ECU Health
ECU Health is a not-for-profit academic health care system headquartered in Greenville, North Carolina, operating 1,708 licensed beds across an academic medical center, community hospitals, and outpatient facilities while serving more than 1.4 million people in 29 eastern North Carolina counties.[1][2] Its mission focuses on improving the health and well-being of the region through high-quality patient care, medical education, and research, with a particular emphasis on rural health challenges and social determinants of health.[3] As the primary teaching hospitals for East Carolina University's Brody School of Medicine, ECU Health integrates clinical practice with academic training to advance medical advancements and workforce development.[4][2] Formerly known as Vidant Health, the system rebranded to ECU Health in January 2022 to underscore its deepened partnership with East Carolina University and commitment to becoming a national model for rural health delivery.[3] The flagship ECU Health Medical Center in Greenville functions as a 974-bed tertiary referral center, handling over 68,000 admissions, 56,000 inpatient surgeries, and 450,000 outpatient visits annually, supported by specialized services in cancer care, cardiovascular health, and emergency response.[5][6] ECU Health has achieved recognition for clinical innovations, record physician recruitment, expanded access to care, and progress in research, positioning it as the largest health provider in eastern North Carolina despite periodic financial pressures from uncompensated care in underserved areas.[7][3]History
Founding and Early Development
Pitt Community Hospital, the foundational institution of what became ECU Health, was established in 1924 in Greenville, North Carolina, to provide local medical services in Pitt County.[8] It was renamed Pitt General Hospital in 1934 amid efforts to expand community healthcare access in eastern North Carolina.[8] In 1949, the facility was reorganized as Pitt County Memorial Hospital (PCMH), with construction of a new structure approved via a $1.4 million bond issue to address growing regional needs.[9] The modern 120-bed hospital opened on February 8, 1951, in West Greenville, marking a significant upgrade in capacity and marking PCMH as a central provider for Pitt County and surrounding areas.[9] Early operations included establishing a board of trustees, approving medical staff, and setting visiting hours, with full accreditation from the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals achieved by May 1956.[9] The hospital expanded in 1961 with the completion of the A Wing addition, increasing bed capacity and acquiring land for future growth, reflecting its evolving role in regional healthcare delivery.[9] By the late 1990s, PCMH leaders partnered with East Carolina University's Brody School of Medicine to form University Health Systems of Eastern Carolina in 1997, integrating hospital operations with academic medicine to enhance services across 29 counties.[10][11] This union laid the groundwork for a not-for-profit system focused on primary care and community health, building on PCMH's legacy of local service.[10]Expansion and Rebranding to Vidant Health (2012)
In December 2011, University Health Systems of Eastern Carolina announced its rebranding to Vidant Health, effective January 25, 2012, to establish a unified identity emphasizing vitality and regional service.[12][10] The name "Vidant" drew from Latin and French roots connoting life ("vi") and health ("sante"), selected after evaluating options that initially included shortening to "UHS" but were deemed insufficient for conveying the system's scope and energy.[12][13] As part of the transition, Pitt County Memorial Hospital was renamed Vidant Medical Center, while affiliate facilities such as Roanoke-Chowan Hospital, Vidant Pungo Hospital, and others adopted the "Vidant" prefix to consolidate branding across eastern North Carolina's 29 counties.[10][13][14] This move supported operational cohesion amid a workforce of over 12,000 and aimed to enhance recognition in a competitive landscape, though it followed a brief delay from an earlier planned UHS-only rebrand in 2011.[13] The rebranding aligned with strategic expansions, including the acquisition of two community hospitals in fiscal 2011 and integration of an additional facility by early 2012, bolstering the regional network serving 1.4 million residents.[15] Concurrently, Vidant Edgecombe Hospital initiated an emergency department expansion to address growing demand, while Vidant Medical Center advanced infrastructure upgrades, such as a $48 million project started in 2011, reflecting the system's focus on capacity enhancement during this period of growth.[16][17]ECU Partnership and Rebranding to ECU Health (2022)
