Who We Serve
ANTHC was created in December 1997 to manage statewide
health services for Alaska Native people. All Alaska
Natives, through their tribal governments and through their
regional nonprofit organizations, own the Consortium. We
employ, for the better health of our service population,
approximately 2,000 people and operate under a half-billion
dollar operating budget.
Timeline
1997
• IHS opens a the new Alaska Native Medical Center in
Anchorage
• ANTHC incorporates as a not-for-profit organization
1998
• Contract with Indian Health Service transfers statewide
services to ANTHC and expands to include the Division of
Environmental Health and Engineering
1999
• ANTHC and Southcentral Foundation assume joint management
of ANMC
• ANTHC becomes largest tribal self-governance organization
in the U.S.
• ANMC earns certification as Alaska's only Level II Trauma
Center
• AFHCAN telehealth project launches
2002
• ANTHC begins training village-based Dental Health Aide
Therapists
• The Regional Utility Cooperative (later, the Alaska Rural
Utility Collaborative) is created to reduce outages, improve
water quality, lower costs and provide training
2003
• ANMC achieves prestigious Magnet® status for nursing
excellence, an honor bestowed to only five percent of U.S.
hospitals
2006
• ANTHC establishes tobacco-free campus
2007
• ANTHC completes groundbreaking study showing children in
communities with in-home water service have far fewer
respiratory diseases and skin infections
• ANTHC launches Healthy Alaska Natives Foundation
2008
• ANTHC begins work on the Alaska e-Health Network, an
electronic health records system
2009
• American Nurses Credentialing Center redesignates ANMC
with Magnet® status
• ANMC receives full re-accreditation from the Joint
Commission
• ANTHC establishes Center for Climate and Health
2010
• ANMC's trauma center, the only Level II trauma center in
the state, retains verification.
• ANTHC launches www.iknowmine.org to help teens make
healthy choices
• The journal Vaccine publishes a paper on the
near-eradication of hepatitis A in Alaska, and ANTHC's role
in seeing Alaska Natives' rates of the disease go from among
the worst to the best in the U.S. |
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Related Pages
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