Les Hôpitaux - LSU Hospitals
Transcription
Les Hôpitaux - LSU Hospitals
Les Hôpitaux june 2007 de la Louisiane the official newsletter of the lsu health care services division Lallie Kemp Regional Medical Center Dedicates Foundation Circle A Monthly Column by Donald Smithburg, CEO of LSU Health Care Services Division The ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Lallie Kemp Foundation Circle at Lallie Kemp Regional Medical Center (LKRMC) is emblematic of the spirit of a true community hospital. LKRMC is there for everyone, all the time, regardless of a person’s ability to pay. Day in and day out, its employees serve those who seek care. They rise to the occasion in the ordinary tasks that are necessary for a hospital to function and in the extraordinary, caring for the seriously injured and ill, being the beacon of hope in times of emergency, such as the days after Katrina, when they served thousands, without hesitation, when no other resources were available and their own resources were severely strained. This remarkable display of dedication is in return matched by the dedication of the community to LKRMC. It has received such support because it is part of the essential fabric see SMITHBURG on page 2 LKRMC had an excellent turnout for its Foundation Circle dedication and has long had the support of its distinguished ribbon cutters, who are Representative Robbie Carter (first row, left to right) and foundation board members Margie Morrison, Joan Arnone, Ann Smith, Eloise Anderson, and Buster Guzzardo and former foundation board member Cade Williams. Francis Bickham, chairman of the LKRMC foundation board (second row, left to right), G.F. Tycer, foundation board member, Senator Ben Nevers, Representative Tom McVea, Independence Mayor Phillip Domiano, Mark Kolwe, Superintendent of the Tangipahoa Parish School System, and Dr. J. L. Garrett, foundation board member. Garden and Fountain Honor Board Members Independence – Hospital Week was unique this year at Lallie Kemp Regional Medical Center (LKRMC). Besides a week of activities honoring employees for their devotion to LKRMC, the medical center held in concert with the Lallie Kemp Foundation the dedication and ribbon cutting of the Lallie Kemp Foundation Circle. “It was probably the best day of my fifteen years at Lallie Kemp,” LeVern Meades, LKRMC hospital administrator, said. Besides active fundraising that supports a number of staff activities throughout the year, such as the employee recognition ceremony, the foundation provides the majority of funding for critical staff training, such as advanced cardiac life support and pediatric advanced life support. “The training helps to have a better prepared staff to handle see AWARDS on page 2 table of contents ceo’s column pg.1 lallie kemp dedication womrmc hospital week lawmakers back lsu/va plan pg.1 pg.2 pg.3 lsu supports katrina memorial pg.4 hop clinic marks 20 years new logo/graphics standards pg.5 pg.6 lsu health care services division | 8550 united plaza blvd, ste 400, baton rouge, la 70809-2256 | ph: 225.922.2259 page AWARDS, continued from page 1 medical emergencies,” he said. As a result, foundation support directly contributes to the quality of LKRMC health care. The success of LKRMC is due in large part to the success of the foundation’s fundraising efforts, but LKRMC success is due to more than dollars. “It’s not what you give; it’s that you give, be it money, time, labor, talent,” Meades said and acknowledges the across-theboard support LKRMC has in the community. “So many in the community are tied to the medical center. I take a lot of pride in Lallie Kemp,” he said and noted that his family members have received care at LKRMC. SMITHBURG, continued from pg. 1 “There’s a lot of emotion tied into there, too.” This across-the-board support played a key part in the development of the foundation circle, which evolved into a garden and fountain in recognition of past and present foundation board members. At the dedication of the foundation circle, Meades made particular note of the contribution of Dr. Vincent Russo, who first suggested a foundation garden for LKRMC, and who for years has been an essential part of the LKRMC surgical and medical team. Meades also thanked for their contributions to the foundation circle Joan Arnone, Sandy Reed, Eloise of the region. It is the good neighbor we all strive to be. The Foundation Circle honors those who have contributed to LKRMC, and LKRMC is honored to serve its community. Sincerely, Donald R. Smithburg, CEO LSU Health Care Services Division