On November 12, 2021, East Carolina University's Brody School of Medicine and Vidant Health announced a joint operating agreement to enhance clinical integration and form the ECU Health system.[18] The ECU Board of Trustees approved the agreement the prior week, followed by unanimous approval from the UNC Board of Governors on November 18, 2021.[19] Under the terms, the two entities retained separate legal statuses but committed to collaborative operations aimed at improving healthcare delivery for approximately 1.4 million residents in eastern North Carolina.[20] The agreement became effective on January 1, 2022, establishing a shared leadership and governance structure for ECU Health, including integrated management, strategic planning, and development of shared services.[20] It emphasized advancing medical education, research, and philanthropy while positioning the partnership as a national model for rural academic healthcare.[20] Vidant Health CEO Dr. Michael Waldrum stated that the collaboration would transform healthcare by combining academic excellence with advanced delivery systems, as quoted in official announcements.[20] Rebranding from Vidant Health to ECU Health commenced in May 2022, following the logo reveal on April 14, 2022, with full implementation spanning several months across facilities and ECU Physicians practices; the Brody School of Medicine retained its name.[21] The new branding symbolized the deepened partnership, highlighting a unified commitment to innovation, education, and addressing regional health disparities, according to ECU Chancellor Philip Rogers.[21] This change made the longstanding affiliation more visible, as noted by Brody School Dean Dr. Jason Higginson, who emphasized its role in elevating care, research, and education opportunities.[21]Facilities
Owned Hospitals
ECU Health owns and operates a network of hospitals centered around its flagship academic medical center in Greenville, North Carolina, supplemented by community hospitals serving rural and coastal areas across 29 eastern North Carolina counties. The system totals approximately 1,447 beds, with ECU Health Medical Center accounting for 974 licensed beds and providing comprehensive acute, intermediate, rehabilitation, and outpatient services to over 1.4 million residents.[22][6] These facilities emphasize integrated care, including 24/7 emergency departments at each hospital location, and function as teaching sites affiliated with East Carolina University's Brody School of Medicine.[23] The primary facility, ECU Health Medical Center, established as Pitt County Memorial Hospital in 1949 and expanded through mergers, serves as the system's hub with specialized services across two campuses, including advanced cardiology, oncology, and trauma care. ECU Health Maynard Children's Hospital, integrated within the Medical Center, focuses on pediatric inpatient and emergency care, with a dedicated children's emergency department. ECU Health Beaufort Hospital, operating as a campus of the Medical Center in Washington, functions as a full-service community hospital offering inpatient, outpatient, and emergency services in a waterfront setting.[24][25] ECU Health's eight community hospitals deliver localized acute and emergency care, often in underserved rural regions, with capacities ranging from smaller critical access facilities to mid-sized general hospitals. These include:| Hospital Name | Location | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| ECU Health Bertie Hospital | Windsor, NC | Community hospital providing emergency and general medical services.[24] |
| ECU Health Chowan Hospital | Edenton, NC | Full-service facility with 24/7 emergency care and surgical services.[24] |
| ECU Health Duplin Hospital | Kenansville, NC | Offers inpatient care, emergency services, and outpatient clinics.[24] |
| ECU Health Edgecombe Hospital | Tarboro, NC | General hospital with medical, surgical, and emergency capabilities.[24] |
| ECU Health North Hospital | Roanoke Rapids, NC | Licensed for 204 beds, including nursery; provides array of medical and surgical services with 24-hour emergency care.[24][26] |
| ECU Health Roanoke-Chowan Hospital | Ahoskie, NC | Community hospital focused on regional acute care needs.[24] |
Specialty and Outpatient Facilities
