- Vancouver Island Health Authority
Transcription
- Vancouver Island Health Authority
Remember Mrs. Pudding? Well, she’s back! M rs. Pudding first burst onto the VIHA scene – and diabetes education folklore – in 2006 as the feisty, zany and grandmotherly Mrs. Pudding who struggles to first accept, and then manage, her diabetes. Some 2000 copies of the DVD have been sold and distributed across Canada, and in response to huge demand, VIHA is pleased to introduce the DVD sequel ―Mrs. Pudding Presents The Sweetheart Disease.‖ ―While diabetes is certainly no laughing matter, humour is a wonderful tool to reach out and connect with audiences seeking to learn more about diabetes and diabetes management,‖ explains Mrs. Pudding – AKA, Sue Schaefer, Diabetes Nurse Educator, CDE with VIHA‘s Aboriginal Health Department. ―Mrs. Pudding is particularly popular among First Nations where high diabetes rates are a significant health concern and where Mrs. Pudding‘s storytelling is a respected teaching method.‖ VIHA Diabetes Nurse Educator Sue Schaefer dressed as her alter ego, “Mrs. Pudding” The Sweetheart Disease, which addresses the not-often discussed complication of diabetes — erectile dysfunction — will be launched in November during Diabetes Awareness Month. For more information, call: 250-370-8914. VIHA Wins Top Award for Energy Savings T VIHA’s Energy Team his summer, VIHA beat out more than 1,000 commercial and provincial organizations to win BC Hydro‘s prestigious ―Big Gig‖ award. The award recognizes the most electricity saved per fiscal year within the commercial sector in BC. In 2010, we saved a whopping 4.1 GWh of electricity. That‘s about as much electricity as 410 Vancouver Island homes will use in one year (Source: BC Hydro). Any monetary savings will help to cover expanding health care electricity demands due to changing services and new facilities. This amazing accomplishment was led by VIHA‘s two BC Hydro-sponsored Energy Managers and was supported by VIHA senior management, Green Teams, Facilities Maintenance and Operations, Purchasing and IMIT. Savings came from initiatives such as lighting retrofits, ―turn-it-off‖ campaigns and other energy conservation measures. These initiatives not only save energy and utility costs, but also lessen our impact on the climate – an accomplishment we can all feel good about. Nancy Myers—BC Hydro‘s longest sponsored Energy Manager—accepted the award during the annual Energy Manager‘s Forum held September 16 th in Surrey. Joe Murphy, VIHA Vice President, Operations & Support Services, was also acknowledged as ―Energy Champion‖ and leader. November 2010 - Page 1 - www.viha.ca/news GREEN TIP: Did you know the average office worker uses 7,500 sheets of paper a year? That equals a whole tree! Print duplex or, better yet, save files electronically and help save a tree! VIHA Staff Help Out at Men’s Health Day I n September, VIHA staff were on hand to draw blood from men during the 8th annual Men’s Health Day at Mayfair Mall in Victoria. Over 500 south island men received FREE blood tests from VIHA staff to help detect treatable diseases such as prostate cancer, diabetes and high cholesterol. Other neighbouring booths at the event offered information about the importance of blood pressure monitoring, fitness, nutrition, healthy posture and stress management. ―This event has direct, positive health impacts for men,‖ explains Susan Barron, VIHA Lab Services Community Outreach Supervisor. ―Last year, 31 men were alerted to high prostate-specific antigen levels as a result of their Men‘s Health Day tests and received follow-up care from their family doctors.‖ Thank you to Susan Barron and Technical Assistant Kathy Mayoh for organizing VIHA‘s participation in this important event and kudos to all the physicians and staff who took time on a sunny Saturday to look after the men in our community. Remember, it‘s Movember — the month of the ‗stache — when men stop shaving for a good cause. Learn more at ca.movember.com. With smiling faces like these, it’s not hard to see why 500 men were willing to have their blood drawn by VIHA’s Lab Services team (L-R): Suzi Tarnowski, Elisha Kaufmann, Catherine Hayden, Rosanne Babuik, Diane Louie, Amy Crha. Construction Underway at NRGH’s New Emergency Department N ot even a rainy day could dampen the spirits of those joining Premier Gordon Campbell on October 26, 2010 for the official construction kick off for Nanaimo Regional General Hospital‘s new Emergency Department (ED). The new $36.9 million ED will provide many benefits to the thousands of patients who use the facility, not only for its spacious design, but also because the state-of-the-art building will have so much natural light. Staff and physicians of the island‘s busiest emergency department will have a working environment that will enhance the important work that they do each and every day. The building‘s design will achieve LEED Gold certification as part of the Province‘s commitment to a greener and more sustainable future. Pictured left to right at the NRGH ED construction kick-off: MLA Ron Cantelon; RHDN Chair Joe Stanhope; Premier Gordon Campbell; Nanaimo & District Hospital Foundation Chair Leslie