Contact Us
Providence Alaska Medical Center
3200 Providence Drive
Anchorage, AK 99508
Phone: 907-562-2211
Maps & Directions
We feel that the patient/family experience with Providence is the most important part of caring for our community. We value your feedback and greatly appreciate your comments as they help us respond to feedback in in a timely, effective and appropriate way. If you would like to provide feedback, click the button below.
Following is a list of phone numbers that may be useful during your stay at Providence Alaska Medical Center. Dial 2+ the four-digit extension from any telephone within the medical center to reach the department.
- Admitting: 907-212-3120
- Billing customer service - Clinic/Physician: 907-212-6522
- Billing customer service - Hospital: 907-212-6500
- Dietary: 907-212-3358
- Dietary (After 7 p.m.): 907-212-4372
- Gift shop: 907-212-3159
- Hickel House (Lodging): 907-212-4949
- Media relations: 907-212-6083
- Medical arts pharmacy: 907-212-5090
- Medical records: 907-212-3170
- Nursing administration: 907-212-3640
- Patient information (front desk): 907-212-3188
- Patient or family concerns: 907-212-3615
- Security (lost and found): 907-212-2508
- Spiritual care: 907-212-2990
A simple, streamlined patient transfer is just one call away:
Call 907-212-7363 (212-SEND) or 1-844-944-9337
The Providence Alaska Medical Center Patient Transfer Center provides a centralized point of contact to coordinate all incoming referrals from providers and health care facilities.
The Transfer Center team in collaboration with patient placement will track real-time bed availability, collect patient information and facilitate all transfer requests via a 24/7 phone line.
The PAMC Patient Transfer Center aims to ease the way of referring providers and ensure patients receive the right care at the right time in the right setting.
Marketing & Communication Department: 907-212-3145
Mon - Fri: 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Email us
If you are a reporter looking for a Patient Condition, please call the 24-Hour Media Relations Line at 907-212-6083.
Providence Alaska welcomes the opportunity to work with the media. For information or to schedule an interview with an employee or to obtain the one-word condition update on a patient, please call 907-212-6083.
The care of patients must always remain our primary responsibility, including maintaining a patient's right to privacy and confidentiality. We require all representatives of the media to coordinate interview and photography requests in advance by contacting Marketing & Communication. After the request is received, a staff member will quickly determine whether an interview is possible and, if it is, will coordinate the arrangements, including securing written permission from the patient.
All requests involving Providence facilities or personnel requested by an external media source must be approved by the Marketing & Communication Department or its designated facility representative, regardless of a patient's participation in the activity.
All media must be escorted by a representative from the Marketing & Communication Department or its designated facility representative. All participants approached during interviews, photography, filming or recording have the right to decline, including Providence employees, physicians, and volunteers.
No photos or video of patients may be taken without a Marketing & Communication staff member first securing written permission from the patient. This includes b-roll footage from outside the hospital, as patients can sometimes be seen entering and departing the hospital.
Providence Alaska follows the American Hospital Association guidelines regarding patient privacy issues contained in the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).
If you are a reporter looking for a Patient Condition, please call the 24-Hour Media Relations Line at 907-212-6083.
We are committed to protecting the privacy and confidentiality of our patients and their medical information as mandated by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA). To help ensure these rights, we have adopted the following definitions approved by the American Hospital Association for reporting patient conditions to the media.
How we provide patient conditions:
- You must have the patient's full name
- We will only provide a one-word description about a patient's condition: "good," "fair," "serious" or "critical," or "undetermined/under evaluation" or "treated & released." Please note "stable" is not used. If there is no information available on the patient, the condition update will be "no information."
- In the event of a large-scale disaster, we will attempt to provide non-specific information about patients brought to the Medical Center
- Under the HIPAA regulations, the Communications & Marketing staff will not be able to provide a one-word condition of the patient if one of the following apply:
- The patient has "opted out" of being listed in the hospital directory. HIPAA provides all patients with the right to "opt out" of being listed in the hospital directory. If a patient opts out, no information whatsoever can be shared, including whether or not the person is even a patient at the hospital.
- Family members have not yet been notified of the patient's admission to the hospital. As has always been the practice, no information will be given to the media until the next of kin have been notified.
- The reporter does not supply the full name of the patient in question. In order for information to be released, HIPAA requires the caller to state the patient's name. For example, a reporter calling and requesting the names and conditions of "those injured in the Glenn highway accident earlier tonight" will not be able to receive any information from hospital officials.
- The patient has been categorized by hospital administration as a "hidden patient," a designation that is occasionally used to protect the identity of a patient for security or other significant reasons. For example, in case of violence where the perpetrator remains at large and the security of the patient and/or staff may be compromised, or in order to protect the identity of a rape or child abuse victim, no information will be given.
Under the Patient Privacy Regulations, HIPAA does not permit the release of the following patient information:
- Patient's age or date of birth
- Patient's home address
- Nature and description of patient's injuries