MetroWest Medical Center plans to close nearly all services at one of its two hospitals, according to documents the hospital filed with the state on Tuesday.

According to the notice, MetroWest plans to shutter its medical/surgical unit, intensive care unit, operating rooms, emergency department, and outpatient rehabilitation service at Leonard Morse Hospital in Natick, which has been in operation for more than 125 years. Psychiatric service, sleep labs, and CT services are the only services that will remain on the campus.

The hospital, which was founded in 1893, said in its filing that it would submit a formal proposal with the state on Feb. 20, kicking off a 90-day notice of its closure.

Hospital officials did not immediately return calls for comment.

MetroWest, which includes Framingham Union Hospital as well as the hospital in Natick, is one of the state’s few for-profit institutions and also one of the few to be operated by an out of state parent company. The health system is owned by Texas-based Tenet HealthCare (NYSE: THC), which also owns Saint Vincent Hospital in Worcester.

Like its parent, the hospital’s financials have fluctuated in recent years but most recently operated in the black. According to financial documents submitted to the state for fiscal 2018, which ended in December 2018 and is the most recent year available, MetroWest Medical Center as a whole reported a $4.3 million operating gain on $251 million in net patient service revenue. That compares to a $3.4 million loss on $238.4 million in net patient service revenue the year prior.

State filings also show that parent company Tenet Healthcare reported a $316 million operating revenue in fiscal 2018. That compares to a $444 million operating loss the year prior.

This article originally appeared on the Boston Business Journal’s website.