ECU Health operates a network of outpatient specialty clinics and facilities across eastern North Carolina, extending specialized medical services to communities served by its regional hospitals. These clinics provide access to multidisciplinary care in fields such as cardiology, nephrology, orthopedics, and pulmonology, often staffed by physicians affiliated with East Carolina University's Brody School of Medicine.[1] [27] At ECU Health Bertie Hospital Outpatient Specialty Clinic, services include ear, nose, and throat care; heart and vascular services; nephrology; orthopedics and sports medicine; pain management; podiatry; and pulmonology. Similarly, the ECU Health Chowan Hospital Outpatient Specialty Clinic offers cancer care, heart and vascular services, nephrology, pulmonology and sleep medicine, and wound care. The ECU Health Roanoke-Chowan Hospital Outpatient Specialty Clinic provides heart and vascular care, nephrology, podiatry, pulmonology, and urology, with nephrology availability varying by schedule.[27] [28] [29] Pediatric specialty outpatient services are available through dedicated units, including a 12-bed Pediatric Day Medical Unit at ECU Health Maynard Children's Hospital, which handles infusion therapies, pre- and post-operative care, and other non-inpatient procedures. Additional outpatient areas support emergency care, surgery, imaging, rehabilitation, and patient testing for pediatric patients.[30] [31] ECU Health's outpatient surgery center performs thousands of procedures annually, encompassing a broad spectrum of elective and minimally invasive interventions across multiple specialties. Rehabilitation services, including outpatient physical, occupational, and speech therapy, are offered at sites such as ECU Health Medical Center Outpatient Rehabilitation, with specialized programs in audiology, aquatic therapy, hand therapy, orthotics, and vestibular rehabilitation.[32] [33] [34]Services
Clinical and Specialized Services
ECU Health offers an extensive range of specialized clinical services, focusing on advanced diagnostics, treatments, and multidisciplinary care across its 1,447-bed system serving eastern North Carolina. These include sophisticated interventions in oncology, cardiology, neurology, and pediatrics, supported by over 1,100 providers in more than 185 clinics.[35][1] In cancer care, ECU Health provides comprehensive programs emphasizing early detection, chemotherapy, radiation, and surgical oncology, coordinated through dedicated centers that integrate research and patient support services.[35] Heart and vascular services encompass diagnostic imaging, interventional procedures, and surgical interventions for conditions like coronary artery disease and arrhythmias, with a focus on minimally invasive techniques to enhance recovery.[36] Neurological care addresses disorders of the brain, spine, and nervous system, including stroke management, epilepsy treatment, and neurosurgical procedures, leveraging specialized teams for acute and chronic conditions.[37] Pediatric specialized services at ECU Health Maynard Children's Hospital include genetics for diagnosing hereditary disorders, a hemophilia treatment center—one of three in North Carolina—for bleeding and clotting issues, and the state's largest sickle cell center managing hemoglobinopathies through infusion therapies and multidisciplinary clinics.[30] Additional pediatric offerings feature board-certified anesthesiology for procedural sedation and outpatient management of chronic illnesses and developmental delays.[30] Other key specialties encompass transplant services for organ replacement, bariatrics for surgical weight management, behavioral health for psychiatric and substance use disorders across age groups, and orthopedics and sports medicine for joint reconstruction and injury rehabilitation.[35] Further areas include infectious disease management for complex pathogens, nephrology for kidney disorders, pulmonology for respiratory conditions, and urology for genitourinary pathologies, all delivered via coordinated care models that facilitate transitions between outpatient and inpatient settings.[35][38]Emergency and Transport Services
ECU Health operates 24/7 emergency departments at each of its nine hospitals across eastern North Carolina, providing immediate care for conditions such as broken bones, chest pain, strokes, severe allergic reactions, and life-threatening injuries.[39] A dedicated children's emergency department is available at ECU Health Medical Center in Greenville, staffed by pediatric specialists to address pediatric emergencies separately from adult care.[40] The system emphasizes rapid assessment and stabilization, with ECU Health Medical Center serving as the regional hub for high-acuity cases due to its designation as a Level I trauma center verified by the American College of Surgeons.[41] ECU Health EastCare, the system's critical care transport division established in 1985, delivers air and ground medical transportation services covering eastern North Carolina, parts of South Carolina, and Virginia within a 150-mile radius of Greenville.