Anderson, Buster Guzzardo, G.F. Tycer, Tina Bickham, Francis Bickham, Sherre Pack-Hookfin, Dr. Kathy Willis, Julie Desselles, foundation board members, and the LKRMC maintenance department and hospital administration. WOMRMC Celebrates Hospital Week Lake Charles -- Donning goofy shoes and goofy hats, western garb and fifties wear, employees of the Walter O. Moss Regional Medical Center took center stage at the annual WOMRMC Hospital Week, May 7 to 11. To show appreciation to their staff, hospital administrators planned a week-long celebration of meals, events, and contests. At the dessert contest and goofyshoe day, employees submitted their best desserts and had photos taken as they wore their goofiest shoes. At the annual service directors’ breakfast, hospital service directors prepared and served a complimentary breakfast to employees, who also dressed in ‘50s garb. The morale committee served 400 hamburgers and brown bags to employees who could also wear jeans for the picnic meal on the Bertha Reed (left to right), Linda Nickerson, Rose Burgess, and Margaret Fontenot model their crazy hats. lawn. At the horseshoe tournament, with a full capacity of 64 participants, employees could dress in western style, and during the annual hospital week reception and ice cream social, employees received service pins and banana splits and wore their crazy hats. lsu health care services division | 8550 united plaza blvd, ste 400, baton rouge, la 70809-2256 | ph: 225.922.2259 page l Legislative Budget Committee Supports Funding for LSU / VA Medical Complex Baton Rouge -- The Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget unanimously agreed to support the provision of $266 million in seed money for the construction of the LSU VA medical complex in New Orleans. The full legislature must now approve the plan. Once that happens, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development must agree to fund the request. “This effort is vital to our redesigned health-care environment,” Governor Kathleen Blanco said in a prepared statement encouraging lawmakers to back the plan, which calls for a self-supporting teaching and research hospital. The partnership with the VA will offer taxpayer savings of $400 million over 25 years as the two institutions share some facilities and services, such as a power plant and parking and food and laboratory services. “The opportunity to join with the VA, arguably one of the best Legislators are currently reviewing the business plan and funding for the LSU VA medical complex. health-care systems in the world, is one we must seize without delay,” said Don Smithburg, CEO of the LSU Health Care Services Division. “This venture is a win-win situation for all involved.” In addition to federal and state capital investment, the construction itself will generate the equivalent of almost 20,000 jobs, and, once completed, the LSU VA complex will produce 10,000 high-paying jobs. The project is also vital to graduate medical education for the LSU and Tulane health sciences centers. LSU trains seventy percent of Louisiana physicians. Also, in 2005, 2,300 allied health students from 18 educational institutions trained at the Medical Center of Louisiana. “The new LSU VA medical complex will be expressly built for health sciences education,” Smithburg said. “We will continue to be the training ground for, and partners with, the many educational institutions that have relied on MCLNO for generations.” Read All About It! Many LSU HCSD employees receive in their individual email the link for each issue of Les Hopitaux de la Louisiane, but some do not have daily access to LSU HCSD email. So we depend on hospital administrators, department and public relations directors, and humanresources and patient-advocate administrators to print each issue and to post it on bulletin boards. We want everyone to know the latest. Please print it and post it. Please print and post every issue of Les Hopitaux de la Louisiane. lsu health care services division | 8550 united plaza blvd, ste 400, baton rouge, la 70809-2256 | ph: 225.922.2259 page LSU Supports Katrina Memorial at Charity Hospital Cemetery The Hurricane Katrina Memorial is a project of the New Orleans Katrina Memorial Corporation, a non-profit, 501(c)(3) corporation established to create a permanent memorial honoring those who lost their lives in the devastating hurricane and to lay to rest the unclaimed and unidentified victims of Hurricane Katrina. katrina memorial offers donor opportunities New Orleans - The LSU Board of Supervisors and LSU HCSD support plans