Modern Healthcare

Longtime rehab hospital exec Eckenhoff dies

- By David May

Edward Eckenhoff, who led two prominent rehabilita­tion hospitals, died earlier this month after a battle with cancer. He was 74.

In 1963, when he was just 20 years old, Eckenhoff was critically injured in an auto accident. His college roommate, who was driving, was killed and Eckenhoff’s injuries left him a paraplegic. But the tragedy would lead him to a long career helping others living with disabiliti­es.

In 1974, not long after earning a master’s in healthcare administra­tion, Eckenhoff joined the Rehabilita­tion Institute of Chicago, recently rebranded as the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab. He served at the hospital until 1982, holding the title of vice president of administra­tion.

He relocated to the Washington, D.C., area to pursue his dream of establishi­ng a free-standing rehab hospital. In 1986, the National Rehabilita­tion Hospital opened for business, with Eckenhoff as founding president and CEO. During his long tenure at the organizati­on, now part of MedStar Health, he led expansion from a single hospital to a rehabilita­tion network with more than 40 locations. It provides inpatient and outpatient care, including unique services such as day treatment programs for patients with conditions such as spinal cord injuries and traumatic brain injury.

He retired from NRH in 2009 but continued to serve on the organizati­on’s board of directors for several years.

Eckenhoff received many industry awards and in 2007 was appointed by President George W. Bush to the President’s Commission on Care for America’s Returning Wounded Warriors, following reports of poorqualit­y care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and other veterans-care

● facilities around the country.

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