[42] [43] EastCare operates seven rotor-wing aircraft, including EC135 and EC145 models, from eight bases, alongside 28 ground ambulances for scene responses, inter-facility transfers, and non-emergency patient transports back to residences or long-term care facilities.[42] [44] Services include 24/7 availability for transporting patients directly from emergency scenes or from regional hospitals to ECU Health Medical Center for advanced treatment.[43] In 2021, EastCare became one of the first programs in North Carolina to carry O-negative whole blood on flights, enabling immediate transfusions during transport.[45] The transport fleet supports the system's emergency medical services (EMS) framework, with medical direction provided through affiliations with East Carolina University's Brody School of Medicine Department of Emergency Medicine, ensuring protocol-driven care during transfers.[46] EastCare's operations have expanded over four decades, from a single helicopter to a comprehensive network, handling thousands of missions annually to bridge rural access gaps in the region.[43]Academic and Research Integration
Affiliation with Brody School of Medicine
ECU Health maintains a primary academic affiliation with the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University, serving as its principal teaching hospital system for medical education, graduate medical education, and research activities.[4] This partnership designates ECU Health Medical Center, with 1,029 beds across two campuses, as the core academic medical center supporting Brody's clinical training programs.[1] The affiliation originated from a long-standing relationship between Vidant Health (ECU Health's predecessor) and Brody, which intensified through a clinical integration agreement announced on June 23, 2021, enabling the rebranding to ECU Health and formation of a unified academic health system.[47] A joint operating agreement, formalized on November 12, 2021, and unanimously approved by the UNC Board of Governors on November 18, 2021, established shared governance and operational alignment between Brody and ECU Health to enhance clinical care, education, and research efficiency.[18][19] Under this structure, Brody faculty hold key leadership roles within ECU Health, including dual appointments such as Dr. Michael Waldrum serving as both CEO of ECU Health and Dean of Brody School of Medicine, facilitating integrated decision-making on clinical and academic priorities.[48] The affiliation supports Brody's graduate medical education programs, with ECU Health hosting residencies in specialties like family medicine and internal medicine, training over 400 residents and fellows annually across its facilities.[49][50] This partnership extends to research initiatives, exemplified by joint membership in the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology awarded in July 2021, which expands access to trials for rare cancers and other conditions within ECU Health's 29-county service area.[51] Recent developments include a November 27, 2024, groundbreaking for the Brody-ECU Health Center for Medical Education Building, aimed at advancing simulation-based training and interprofessional education.[52]Education and Training Programs
ECU Health, in partnership with the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University, sponsors over 40 graduate medical education (GME) programs, including residencies and fellowships focused on primary care, specialty, and subspecialty training.[53] These programs operate primarily at ECU Health Medical Center, a 974-bed tertiary referral center, and affiliated facilities, providing hands-on clinical experience, research opportunities, and emphasis on rural health delivery to serve eastern North Carolina's 29-county region.[54] In July 2025, the system welcomed 154 new residents and fellows, reflecting expansion in trainee capacity amid growing demand for specialized providers.[53] Residency programs encompass core areas such as family medicine, internal medicine, emergency medicine, and cardiothoracic surgery, with dedicated tracks like the Rural Family Medicine Residency launched in 2021 to equip graduates for practice in underserved rural settings through community-based rotations and targeted skill development.[55][56] Additional residencies include dental medicine general practice, neurology—inaugurated in 2025 to address regional neurology access gaps—and combined internal medicine/emergency medicine pathways.[57][58] Fellowship offerings extend training in subspecialties like acute care surgery, cardiovascular disease, and cardiothoracic surgery, building on residency foundations with advanced procedural and research components.