Sundby; NRGH Emergency Chief Dr. Drew Digney; VIHA Board Chair Jac Kreut. Accreditation Days are on the Horizon Let’s hear it for… Dorothy Wells V Leah Assu has some kind words to share about her colleague in Campbell River: IHA‘s Accreditation Survey begins in April 2011. Accreditation is important because it supports staff, physicians and volunteers to provide the best possible care for patients and clients. To help prepare for the survey VIHA is offering education and information sessions for staff. Visit https://intranet.viha.ca/departments/quality/ accreditation/ or contact Evelyn Thompson-Smith at 250.370.8502 for more details. “Thank you, Dorothy, for always going above and beyond every day! You are a valuable coworker and an asset to our office. You make our office a better place and it would never be the same without you!” November 2010 - Page 2 - www.viha.ca/news Dorothy Wells atop Polar Peak in Fernie, BC Home & Community Care Staff Sing to Support the Campbell River Hospice Society S Did you get your flu shot? These VIHA staffers did and you should too! Visit www.viha.ca/flu/ for flu clinic dates near you. even members of VIHA‘s Home and Community Care team in Campbell River are hopeful their rendition of Bill Withers‘ hit song Lean on Me will harmonize into a donation for the Campbell River Hospice Society. After hearing about Global TV‘s singing competition, Canada Sings, colleagues Christol James, Gerrie Miller, Janine Lovely, Carrie Johnston, Barb Boniface, Janet Woznow and Leah Assu, formed the group HCC Sunflowers and got to work The HCC Sunflowers creating a DVD of the group Back row(l-r): Carrie Johnston, Leah performing the song A Capella. Above: Miranda Cnossen, VGH LPN getting her flu shot from Employee Health Nurse, Pat Ashton at VGH. Assu, Janet Woznow, Barbara Boniface ―We chose Lean On Me because Front row (l-r): Janine Lovely, Christol of the nature of our jobs: our James, Gerrie Miller clients lean on us for their care and we (staff members) lean on each other for support,‖ said Leah. The HCC Sunflowers (they chose this name because the sunflower is the logo of the Campbell River Hospice Society) will learn by early November if they are finalists in the competition. If successful they will travel to Toronto for a week of training with artistic directors, vocal coaches, stylists and choreographers in preparation for a performance before a live studio audience in Toronto. The final two groups will square off with the winner receiving a donation for the charity of their choice. Canada Sings will air on Global TV in early 2011. Above: Nurse Kelsey MacKellar RN, receiving her flu shot from Occupational Health Nurse Sylvie Dolbec at Tofino General Hospital. Comox Valley Nursing Centre Staff Enjoy the Thirty Mile Diet S taff at the Comox Valley Nursing Centre enjoyed a lunch hour tour of their local cheese factory over the summer as part of their brown bag adventures and commitment to the 100 mile diet. As residents of Comox Valley, they have the good fortune to actually live the 30 mile diet on occasion, thanks to all the great farmers and many organic food producers in their region. The open house and tour, which included samples of delicious, award-winning cheeses and locally produced pepper jellies, also highlighted the importance of food safety practices and hygiene. Saying, “Cheese!” during their lunch hour adventures (l-r): Willa Cannon, Cindy Gavel and Patricia Foster November 2010 - Page 3 - www.viha.ca/news 19th Lotto for Life Benefits the NRGH ED Expansion Telecom Tips for Business Trips Outside of Canada he Nanaimo & District Hospital Foundation is once again offering Central & North Island VIHA staff first opportunity to purchase Lotto for Life tickets through Payroll Deduction. Tickets are $100 each, with a 1 in 5,000 chance to win incredible prizes like vehicles, trips and even the Grand Prize of $100,000! R T Sign-up for Payroll Deduction from Nov. 1 — Dec. 1 and the cost will be deducted from your paycheques in four $25 installments (Jan. 14th & 28th and Feb. 11th & 25th). Visit www.nanaimohospitalfoundation.com to download forms or pick them up in person at the Foundation office. All Lotto for Life proceeds help fund the Emergency Department Expansion at NRGH. Call 250-755-7690 for details or email info@nanaimohospitalfoundation.com. ecently, there have been stories in the media concerning ‗surprise‘ invoices with hundreds of dollars in international roaming fees once the cellular user returns home from a business trip. VIHA‘s Telecommunications team can help you avoid this. If you have an upcoming business trip outside of Canada, “Wow! Look at the roaming Telecom can activate various charges on our cell phone bill!” data and voice packages on your VIHA cellular device for the duration of your trip. Please contact us through the IMIT Service Desk and we will consult with you regarding your destination and the options available. The Bears Are Back! T he Queen Alexandra Foundation for Children‘s 10th Annual Bear Wear event runs from November 16 – December 19 at the Hotel Grand Pacific in Victoria. Check out this fun, free, family festival featuring over 50 dressed teddy bears. Each bear comes with