FMDH - Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital
Transcription
FMDH - Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital
MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital 2011 Contents Our Mission....................................................................... 2 Our Vision......................................................................... 2 Our Values......................................................................... 3 To Our Community.......................................................... 4 Dear Friends of FMDH.................................................. 6 Board of Trustees............................................................. 7 CAHs and Medicare......................................................... 8 Hospital Statistics.............................................................. 9 Patient Care Statistics....................................................... 9 FMDH Foundation........................................................ 10 Emergency Services........................................................ 12 FMDH Healthcare Providers ...................................... 14 Visiting Specialists........................................................... 17 Certified Registered Nurses........................................... 17 Patient Care Services...................................................... 18 Statement Of Operations.............................................. 20 Balance Sheet................................................................... 21 Production Credits.......................................................... 22 FMDH Telephone Directory........................................ 23 Our Vision: Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital will be the best place to work, the best place to practice medicine and the best place to receive care in rural America. Our Mission: To advance the coordinated delivery of health services, guided with respect for the individual needs of our patients, thereby improving the health of our regional community. 2 • F MDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t • www.fm Our Values Com m i t m e n t : Our utmost commitment is to continuously improve the quality of services provided to our customers. It is our intent to be accountable to our customers through an organized quality improvement effort. Com p a s s i o n : Our first responsibility is to our patients. Our staff will show compassion and be responsive to their needs, regardless of race, creed or ability to pay. Inn o v a t i o n : Competence: Our employees are our greatest resource. By our investment in their personal and professional growth, our ability to provide a healing environment for our patients is enhanced. Communication: An essential ingredient to providing quality patient care is communication with patients, with family and with healthcare team members. Our staff will communicate in an open, honest and respectful manner, seeking first to understand before being understood and focusing on the well-being of the patients we serve. Creativity and innovation will guide our thinking. Flexibility will be the key to our success in a rapidly changing We believe in building relationships environment, while remaining with our community. We work together responsive to our customers’ needs. with schools, businesses and public entities to improve the health of those Ste w a r d s h i p : we serve. We will manage our resources (technical, financial, human and natural) to support our commitment to We also believe in the high quality patient care both now and neighboring communities we in the future. serve. We partner with the healthcare facilities located in our service area and will work together to pool our resources to meet identified needs. dh.org • FMDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t 3 To Our Community As I write this message, the United States Supreme Court has taken up the question of the constitutionality of the Accountable Care Act, or what is more often referred to as the “healthcare reform act.” Before your eyes start glazing over – my intent in this message is not to discuss the pros and cons of healthcare reform. However, the contentiousness of the current political and cultural environment of the United States as it relates to how health care is delivered – as depicted, in part, by this constitutional debate – causes me concern. I believe it should cause concern among all citizens of northeast Montana. The debate over the Accountable Care Act is just one aspect of the change that is being promoted by persons concerned with the sustainability of the healthcare delivery system. The outcome of the greater change debate could have significant impact on access to services for all of us living in Glasgow and northeast Montana. Change is not always a bad thing. Particular to health care delivery, the drive to continually develop new technologies and care techniques