[59] Beyond clinical GME, ECU Health provides administrative fellowships that immerse participants in healthcare operations, policy, and leadership, offering competitive compensation and benefits aligned with industry standards to develop future executives.[60] To support evolving training needs, ECU Health and the Brody School of Medicine broke ground in November 2024 on a new Center for Medical Education Building, designed for simulation labs, interprofessional exercises, and expanded capacity to train future physicians amid rising enrollment at the medical school.[52] These initiatives align with the Brody School's track record, ranking in the top 10% nationally for producing primary care physicians who remain in-state and serve underserved areas.[61]Research and Innovation Efforts
ECU Health, in partnership with East Carolina University's Brody School of Medicine, maintains an Office of Clinical Research that oversees clinical trials and studies across its facilities, supporting study initiation, regulatory compliance, budgeting, and patient recruitment.[62] This office facilitates investigator-initiated research and multi-site collaborations, enabling access to trials in specialties such as oncology, cardiology, and infectious diseases, with patients directed to clinicaltrials.gov for eligibility screening.[63] In 2022, ECU Health reported success in recruiting racially diverse participants for trials testing new medicines and treatments, enhancing the applicability of findings to underrepresented populations in eastern North Carolina.[64] Research efforts emphasize major disease areas, including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer, neurological disorders, and infectious diseases, with programs designed to translate laboratory discoveries into clinical applications.[65] Cancer-specific trials explore novel prevention, detection, and treatment methods, alongside symptom management strategies, conducted at ECU Health's Leo W. Jenkins Cancer Center.[66] The Division of Infectious Diseases conducts trials for emerging treatments targeting HIV, Clostridium difficile infections, and bloodstream pathogens, aiming to refine protocols for regional patient care.[67] Innovation is advanced through the East Carolina Research and Innovation Campus (ECRIC), which includes facilities like the Life Sciences and Biotechnology Building, opened in November 2021, supporting bioprocessing and wet-lab research adjacent to ECU Health sites.[68] In May 2023, ECU established a regional innovation hub under NCInnovation to commercialize research into practical solutions, with ECU Health contributing to healthcare-focused translations.[69] ECU's attainment of Carnegie R1 doctoral research status in February 2025 underscores expanded research capacity, including health sciences, bolstering ECU Health's pipeline for evidence-based advancements.[70] In 2024, initiatives included new fellowships in electrophysiology and groundbreaking for Brody's Center for Medical Education to integrate simulation-based innovation in training and research.[71]Achievements and Community Impact
Expansions and Access Enhancements
In 2025, ECU Health opened the ECU Health Behavioral Health Hospital, a 144-bed facility providing inpatient and intensive outpatient psychiatric services in Greenville, North Carolina, through a partnership with Acadia Healthcare.[72][73] The hospital, which hosted a ribbon-cutting ceremony on August 25, 2025, began admitting patients in fall 2025 to address regional shortages in mental health care capacity.[73] ECU Health also advanced construction on the Center for Medical Education Building, a seven-story, 195,000-square-foot structure connected to ECU Health Medical Center, with groundbreaking held on November 22, 2024, and completion targeted for August 2027.[74][75] This facility will include advanced classrooms, anatomy labs, and simulation technology to support training at the Brody School of Medicine.[74] Additionally, in June 2025, ECU Health proposed $220 million in capital projects, including reopening a shuttered facility in Martin County as North Carolina's first Rural Emergency Hospital to restore essential services in underserved areas.[76][77] To enhance access, ECU Health launched Health Hubs in 2023, establishing 21 locations across eastern North Carolina to provide telehealth services, screenings, and connections to community resources addressing social determinants of health.[78][79] These hubs facilitate virtual consultations and on-site support in rural settings. In March 2025, the system introduced a telecardiology program at ECU Health Chowan Hospital in Edenton, enabling remote specialist readings of EKGs and echocardiograms to expedite cardiac care.