for the construction of the New Orleans Katrina Memorial on the grounds of the Charity Hospital Cemetery at the end of Canal Street at City Park Avenue, in Mid-City New Orleans. The memorial will be a place to honor all the victims of Hurricane Katrina and a mausoleum for the unidentified and unclaimed victims of the storm. “As we recover from the devastation and prepare for our future in health care, The LSU Board remembers those who have gone before us with this memorial,” said Donald Smithburg, CEO of LSU HCSD. “The cemetery has always been a place of remembrance. The memorial to those who perished in the storm will continue this sacred tradition.” The proposed design incorporates shapes of a hurricane and labyrinth. Mausoleums and trees will line the outer labyrinthine walkways; donor recognition plaques the inner. A statue of two bronze angels bearing a flaming fleur de lis will be in the center. The NOKMC began a nationwide campaign at the end of April to raise $500,000 in grants and gifts for the first phase of the $1.2 million project. Donate by snail mail or at neworleanskatrinamemorial.org. For more information, call 504.658.9660. The New Orleans Katrina Memorial Corporation is currently soliciting tax-deductible donations toward the construction costs and the perpetual care of the memorial. Platinum Level $100,000 Plus Donors will be prominently identified on a cast bronze plaque at the entrance to the memorial, on the base of the central angel statue, or at a mutually agreed upon site within the memorial. Gold Level $50,000 - $99,999 Contributors will receive highprofile recognition on bronze plaques positioned beside the mausoleums. Silver Level $10,000 - $49,999 Contributors will be acknowledged on benches positioned throughout the memorial. Bronze Level $1,000 - $9,999 Donors will be identified on bronze granite pillows or granite pavers along the walkway. Friends Level $50 - $999 Donors will be recognized on the memorial website and in the dedication program. lsu health care services division | 8550 united plaza blvd, ste 400, baton rouge, la 70809-2256 | ph: 225.922.2259 page l Hiv OUTPATIENT Clinic Marks 20 Years “The importance of the clinic is highlighted by the fact that it was one of the first two clinics opened in New Orleans after the storm,” Dr. Kaiser said. Katrina scattered HOP staff nationwide, but a critical mass remained in Louisiana, and, within two weeks of the storm, staff were seeing patients at Earl K. Long Medical Center, said Dr. Lynn Besch, HIV division director and associate professor of clinical medicine in infectious diseases. “EKL graciously gave us Drs. Cathi Fontenot, Michael Kaiser, and Michael Butler were among the speakers at the support,” she said. “In three HOP ceremony. months we saw 280 patients.” Staff weekly drove to Leonard New Orleans -- The LSU Medical together a comprehensive system Center of Louisiana at New of care for people living with HIV,” J. Chabert Medical Center in Orleans HIV Outpatient Clinic said Dr. Michael Kaiser, associate Houma, where the LJCMC pharmacy filled prescriptions. (HOP) observed its twentieth chief medical officer for the LSU When Rita hit, the LSU year of serving HIV/AIDS patients Health Care Services Division and HCSD safety net again fell into in the New Orleans metropolitan one of the clinic’s founders. “In place. HOP staff saw patients area on Friday, May 18, 2007, 2007 it is still the place where the with an anniversary program. vast majority of people in the New at University Medical Center in Lafayette, she said. In the mid-1980s, as HIV Orleans area get their care.” Despite the disruption of rapidly spread in New Orleans, Innovative HOP patient services the Charity Hospital Department have received national recognition, services due to the hurricanes, HOP is committed to the of Medicine Infectious Disease and HOP staff devotes itself to provision of a health care system Clinic treated HIV patients. In teaching others HIV care and that improves client outcomes, 1986, Dr. Ted Wisniewski and advocacy on the local, state, and protects client confidentiality, others petitioned the Robert national levels for services for the maximizes client and community Wood Johnson Foundation for HIV-infected and affected. funding for an HIV clinic. Post-Katrina, the clinic continues input, and respects the cultural diversity of clients and staff. As a result, in 1987, HOP to provide care to HIV/AIDS Guest speakers at the program opened its doors to assist the patients, now more than 6,000 in were Drs. Michael Butler, Michael growing