has significantly changed how care is delivered – for the better in most cases. Further, I would be the last person to argue that the system, under its current construct, is perfectly efficient from both financial and clinical points of view. Change is needed and the concern for the United 4 • F MDH 2 011 States’ ability to sustain the existing delivery model is a very real concern. However, the wrong change or changes to the system can have disastrous impacts on the availability of services and the way of life for many parts of the country. One change that has been on the most recent agendas of many governmental agencies, healthcare stakeholders and individual members of Congress is the idea of doing away with the Critical Access Hospital (CAH) program. Your eyes would certainly glaze over if I went into too much detail on what the CAH program is and how it works. Suffice it to say that Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital is a Critical Access Hospital – as are all but a handful of hospitals in Montana. The program finds its origins in a Montana demonstration project operating in the late 1980s and early 1990s. It was developed because the Medicare Prospective Payment model of reimbursement did not work in rural communities. Due to the creation of A n n ua l Re p o r t • www.fm the CAH model, many rural communities in Montana, and throughout the country, have been able to continue to carry on their missions of service to the citizens of their service areas. It works because it helps smooth out the peaks and valleys of extreme volume variability inherent in rural hospital operations, creating a more stable environment for all of us. have very little impact on such expenditures from a macroeconomic perspective. However, it would have significant microeconomic and micro-cultural impacts on the communities served by Critical Access Hospitals. Why should you be concerned? If you do not think that FMDH or other CAHs contribute to the economic and cultural wellbeing The arguments for of their respective changing or ridding communities– there is ourselves of the CAH no need to be concerned. Due to the creation model sound fair Whatever may happen, of the CAH in theory but, when the communities will examined in the context adapt as is needed. model, many rural of operational reality, do If, however, you do communities in not withstand scrutiny. believe that the scope The argument is that as of services available Montana, continue we try to curb the federal and the numbers and to carry on their government’s costs in types of jobs provided paying for the Medicare by CAHs is important missions of service and Medicaid programs, to the economic and to the citizens of everyone should cultural health of the “share” in the pain. To community, you need their service areas. most people that is a to make your voices reasonable argument – heard. Our collective why should one sector future should not be left of the country be spared environmental and to politicians - or to hospital administrators. economic pain when others have to suffer. Such determinations are most rightly made by However, the contextual reality is that the the community all institutions serve. CAH program is a miniscule part of the overall government expenditures in the Medicare and Medicaid program. We are talking 2% to 4% of the hospital expenditures for the entire country in any given year. Eliminating or substantially changing the program would dh.org • FMDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t 5 Dear Friends of FMDH, “The best place to work, the best place to practice medicine and the best place to receive care in rural America.” Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital is committed to this Vision Statement on every level throughout the organization. The FMDH Board and Leadership Team continue to look to the future in many ways. First and foremost is how this organization can provide the best care and services for you, the patient. Last year, we reported that FMDH embarked on a Community Health Services Development Project. Part of this project was community engagement, which included both a health care service Pat Gunderson President 2012 survey and meetings with community focus groups. We Serving Second Term listened to your concerns and suggestions. As a result, 2007-2015 we have committed to an evaluation of two potential additions to the services FMDH now provides, Hospice Care and limited cardiology services. FMDH will explore the possibility of adding these new services and others in the future, but their analysis will be based on community needs, the ability of FMDH to support a new service and the financial implications for expansion of services. In addition to looking to the future, we are continually looking for ways we can improve as a Board. In our most recent self-evaluation, the Board recognized that we need to make sure that we are doing our best in terms of community relations. We