[80] Earlier telemedicine expansions include a May 2025 project extending specialized consultations to rural hospitals such as ECU Health Bertie Hospital.[81] North Carolina's Medicaid expansion, effective December 1, 2023, has significantly bolstered ECU Health's access efforts, enrolling nearly 400,000 residents by March 2024 and providing coverage to over 100,000 in eastern North Carolina.[82][83] ECU Health advocated for this policy for over six years, citing its role in stabilizing rural hospitals and improving primary care access, with state leaders noting reduced uncompensated care burdens by January 2025.[84][85] The expansion has enabled investments in community services, though its long-term causal effects on health outcomes remain under evaluation amid ongoing financial pressures in the region.[86]Awards, Recognitions, and Outcomes Data
ECU Health Medical Center has been rated high performing by U.S. News & World Report in 21 adult procedures and conditions, including evaluations for heart failure, pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease management.[87] In 2025, ECU Health Bertie Hospital received a five-star overall quality rating from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), reflecting superior performance across patient experience, safety of care, readmission, and mortality metrics compared to national benchmarks.[88] All nine ECU Health hospitals earned Get With The Guidelines awards from the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association in September 2025, marking the third consecutive year of recognition for adherence to evidence-based protocols in stroke care (Gold Plus with Target: Stroke Honor Roll Elite and Target: Type 2 Diabetes Honor Roll), coronary artery disease (Silver or Gold), and heart failure (Silver).[89] ECU Health's East Carolina Heart Institute achieved three-star ratings—the highest level—from the Society of Thoracic Surgeons in 2025 for isolated coronary artery bypass grafting, aortic valve replacement, and mitral valve repair or replacement, with the latter improving from a prior two-star designation based on composite scores for operative mortality, major morbidity, and other risk-adjusted outcomes.[90] In patient experience metrics, ECU Health Medical Center was designated a national leader by Press Ganey in October 2024 for the second year running, scoring in the top decile across dimensions such as communication with providers and discharge information.[91] Becker's Hospital Review ranked it the top U.S. hospital for patient experience in March 2024, drawing from HCAHPS survey data on responsiveness and quietness.[92] ECU Health Bertie Hospital placed among the top 20 critical access hospitals nationwide for patient satisfaction in June 2025, per Chartis Rural Health data analyzing HCAHPS responses on recommendation likelihood and staff courtesy.[93] Nursing staff at ECU Health facilities have received multiple DAISY Awards for extraordinary compassionate care, with honorees nominated by patients, families, and colleagues since the program's adoption.[94] Several nurses were also selected for the Great 100 Nurses of Eastern North Carolina in recent years, recognizing clinical excellence and community impact.[94] Internal recognitions include the 2025 Board Quality Leadership Awards to teams demonstrating sustained improvements in clinical metrics, such as reduced infection rates.[95] ECU Health Medical Center holds Magnet Recognition from the American Nurses Credentialing Center, signifying excellence in nursing practices and patient outcomes based on empirical evidence of lower mortality and higher satisfaction.[96]Challenges and Criticisms
Financial Pressures and Service Reductions
In October 2025, ECU Health anticipated a $50 million revenue loss stemming from state Medicaid reimbursement rate reductions implemented on October 1, which were part of broader efforts to address North Carolina's budget gaps. These cuts, combined with federal sequestration impacts on Medicare (approximately 2% for fiscal year 2025) and ongoing economic headwinds such as inflation in labor and supply costs, exacerbated the system's operating pressures.[97] ECU Health CEO Michael Waldrum noted that such federal and state policy changes necessitated "painful choices," including considerations for staff reductions and operational reorganizations to maintain service viability amid declining reimbursements.[97] The health system's financial strain was further highlighted by its reliance on Medicaid state-directed payments as a "lifeline" for uncompensated care in rural eastern North Carolina, where a significant portion of patients qualify for public programs.