number of patients Orleans, Jefferson, St. Tammany, Kaiser, Dwayne Thomas, Cathi diagnosed HIV positive. More St. Bernard, Plaquemines, St. Fontenot, and Rob Marier, who than 100 people received care Charles, St. John, and St. James was MCLNO medical director that first year. In 2005, more parishes. The HOP Clinic is than 3,300 patients received restoring its “one-stop shop” option when the clinic opened, and care. Since the early 1980’s, for HIV care. In addition to primary Harlee Kutzen, R.N., who was more than 13,000 HIV/AIDS care, HOP offers access to dental, the clinic’s first director. Besides a reception, the event included a patients have been reported in psychiatry, gastroenterology, health fair and exhibits. the New Orleans area. pulmonology, dermatology, “In 1987 the clinic was a cardiology, nephrology, pain national model for bringing management, and OB/GYN. lsu health care services division | 8550 united plaza blvd, ste 400, baton rouge, la 70809-2256 | ph: 225.922.2259 page Beginning immediately, all new stationery and other new items, such as identification badges and signs of any size, for interior or exterior display, should have the new logo and the new graphics standards. PowerPoint presentations, poster presentations, and presentations of any kind should have the new logo and graphics standards in place prior to their next appearance before an audience. No entity should be using stationery, signs, presentations, or items of any kind with the LSU Health Sciences Center name or logo as HCSD has been an entity of the LSU System Office since July 5, 2005. The LSU HCSD Graphics Standards Manual offers guidelines for the use of the new logo and graphics standards, but an unexpected instance may arise. In this event, LSU HCSD headquarters will determine the appropriate use of the logo or application of the standards. If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to ask. Call the LSU HCSD Office of Communications and Media Relations, 225.922.0797. www.lsuhospitals.org Get the latest information about HCSD Hospitals The Website features: • A comprehensive listing of facilities, departments, services and information sources for LSU HCSD Hospitals and Clinics. •An expanded News and Announcements section, current press releases and Annual Reports. • Job listings. •Emergency Information and Contacts. •Health Care Effectiveness and Disease Management Program Information. june 2007 Baton Rouge - The LSU HCSD begins the use of its new logo and graphics standards this month. The new logo for the LSU Health Care Services Division reflects the innovative direction that LSU hospitals are taking in the twentyfirst century. It is an easily recognizable visual brand that clearly and consistently communicates our identity to the patients, their families, and the many communities that LSU health-care professionals serve. The logo and associated graphics standards also offer each hospital the opportunity for its own immediate identification. All entities within the Health Care Services Division will immediately begin the use of the new logo and graphics standards. However, common sense will also prevail. For instance, LSU HCSD will allow reasonable time for hospitals to install new signs and to exhaust existing stationery. In fact, hospitals, departments, sections, and all others should continue to use stationery in stock until June 30, 2007. After June 30, 2007, all should use stationery with the new logo and new graphics standards. L es H ôpitaux LSU de la Louisiane LSU HCSD Introduces New Logo and Graphics Standards colophon Les Hopitaux is a monthly newsletter of LSU Health Care Services Division, which operates eight of the state of Louisiana’s public hospitals: Bogalusa Medical Center Bogalusa, La. Earl K. Long Medical Center Baton Rouge, La. Huey P. Long Medical Center Pineville, La. Lallie Kemp Regional Medical Center Independence, La. L.J. Chabert Medical Center Houma, La. Medical Center of Louisiana at New Orleans New Orleans, La. University Medical Center Lafayette, La. W.O. Moss Regional Medical Center Lake Charles, La. LSU Health Care Services Division 8550 United Plaza Blvd, Ste. 400 Baton Rouge, LA 70809 ph. 225.922.0488 fax. 225.922.2259 Donald R. Smithburg Executive Vice President/CEO Editor.........................Marvin McGraw Editor.........................Michael Higgins Staff/Design...............Shawn M. Taylor lsu health care services division | 8550 united plaza blvd, ste 400, baton rouge, la 70809-2256 | ph: 225.922.2259 page
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