Sign In

Parking will be limited at the Floyd Medical Center campus, including the Emergency Care Center, due to construction and road widening. Learn more about our parking changes.

Skip Navigation LinksFloyd > News Room > News Details
Atrium Health Floyd Tightening Visitation Restrictions
Share Article Share this page
Email this page

Atrium Health Floyd Tightening Visitation Restrictions

12.29.2021

COVID-19 Cases Rising in Community

ROME, GA., DECEMBER 29, 2021 As COVID-19 numbers continue to rise in the community, Atrium Health Floyd is further limiting visitation at all locations, including Floyd Medical Center, Polk Medical Center and Cherokee Medical Center. Most patients will be allowed one designated visitor.

Other inpatient and outpatient areas in all three communities will be affected. Requests for additional visitors due to special circumstances, such as end-of-life, will be considered on a case-by-case basis.

​The changes take effect Thursday, Dec. 30 at 8 a.m.

Most hospitalized patients will be allowed one designated visitor:

  • All visitors and patients will b​e screened before entering the hospital. Visitors with flu-like symptoms and those with a positive or pending COVID-19 test will not be granted access.
  • Visitors should wear a surgical or medical-grade mask. They will be provided one if needed. Visitors should also practice hand hygiene and observe social distancing.
  • Non-emergency patients and visitors may enter hospitals only at the main entrance, with the exception of laboring mothers, who should enter at the Family Birth Center Entrance.
  • Emergency patients should enter hospitals at emergency room entrances.
  • The Turner McCall Boulevard parking deck at Floyd Medical Center will remain closed to the public.
  • No visitors younger than 18 will be permitted. 
  • Visitors older than 65 and those who are at increased risk for complications from COVID-19 are discouraged from visiting.
No visitors are permitted at the following locations for patients 18 and older:
  • ​Emergency departments
  • Primary Care
  • Outpatient Diagnostic Imaging when patients don't require anesthesia
  • Outpatient Rehabilitation Services
  • Outpatient Wound Care
  • Urgent Care

Pediatric patients (hospitalized, emergency room and surgery) will be permitted two designated visitors. Visitors must be 18 or older.

​Laboring mothers are allowed one designated visitor. In addition, a labor coach/doula, age 18 or older, may accompany the mother but must leave immediately after the baby is born.

Patients delivering by C-section are permitted one designated visitor. They will receive a green armband and must wear the armband to enter labor and delivery rooms.

After moms have given birth, they will be allowed one designated visitor who can spend the night if they choose.

Babies in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at Floyd Medical Center will be permitted two designated visitors with an issued ID band. 

About Atrium Health Floyd
Since 1942, Floyd, now Atrium Health Floyd, has worked to provide affordable, accessible care in northwest Georgia and northeast Alabama. Today, Atrium Health Floyd is a leading medical provider and economic force. As part of the largest, integrated, nonprofit health system in the Southeast, it is also able to tap into some of the nation's leading medical experts and specialists with Atrium Health, allowing it to provide the best care close to home – including advanced innovations in virtual medicine and care. At the hub of these services is Floyd Medical Center, a 304-bed full-service, acute care hospital and regional referral center. Atrium Health Floyd employs more than 3,400 employees who provide care in over 40 medical specialties at three hospitals: Floyd Medical Center in Rome, Georgia; Floyd Cherokee Medical Center in Centre, Alabama; Floyd Polk Medical Center in Cedartown, Georgia, as well as Floyd Behavioral Health Center, a freestanding 53-bed behavioral health facility, also in Rome; and a primary care and urgent care network with locations throughout the service area of northwest Georgia and northeast Alabama.