an exciting silent auction package – just perfect for a holiday gift – and all funds raised will help the Queen Alexandra Foundation for Children build Jeneece Place, a home away from home for children and their families who have to travel to Victoria for medical care. More information is available at: http://www.queenalexandra.org/ Events/ViewEvents.asp?id=122. World Breastfeeding Week 2010 V IHA and Breastfeeding Matters South Vancouver Island welcomed Dr. Kathleen Kendall-Tackett to Victoria to celebrate World Breastfeeding Week (October 1-7). Dr Kendall-Tackett spoke to staff, students and other health professionals about postpartum depression and potential breastfeeding challenges for mothers who have experienced trauma or abuse. During her well-received presentations, Dr. Kendall-Tackett was very instructive on how health professionals can identify women who may be at risk for depression, better understand how postpartum mood can impact breastfeeding, and support these mothers to preserve the breastfeeding relationship whenever possible. Dr. Kendall-Tackett is a clinical associate professor of pediatrics in Texas as well as a health psychologist, lactation consultant, researcher and an author and editor of many books and articles on trauma, maternal depression and breastfeeding. Proceeds from her conference appearance will be used to purchase 30 books for health professionals, donated to the VIHA medical library and Island Medical Program. For more information about breastfeeding and postpartum depression, visit her website at: www.uppitysciencechick.com. November 2010 - Page 4 - www.viha.ca/news ISSUE 1 November 2010 Safety First... ...Be Aware Do Your Share Renewed Name Renewed Focus Wellness and Safety is changing its name back to Occupational Health and Safety. Our name reflects the broadest definition of health—encompassing everything from Wellness and Prevention to Injury and Disability Management. It brings us in line with other organizations around the world, and reinforces our commitment to a safe work environment for every VIHA employee. The OHS team has expertise to help you identify safety hazards in your area, learn from incidents or near misses, and create safe work practices for you, your coworkers and your patients. We look forward to working with you to make VIHA the safest health authority in BC. ~Lesley Moss, Executive Director Occupational Health and Safety. SETTING OUR SIGHTS ON SAFETY The Staff Safety and Injury Prevention System Wide Initiative has been talking to staff and carefully evaluating safety initiatives to see what has been working, and how we can share that success across VIHA. The result is a safety strategy focusing on three areas: Prevention, Leadership and Quality Work Environment. MSIP Coaches are making a difference. Injury rates on units with coaches have improved by 36 per cent. Maintaining and expanding the MSIP coaching program will be a key cornerstone of our prevention strategy. Violence Prevention is another focus. VIHA’s violence prevention curriculum has been recognized as the best in BC. More than 115 VIHA staff have become our leaders in this area, undertaking specialized training to help educate coworkers on how to prevent violence in the workplace. But we recognize that this important education can be more effective if it is tailored to the needs of staff in different environments, The latest group of MSIP Coaches underwent training in Duncan in October, and are now working to make things safer on their units who deal with unique and specific patient populations. Action is also needed to meet the needs of the bariatric patient population. These patients require specialized equipment to safely manage their care. A Bariatric Care Needs project will look at how to create a system to purchase and share this equipment and expertise in the most efficient way, to ensure our patients who need it can have access within 24 hours of admission. For more information on how you can stay safe on the job, check out our website ADULT LEARNING How training and education will ensure success WELCOMING SPACE, WELCOMING ATTITIUDE The SWI safety strategy includes actions to help ensure VIHA employees have a quality work environment. We believe this is a combination of a welcoming physical space, and an emotionally safe place. A place where you feel like part of a team, and have the tools to do your job effectively. It is somewhere you are proud of, where you feel you make a valuable contribution, and where you want to come to work. A new code of conduct to reinforce expected behaviour will support VIHA’s Respectful Workplace Policy, and support tools will help build effective teams, and respectful communication. We are also researching psychological safety programs to help support a respectful workplace, and to serve as a foundation for a staff Mental Health and Addictions strategy. The physical space we work in also has an impact on our health and safety, and we’ll be working with Facilities, Maintenance and Operations to improve the physical appearance and functionality of workplaces and care areas. Jumping on the flu vaccine bandwagon More than three-thousand VIHA staff have taken advantage