are committed to making ourselves accessible to all members of the greater community that FMDH serves. Please don’t hesitate to contact me or any Board member regarding your healthcare experiences and to inform us of any healthcare needs that you feel aren’t being met through FMDH. The Board truly wants to ensure that we are serving our Community, those that need healthcare services and those in support of loved ones who are ill. We are determined to do our part in providing you with “the best place to receive care in rural America.” Sincerely, Pat Gunderson President, Board of Trustees 6 • F MDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t • www.fm Board of Trustees Deneen Fuhrman Vice President Serving Third Term 2005-2013 Jody Faul Serving First Term 2010-2012 dh.org • Tim Newton Secretary/Treasurer Serving Second Term 2007-2012 Kerry Kingsley Serving Second Term 2009-2014 FMDH 2 011 Kevin Miller Serving First Term 2012-2014 Amy Capdeville Dennis Idler Serving Third Term 2005-2013 Muriel Burt Serving First Term 2012-2014 Serving First Term 2011-2013 A n n ua l Re p o r t 7 Critical Access Hospitals and Medicare Critical Access Hospitals are rural hospitals that have been given a special designation by Medicare. This designation allows the hospital to receive cost-based reimbursement from Medicare and Medicaid rather than the traditional Medicare/Medicaid Fee. The Medicare/Medicaid Fee is the total amount that Medicare/Medicaid will allow a hospital to be paid for a service, regardless of what the hospital charges for the service. The traditional Medicare/Medicaid Fee Schedule was created based on the presumed average cost to provide services amongst all hospitals in the nation with only minor adjustments to the fee based on location. Because it is looking at the cost to provide the service on a national level, and the majority of services are provided at very large urban hospitals, the cost that Medicare uses to set its fees reflects the cost for large high-volume facilities to provide services. Large urban hospitals that have dramatically higher volumes than rural facilities, such as FMDH, are able to provide services at a lower cost per patient encounter because their volumes are so much higher. The principal at work in healthcare is the same as in manufacturing. Most would agree that a large car manufacturer that produces hundreds of thousands of cars per year would be able to produce a car at a 8 • F MDH 2 011 significantly lower cost than a company trying to manufacture one by hand and only producing a couple dozen cars a year. Traditional Medicare/Medicaid Fee Schedules would be paying the local car manufacturer based on the cost experience for the large car manufacturer. Cost-based reimbursement moves a hospital’s payment structure from the traditional fee-based structure to one that pays a hospital based on the costs that they actually incur to provide services to Medicare and Medicaid patients. At the end of each year, the hospital provides Medicare/Medicaid with a detailed accounting of the costs that the hospital incurred to provide services to Medicare/ Medicaid patients through a document called a Cost Report. The Cost Report is similar to a personal Tax Return, in that it compares the total payments that Medicare/Medicaid makes throughout the year (based on estimates from prior year cost reports) to the actual allowable cost to provide the services as demonstrated in the Cost Report. If the total allowable costs is greater than the total of the payments made by Medicare/Medicaid throughout the year, then Medicare/Medicaid sends the hospital an additional payment, if the total allowable costs are less than the total payments, then the hospital has to send back the difference. A n n ua l Re p o r t • www.fm Patient Care Statistics Number of Staffed Beds Number of Bassinets Inpatient Admissions Total Patient Days Average Patients/Day Average Length of Stay(in days) Emergency Patients Surgeries Deliveries Total Patients Served Laboratory Tests Radiology Procedures Meals Served Pounds of Laundry Processed 2011 25 6 787 2,466 6.7 3.1 3,213 1,123 125 33,621 52,771 11,673 50,235 80,452 2010 25 6 794 2,499 6.8 3.1 3,358 1,179 125 34,276 53,781 12,635 47,754 79,635 Employment Statistics FMDH is the largest employer in Valley County. As of June 30, 2011, FMDH employed a total of 236 full and part time employees. The Full Time Equivalents (Total worked hours divided by full time hours [2080 hours in one work year]) were 177.29. According to a report prepared by the Montana Department of Labor and Industry’s Research and Analysis Bureau, in 2010: • FMDH employment in relation to total county employment was 64% greater than expected when considering statewide employment patterns; • FMDH accounted for 8.8% of Valley County’s non-farm employment and 15% of Valley County’s total wages. • For every Full Time Equivalent employed at FMDH, another .37 jobs are created in Valley County. Based