[98] Chief Operating Officer Brian Floyd described ECU Health's margins as "tight," warning that proposed federal Medicaid cuts under legislation like the One Big Beautiful Bill Act could push rural facilities toward closure or severe service limitations without additional support.[99] Despite these challenges, ECU Health reported no operating deficits in its most recent Form 990 filings for affiliated entities, though total clinical revenues exceeded $215 million annually from state-appropriated and patient sources, underscoring vulnerability to reimbursement volatility.[100] In response to earlier financial evaluations, ECU Health closed five regional ambulatory clinic sites in January 2023 after a review deemed them unsustainable, aiming to reallocate resources toward higher-acuity core services.[101] These closures primarily affected outpatient locations in eastern North Carolina, with no reported impact on inpatient or emergency capacities at flagship facilities like ECU Health Medical Center. No large-scale service suspensions have been announced as of late 2025, though ongoing Medicaid adjustments have delayed plans to reopen the Martin County hospital as a rural emergency facility, citing funding shortfalls exceeding $200 million.[102] Leadership emphasized reinvestment in essential areas like behavioral health and primary care to mitigate broader access reductions.[103]Compliance and Governance Issues
In February 2025, ECU Health Medical Center was reported by PatientRightsAdvocate.org to partially fail federal price transparency requirements under the 2019 CMS Hospital Price Transparency Rule, specifically lacking fully accurate de-identified minimum and maximum negotiated charges in its machine-readable file and insufficient actual pricing data availability.[104] This placed it among noncompliant hospitals in North Carolina, where only 33% of 49 evaluated facilities met full standards, compared to a national compliance rate of 21% across over 2,000 hospitals in a November report.[104] ECU Health maintained it was fully compliant with CMS rules and had received no formal non-compliance notices.[104] A data breach at East Carolina University's Brody School of Medicine, part of ECU Health, exposed protected health information of 19,085 individuals—including names, insurance details, and diagnostic or clinical data—to unauthorized ECU students, employees, and clinicians from July 2022 to January 2024.[105] Discovered on December 21, 2023, and notified to affected parties on February 20, 2024, the incident prompted a class-action lawsuit filed on April 12, 2024, in Pitt County Superior Court alleging negligence and HIPAA-related violations.[105] The case settled for $250,000, including provisions for class members to claim up to $100 each, with final approval pending as of September 2025.[105] ECU Health Medical Center agreed to pay $119,000 to resolve allegations of violating the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) by failing to provide an appropriate medical screening examination to a patient presenting with an emergency medical condition.[106] Governance tensions arose in 2019 when Vidant Health (ECU Health's predecessor) and Pitt County unilaterally altered the Vidant Medical Center board structure to eliminate appointments by the UNC Board of Governors, contravening a longstanding affiliation agreement with East Carolina University and the UNC System.[107][108] ECU and UNC officials criticized the changes as occurring "behind closed doors" without consultation, prompting a lawsuit, a temporary restraining order, and threats of $73 million in state funding cuts perceived by Vidant as political retaliation.[109][110] The dispute settled in October 2019 with restored UNC appointment rights, paving the way for a 2021 joint operating agreement and 2022 rebranding to ECU Health under revised state-enabled governance that maintained separate legal entities while enhancing ECU integration.[108][18]Governance and Leadership
Governing Board Composition
The ECU Health Governing Board, formally the ECU Health Board of Directors, comprises 11 members who establish policies for the health system and its subsidiaries, drawing from community leaders to ensure local representation in decision-making. These individuals serve voluntarily without compensation, focusing on strategic oversight rather than operational management.[111] Current board members include:| Name | Credentials/Affiliation |
|---|---|
| Marcus S. Albernaz | MD |
| Roger L. “Vern” Davenport | - |
| Deborah W. Davis | - |
| Ernest L. “Ernie” Evans | - |
| Jimmy F. Garris | - |
| Robert J. “Bob” Greczyn, Jr. | - |
| Antoine “Tony” E. Khoury, Sr. | - |
| William C. Monk, Jr. | - |
| Philip G. Rogers | Ed.D |
| Diane N. Taylor | - |
| Anand “Andy” Tewari | MD |