of flu clinics at their sites to protect themselves from getting sick this winter, and they’re urging you to do the same. Care Aide Paz Ribeiro said, “I get the flu shot to protect my family and my patients.” “I think all health care workers should be immunized,” said Dr. Ami Brousseau. “As someone who works in paediatrics, I think it is the easiest way to protect our kids.” Learning and support tools to promote safety are important for all aspects of the safety strategy. We’ve learned that the classroom isn’t always the best place to teach. We’re more likely to understand a new way of doing things if we learn it by doing it in our workplace. This hands-on learning, at the time of need, is what is going to help us get the change in thinking we need to become the safest in BC. The new Learning Management System (LMS) coming on stream across VIHA gives us a great opportunity to provide safety education at the time of need, in a format that is easy for staff to follow and retain. Some VIHA patients are also urging staff members to get immunized. “It is hard enough being in the hospital without having to worry about getting the flu,” says Susan Dingle, a patient on R2 at Royal Jubilee. “I hope everyone who looks after me cares enough to get their flu shot.” Find out more about the vaccine and immunization clinics on the VIHA intranet and at www.viha.ca\flu. Medical Student Dr. Ami Brousseau gets his flu shot to protect his patients in Paediatrics—and thinks you should too! RJH Patient Care Centre UPDATE November 2010 Staff Training & Education The PCC & You With move day to the PCC right around the corner, staff orientation is in full swing. Questions about: November 15th to December 8th, clinical staff moving to the PCC will have the opportunity to train on key pieces of new equipment. Professional Practice’s Learning and Performance Support (L&PS) team has been liaising with PCC Project Team to plan this exciting opportunity. Depending on your role, you may be oriented to the following: Unit/room layout The move day? New equipment? Unit layouts? Tours? Check out The PCC & You intranet site for more info. Written for staff and updated regularly, The PCC & You answers your questions and provides the information you need to know. Ceiling lifts and sling selection Vital sign monitors Bed pan cleaner New positive patient ID equipment see page 2... https://intranet.viha.ca/ departments/pcc Visions and Smart Beds This fall, the Victoria Hospitals Foundation’s direct mail campaign and gala fundraiser, Visions, will support Smart Beds for the new Patient Care Centre. The goal is to raise $715,000 to purchase 65 of the $11,000 beds. Visions will be held Saturday, November 20th. Over the past 19 years, this annual gala has raised more than $3 million for priority medical equipment for the Royal Jubilee and Victoria General Hospitals. This year marks Visions’ 20th anniversary. Construction workers, local dignitaries and VIHA staff celebrate the laying of the PCC’s final 3 exterior bricks For more information, Visions tickets and volunteer opportunities, or to support the 2010 Fall Campaign, please call the VHF office at 250-414-6688 or go to www.victoriahf.ca/visions. www.viha.ca/patient_care_centre & https://intranet.viha.ca/departments/pcc Page 2 RJH Patient Care Centre Staff Training & Education cont . . . Vocera communication devices Nurse call system Negative pressure rooms Handwashing/Personal Protective Equipment station Hill-Rom Beds Security Systems their orientation sessions. This equipment training is just the beginning of a series of face-to-face orientation opportunities for staff. Planning is underway for a General Orientation in January as well as Unit Specific Orientation in February. Please see The PCC and You intranet website for more information at: https://intranet.viha.ca/departments/pcc The L&PS team has been connecting with unit/ department managers to start scheduling staff into Tour the PCC Staff and physicians are invited to tour the nearly completed PCC Mondays at 3 p.m. and Fridays at 1 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. Check out the: Staff Resource Wing — staff gym, locker rooms, lecture hall, Learning Centre, staff café and physician’s lounge Atrium — main entrance and link to the D&T Universal Care Unit Chief Project Officer Rudi van den Broek describes features of the PCC to MLAs Murray Coell and Ida Chong Contact Patti Cross at patricia.cross@viha.ca and nora.lewin@viha.ca to secure a spot. Space is limited so please book in advance; you will receive an email to confirm availability. Attendees need to be at the Wilson Block building 15 minutes prior to tour time for a safety orientation. The project office supplies steel-toed boots, hard hats and reflective vests — feel free to bring your own socks! The PCC is an active construction site so for safety reasons, no bare legs, bare shoulders, shorts, dresses or skirts. Mayor Graham Hill, MLA Murray Coell, MLA Ida Chong and VIHA Board Member Michael Costello tip their hats to the PCC’s hard-working construction crews. www.viha.ca/patient_care_centre & https://intranet.viha.ca/departments/pcc
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