on 2010 FMDH employment this represents 88 additional non-hospital jobs in the county. • For every dollar of wages paid by FMDH, an additional $0.22 of wages is produced in the county in non-hospital wages. This represents an additional $2,709,362 in annual non-hospital county wages. dh.org • FMDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t 9 About FMDH Foundation Along with supporting our students, the The FMDH Foundation is an independent, non- Foundation also gifted a Continuous Passive Moprofit charitable organization that was incor- tion machine to Physical Therapy, a T-4 NuStep porated in 1982. It is governed by a dedicated bike for the Nashua Senior Citizens, CPR mateboard of directors while its day-to-day adminis- rials for FMDH, a birthing bed, and new infant tration is managed by the Foundation Director. warmer for OB/GYN. A total of $61,160.73 was The Foundation is an integral part of the Fran- gifted to students, FMDH, and the community. ces Mahon Deaconess Hospital and the com- This year we raised $17, 229.00 during our annual Golf Tournament, and all munity, helping to provide proceeds went to the Mammogthe latest technology, mediO u r m i s s i o n : raphy Fund. We are also able to cal equipment, and training to provide financial give a little over $6,000 to our for FMDH, better medical support to Frances ambulance services each year. equipment for community orMahon Deaconess ganizations, and scholarships Hospital and other As you can see, the Founmedically needed to Valley County graduates projects in our area to dation has done great things in studying in a medical field. ensure that the medical the last year, and continues to services help Valley County and our com 2011 proved to be a provided in munity. Needless to say, none of great year. The Foundation Valley County meet the this would be possible without gifted $20,000 in Scholarhighest quality the support of you and so many ships to the following stustandards. others over the last 30 years. dents pursuing a degree in a Thank you for your commitment medical field: * Derek Baumgartner * Brianne Saxbury * and all your support. Join us in 2012 for another great year! LeAnn Capdeville * Leigha Hopkins * Corey Smith * Sarah Waarvik * Derek Beadle * Julie Nelson * Justine Stein * Alacia Cole * Chloe Gifts to the Foundation Sukut * Janelle Johnson * Emily Braaten *Aaron There are several different ways you can give a Hartsock * Nicole Nelson * Ashley Fossum tax deductible donation to the Foundation such as cash gifts including memorials and honorari- 10 • F MDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t • www.fm ums, stocks, bonds, real estate, annuities, and bequests. Cash gifts can be given as cash, checks, credit cards, FMDH payroll deduction, and via ACH directly from your bank account. All gifts to the Foundation are managed by the Foundation Board, its Investment Committee, and account managers at RBC Wealth Management to guarantee the highest rate of return. You can determine how to support the Foundation’s mission by choosing from three different trusts or endowments and one fund. Trusts and Endowments When you give to support FMDH Foundation trusts or endowments, your gift is preserved in perpetuity ensuring that it will thrive and continue to grow, impacting the lives of future generations. Your original gift is invested and only the interest and dividends are used to support the Foundation’s giving. These choices include: Visit us online at www.fmdh.org and click on FMDH Foundation The Tomography Fund was started in 2010 when the Foundation pledged to help the Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital raise the funds necessary to purchase a Hologic digital tomography machine. This new digital technology will be vastly improved over analog technology (the type of mammogram machine FMDH currently has) as well as current digital machines because it utilizes tomography, something that is currently used with CT scans. This new technology will allow the FMDH Radiologist to view breasts in a 3-D image, thereby allowing improved identification of potentially cancerous areas. When you give to the Foundation, your gift benefits you and your family while positively affecting our community. It’s a gift that never stops giving! General Endowment that allows the Foundation to purchase much-needed medical equipment for FMDH and other community organizations. (All unspecified donations are deposited To learn more about the Foundation please coninto the General Endowment.) tact: Markle’s Ambulance Trust helps support the ambulance services in Glasgow and throughout Mary Kate McIntyre - Foundation Director 621 3rd Street South Valley County. Glasgow, MT 59230 The Scholarship Trust ensures that funds are Office: (406) 228-3614 given to second-year college students studying in Fax: (406) 228-3535 a medical field who have graduated from a Valley County high school. FMDH Foundation Board Members: Ken