TrustMeBro desk Source-first summaries Searchable archive
Sunday, April 5, 2026
🏥 health

This Ballad Hospital, Flooded by Hurricane Helene, Will B...

Ballad Health, the nation’s largest state-sanctioned hospital monopoly, plans to rebuild Unicoi County Hospital on land that two climate ...

More from health
This Ballad Hospital, Flooded by Hurricane Helene, Will B...
Source: Kaiser Health News

What’s Happening

Alright so Ballad Health, the nation’s largest state-sanctioned hospital monopoly, plans to rebuild Unicoi County Hospital on land that two climate modeling companies say is at risk of flooding.

This Ballad Hospital, Flooded , Will Be Rebuilt for $44M in a Flood Plain By Brett Kelman Republish This Story Unicoi County Hospital, a 10-bed facility in Erwin, Tennessee, was destroyed by a powerful flood during Hurricane Helene in September 2024. Patients and staff fled to the roof and were rescued by helicopters. (shocking, we know)

(Maddy Alewine for KFF Health News) A small Tennessee hospital that was destroyed by a surging river during Hurricane Helene will soon be rebuilt on low-lying farmland that could face several feet of flooding in a much smaller storm, risking another disaster if the new facility is not built to withstand extreme weather, according to a KFF Health News analysis.

The Details

This story also ran on CBS News . It can be republished for free .

Ballad Health just dropped in January that it would spend about $44 million to rebuild the 10-bed Unicoi County Hospital in a field behind a Walmart in Unicoi, Tennessee, about 7 miles from the shuttered hospital that was the site of catastrophic flooding and a daring helicopter rescue on Sept. But the new location also faces significant flood risk, according to a KFF Health News review of information from Fathom and First Street , two climate data companies whose flood modeling is considered more sophisticated than outdated flood maps published Emergency Management Agency.

Why This Matters

Both Fathom and First Street estimate that a 100-year flood — a weather event more common and less intense than Helene — could cover much of the hospital site with more than 2 feet of water. “The proposed site is so obviously a flood plain geomorphologically,” dropped Oliver Wing, chief scientific officer at Fathom. “You dont need a model to see that.

Health experts are weighing in on what this means for people.

The Bottom Line

“You dont need a model to see that. ” Wing dropped the new hospital site was actually more likely to flood than the old site and “risky” for development because of a near potential storm runoff from mountains to the west.

Sound off in the comments.

Daily briefing

Get the next useful briefing

If this story was worth your time, the next one should be too. Get the daily briefing in one clean email.

Reader reaction

Continue reading

More from this section

More health