Newsroom

Newsroom

News reporters on deadline should contact the Children's Wisconsin Marketing and Communication Department at (414) 266-5420 or toll-free at (866) 416-1511. A staff member is on call 24 hours per day, seven days per week to assist the media. After hours, please call (414) 266-2000 and ask the operator to page the on-call staff person for assistance.

General media questions without same-day deadlines also can be e-mailed to the Marketing and Communication Department at pressroom@childrenswi.org.

Media relations staff in the Marketing and Communication Department is available to assist local, regional, national, and international news media in answering questions about the health system, locating an expert, or obtaining more information about a news release or event.

For non-urgent needs, you can also contact:

The Medical College of Wisconsin inquires can be directed to their media relations team.

Social Media

Stay informed by connecting to us through social media. We post parenting advice, health and safety information, links to useful resources and news about Children's Wisconsin. And, we want to hear from you!

Media Guidelines

The Marketing and Communications department at Children's Wisconsin handles all media inquiries. Calls to other areas of the organization will be directed back to our department because our team is most familiar with the needs and deadlines of the news media. We coordinate hundreds of news stories each year for regional, national and international print, broadcast, and electronic media outlets. Whatever your needs, we will work to provide interviews and information on deadline, while respecting our patients and their families.

Who do I contact after hours?
A staff member is on call 24 hours per day, 7 days per week to assist the news media. After 5 p.m. weekdays or on weekends and holidays call (414) 266-2000. Please ask the operator to have the on-call staff person paged.

How do I arrange for in-person interviews and/or photography at Children's Wisconsin?
To protect our patients' privacy, hospital policy requires that all members of the media, photographers, and videographers must be escorted by a member of the Marketing and Communications Department. Public Safety will ask all unescorted media to leave the premises. Please contact us to make arrangements.

Do I have to call the Marketing and Communications Department if the family says it's okay to visit?
Yes. All arrangements must be made through Marketing and Communications. This ensures the privacy and safety of all our patients. If the child is a confidential admission, members of the media are not allowed to gain access to the hospital even with the parent's okay. If patient is confidential or you are unable to get approval from the Marketing and Communications Department, interviews must take place at locations outside of Children's Wisconsin property. Our Public Safety team strictly forbids members of the media inside any Children's Wisconsin location at any time without a Marketing and Communications Department escort.

How do I obtain a patient condition?
To receive patient conditions, you must have the patient's first and last name spelled correctly when you call. The on-call staff person also may ask for the patient's age and circumstances surrounding the admission to further identify the correct patient. Children's Wisconsin staff must gain consent from the child's legal guardian before releasing any information. In cases involving victims of crime or suspected crime, the hospital cannot release any patient information (confidential admissions).

What are the patient conditions and what do they mean?
Patient condition categories have been established by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and are as follows:

  • Undetermined. Patient is awaiting physician and/or assessment.
  • Good. Vital signs are stable and within normal limits. Patient is conscious and comfortable. Indicators are favorable.
  • Fair. Vital signs are stable and within normal limits. Patient is conscious, but may be uncomfortable. Indicators are favorable.
  • Serious. Vital signs may be unstable and not within normal limits. Patient is acutely ill. Indicators are questionable.
  • Critical. Vital signs are unstable and not within normal limits. Patient may be unconscious. Indicators are unfavorable.

Why is the patient confidential?
If a child is the victim of a crime or suspected crime (violent crime, child abuse and shaken baby syndrome are examples), the hospital will list the child with confidential status. This means the hospital cannot release any information —  even that the child is a patient even with parental consent. This is to protect the child, the family and our staff while that patient is in the hospital. A family also can choose to keep their child's admission status private for a variety of reasons.

Our History

Children's Wisconsin dates back to 1894. That's when seven women with a shared vision raised enough money to rent a house at 214 Brady St. in Milwaukee and launch a 10-bed children's hospital. It was the first hospital in the state dedicated solely to children and was founded largely to address the health needs of immigrant children. During its first 10 months in operation, the hospital served 23 children. By the end of the second year in operation, the number of patients had more than doubled.

Within five years, the little house on Brady Street no longer could meet the demand for services. Some children had to be turned away. In 1899, the board of directors, now numbering nine, voted to move the hospital to a building at 100 Farwell Ave.

Demand continued to grow and in 1903, plans for a new building on the corner of 10th Street and Wells Street were approved. The Children's Free Hospital, as it was called, had tripled in size in just 10 years and had become a highly valued part of the Milwaukee community.

With staunch support from the community and friends of the hospital, a major campaign raised the necessary funds for a brand-new hospital in 1923. The 150-bed hospital opened on donated land at the corner of 17th Street and Wisconsin Avenue. This building is known today as Humphrey Hall at Marquette University.

The hospital moved to its current Wauwatosa location in 1988 where, in time, three towers were added. With the newest West tower addition, the current bed capacity is 306 beds.

Today, Children's Wisconsin is a fully integrated health system dedicated 100% to kids and teens, and one of the nation's top pediatric facilities.

Below are some of the milestone events that have contributed to our growth and development as an integrated pediatric health system.

  • 1975 —  Wisconsin Poison Center opens
  • 1978 —  Child Advocacy Center opens
  • 1995 —  First primary care practice joins Children’s Wisconsin
  • 2000 —  Surgicenter of Greater Milwaukee joins Children’s Wisconsin
  • 2000 —  Children’s Specialty Group is created
  • 2004 —  Children’s Service Society of Wisconsin joins Children’s Wisconsin
  • 2004 —  Children’s Research Institute is created
  • 2006 Children’s Community Health Plan enrolls first members