Jansa, President Dan Frost, Vice President Tracey Waarvik, Treasurer dh.org • FMDH 2 011 Sam Knodel Karla Zerbe Kurt Voss Della Gardner Carrie Mesman Millard “Butch” Tewell A n n ua l Re p o r t 11 Improving Access to Emergency Services The recent purchase of a jet aircraft has Northeast Montana STAT Air Ambulance Cooperative flying high about their new and improved capabilities for transporting medical patients facing serious, life threatening conditions. The aircraft was officially ready to fly its first ambulance flight on Febuary 17, 2012. “This has been a long-time goal of the board to advance our service for the communities in Northeast Montana. We are excited and look forward to serving the area and their medical needs,” said Clay Berger, STAT Air Ambulance Director. The new Pilatus PC-12 will serve as the primary aircraft used for air ambulance, offering a five foot wide cargo door and a turbine jet engine that will generate speeds of approximately 322 mph. One of the biggest advantages of the aircraft is the reduced flight time needed to get patients to their destinations. A trip from Poplar Hospital to Billings that once took one hour and fifteen minutes, will now take 45 minutes. A trip from Glasgow to Denver that once took two hours and forty five minutes will now take one hour and 45 minutes. The PC-12 also allows for better accommodations for bariatric patients. With the assistance of a hydraulic arm, patients weighing as much as 650 pounds can be lifted effortlessly into the aircraft by staff. The flight team consists of four full-time and one part-time pilot, five flight registered nurses and six flighttrained EMT’s with 24 hours a day scheduling and on-call services. Quick access to specialized care not available in the rural area means better outcomes for patients. “For a patient experiencing chest pain or who has suffered a heart attack, this service is invaluable. For heart patients that need stents, the biggest advantage is the ability for us to get them to Billings as quickly as 12 • F MDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t • www.fm possible. We get them right into the heart cath lab where they can stent the patient in minutes and you start to see blood flow. The goal is always to get the patient from here to there with as little tissue damage as possible,” Berger said. “Once the emergency room team establishes that the patient needs to be flown out, STAT Air offers us peace of mind because they worry about the travel logistics. We only have to make one phone call and that enables us to focus all of our attention on the patient without trying to figure out how we are going to get them there,” said Val Smith, Director of Nursing, NEMHS. “STAT Air is truly a cooperative invaluable lifeline for the communities of northeast Montana. It ensures that patients can receive care for what are often times life threatening circumstances when every second counts. Those crucial minutes can mean everything for a patient’s outcome,” said Randall Holom, CEO for Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital. The STAT Air Service started in 1984 at Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital when they leased pilots and used nurses from their facility to provide air medical transport. In 1986 they purchased a Cessna twin engine 421 Aircraft and hired pilots and two full time nurses. In 2007, FMDH, Malta, and Northeast Montana Health Services Wolf Point and Poplar campuses created Northeast Montana STAT Air Ambulance Cooperative. Last year, there were a total of 318 air ambulance flights. The board consists of six members, both a CEO and a board member from each facility. They are Peg Norgaard, CEO and Dallas O’Connor, Chairman of the Board for NEMHS, Ward Van Wichen, CEO and Howard Hammond, a board member for Malta, and Randy Holom, CEO and Dennis Idler, a board member for FMDH. The Northeast Montana STAT Air flights can be tracked on their new website www.nemstatair.com. dh.org • FMDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t 13 FMDH Healthcare Providers Janet Armstrong, MD Internal Medicine Gordon Bell, MD Family Medicine 14 • F MDH Jace Ball, PA-C Emergency Medicine Brett Dorwart, R Ph Hospital Pharmacy 2 011 Lisa Ball, CRNA Anesthesia Pain Management Brian Bell, MD FACOG Obstetrics/Gynecology Gerry Fink, CRNA Anesthesia Pain Management Jennifer Fowler, DO Family Medicine A n n ua l Re p o r t • www.fm FMDH Healthcare Providers No Photo Available Arin Iman, DO Family Practice Angela Kemp, PharmD Hospital Pharmacy Anne Millard, MD Family Practice Obstetrics Brenda Koessl, FNP Nursing Services Thomas Mirich III, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Robert Martin, MPT Physical Therapy Gina Reyling, PT Physical Therapy See page 17 for the list of visiting specialists. dh.org • FMDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t 15 FMDH Healthcare Providers FMDH Healthcare Providers Thomas Schultz, CRNA Anesthesia Pain Management