affiliation.
Tom Kruse, chief strategy officer for Virginia Mason Franciscan who served as chief strategy officer for old Harrison Hospital in Bremerton from 2007 to 2011, said the peninsula has been dealing with limited medical care for a long time, and the partnership will bring needed services to the community.
“All of this is to help improve the overall health of the community by intervening sooner and bringing a truly world-class children’s hospital to all the members of the peninsula who’ve never had that caliber before,” he said. “It should be a game changer.”
The Kitsap Sun published a longer version of this article on April 30, 2025. Conor Wilson is a Murrow News fellow, reporting for the Kitsap Sun and Gig Harbor Now, a nonprofit newsroom based in Gig Harbor, through a program managed by Washington State University.