Upper Valley Medical Center

Upper Valley Medical Center

Upper Valley Medical Center serves residents of Miami County in Southwest Ohio from our 100-acre campus in Troy, next to Interstate 75. We offer a wide range of advanced care, including emergency, heart (including cardiac catheterization), cancer, behavioral health, long-term care, and much more. Leading national organizations regularly recognize our quality care. We offer Miami County’s only Level III Trauma Center and the only Level II Special Care Nursery between Dayton and Lima. Our stroke care has earned The Joint Commission’s Gold Seal of Approval® Advanced Certification for Primary Stroke Center. 

Location Information

3130 N. County Rd. 25-A
Troy, OH 45373

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Current ER Wait Time 7 Minutes*
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Patients

Welcome! We want to make your hospital stay as comfortable and easy as possible. Learn what to expect before, during, and after your inpatient stay or outpatient visit.

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Visitors

Whether you’re a patient, family member, friend, or business partner, we welcome you to our campus. Get more information on parking, how to contact patients, rules for visiting patients, and the amenities we offer, including our food and dining options.

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Our Providers

Whether you’re looking for a primary care provider or a specialist, our physicians and advanced practice providers offer you advanced, compassionate care in a wide range of specialties. You’ll find them conveniently close to home and work.

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Awards

We’re proud to make a difference in our community. When others recognize our achievements, we know we’re fulfilling our mission. We’re grateful for the awards and recognition our hospital and people have earned.

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Friday, April 26, 2024

Mobile Mammography

A mammogram is the best way to detect breast cancer early

8:00 AM - 4:00 PM

CHCGD East Dayton Health Center
2132 East Third St
Dayton, OH 45403

Monday, April 29, 2024

Mobile Mammography

A mammogram is the best way to detect breast cancer early

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Jamestown Emergency Department
4940 Cottonville Rd
Jamestown, OH 45335

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Mobile Mammography

A mammogram is the best way to detect breast cancer early

12:00 PM - 4:00 PM

Latest News

King Remembered for Courage, Focus on Solutions

Shane Carter

The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. national holiday celebration gives people the opportunity to think about unifying to find solutions to concerns, Shane Carter, executive director of Troy’s Lincoln Community Center, said during a celebration program Monday at Upper Valley Medical Center.

“The Rev. Dr. King is one of the most courageous, passionate and effective leaders I’ve had the privilege to study. The most admirable trait about Dr. King was his ability to lead people in a direction and not using violence to do that,” Carter said. 

King stood out for his ability to focus on finding solutions to problems including racial injustice using composure, integrity and self-control instead of promoting violence or property destruction, he said.

“There is a reason why this is a national holiday. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. put so much into the progress we see today,” Carter said.

A graduate of Troy High School and the University of Wisconsin, Carter told how his father, the late Clarence Carter, shared with him experiences in the drive for civil rights. Among those experiences was Clarence Carter’s participation as a basketball player in a sit-in at a Woolworth’s food counter in Springfield in 1954.

Despite great progress, work remains to be done, Carter said.

“Many people still want to divide America. Dr. King is watching us today and proud of our progress, but challenging us all that there is much more work to be done,” he said. “Until every innocent child feels the content of their character is the determining factor used to judge, accept and embrace them, there is work to be done.”

The solution, he said, begins at home, and then extends to others. “I believe there are stereotypes in all of our minds that we all must overcome, including myself,” he said.

“You know we don’t have to like people to work with them. You don’t have to absolutely love your neighbor, love your boss … but we can work together and we can use our voice to communicate and we can have the ability to be able to assimilate as one nation,” he said.

As America sees a change in national leadership, people’s focus needs to go beyond whether someone is optimistic or pessimistic, he said. 

 “Realistically, the person holding that seat does not impact our lives as much as some of us complain about. We still have the ability to get up and go to work … to make the difference we want to make in the community,” Carter said. “I would really encourage all of you to focus on what is important to you. Not on what the news says, not what CNN says, not what Facebook says.”

*The current wait time is an estimated wait time before a person sees a physician and is not a guarantee. It is based on patient activity (how many patients are being treated and the severity of their injuries) within the last hour, and it is subject to change at any moment. If you are experiencing an emergency, call 911.