Director Sharlene Schmidt, MS Audiologist Kae Sukut, PA-C Orthopaedic Surgery 16 • F MDH 2 011 Walter Smith, DO Radiology Kari Wiens, FNP Family Practice A n n ua l Thomas Stathos, R Ph Retail Pharmacy Anne Williams, MD FACS General Surgery Re p o r t • www.fm Visiting Specialists Allergy/Immunology Nephrology Podiatry Cardiology Neurology Pediatric Pulmonology James M. Sweet, MD Kendrick Trostel, MD* Scott A. Sample, DO* Brian Rah, MD* Arturo Echeverri, MD Larry Scharfe PA-C Dermatology Michelle L. Spenny, MD Samuel Reck, MD* Jared J. Lund, MD Oncology/Hematology Roger G. Santala, MD William Purcell, MD* Ortho Spine Surgery Alan K. Dacre, MD Ear, Nose & Throat Brett R. Bennion, MD Bruce D. Fisher, MD Jeremy Lysinger, MD Pulmonology Catherine Stephens, MD Rheumatology Bruno Oliveira, MD* Urology Sarah Ryan, MD * provider utilizes telemedicine Certified Registered Nurses Connie Brunelle, RN-BC Certified Flight Registered Nurse Pamela Lee, RN-BC Certified Professional Utilization Review Jeanine Nickels, BSN, RN Certified Lactation Counselor Deborah Guenther, BSN, RN-BC Joy Linn, RN-BC Certified Nurse, Operating Room Certified Medical-Surgical Nurse Vonnie Pattison, BSN, MSN, RN-BC Certified Gerontological Nurse Brandi Knierim, BSN, RN-BC Jill Meiers, RN-BC Certified Inpatient Obstetric Nurse Certified Nurse, Operating Room Certified Wound Care Nurse Leah Miller, RN Certified Lactation Counselor Brenda Koessl, BSN, RN, FNP Certified Emergency Room Nurse Certified Family Nurse Practitioner Lynn Miller, BSN RN-BC Certified Informatics Nurse Elaine Schuchard, RN-BC Certified Emergency Room Nurse dh.org • FMDH 2 011 Amber See, BSN, RN-BC Certified Obstetric Nurse Certified Lactation Counselor A n n ua l Re p o r t 17 Our Services At FMDH, we are dedicated to ensuring that Northeastern Montanans have access to as many medical services as can be supported by our regional community. We are so committed to ensuring that we are able to address the health needs of our regional community that we offer many services not often found in a Critical Access Hospital. We even go so far as to subsidize some of our services, just to ensure that residents in our service area have access to the care they need. 5th Avenue Pharmacy The 5th Avenue Pharmacy is located within the hospital facility and offers a full spectrum of prescription and over the counter medications as well as gifts. One full time Pharmacist and three technicians staff the pharmacy five days a week. Audiology Provides hearing and hearing aid service along with screening services to patients and many schools throughout Northeast Montana. body changes to be better detected. • Nuclear Medicine offering full capabilities to produce tomographic radioactive functional images as well as thallium cardiac treadmill examinations. • Mammography images produced by LoRad by Hologic and uses iCad Secondlook for computer-aided detection (CAD). • Ultrasound featuring two standard machines and one 3D/4D machine. Cardiac Rehabilitation Services include a twelve week comprehensive outpatient program designed to help clients develop a healthier lifestyle. It is a multidisciplinary program made up Diabetic Education of specially trained staff, doctors, dietitians, pharmaFMDH has a Registered Nurse on staff that specializes cists, physical and respiratory therapists, stress managin Diabetes Education. ers and psychologists. Deaconess Radiology In addition to general radiology including C-Arm Fluoroscopy and X-ray, the department offers: • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) using a GE 1.5 Magnet unit. • CT Scan produced by a 16 slice Siemens Somatom Sensation scanner that allows for subtle 18 • F MDH 2 011 Glasgow Clinic A fully staffed primary/urgent care clinic located within the FMDH facility. The clinic is staffed by three Family Practice Physicians, one Specialist in Internal Medicine and a Family Nurse Practitioner and a Physician Assistant. A n n ua l Re p o r t • www.fm Hi-Line General Surgery Located within the Glasgow Clinic, Hi-Line General Surgery offers a variety of surgical and diagnostic services. Home Oxygen/Durable Medical Equipment Offers all the supplies needed to provide care from the comfort of home. Carrying a full complement of breathing assistance devices including home and portable oxygen, nebulizers, C-pap and Bi-pap machines as well as medical supplies such as walkers, wheelchairs and hospital beds. Inpatient Nursing Services FMDH offers a full range of highly trained nursing staff available to make patients as comfortable as possible. Their services are always delivered with empathy and complete regard for patient confidentiality. Therapeutic Drugs Thyroid Studies Bacteriology Coagulation Arterial Blood Gases Transfusion Services Milk River OB/GYN Both Gynecological and Obstetrical services offered with emphasis on applying the most up to date medical care to each individual depending upon her particular circumstances. From routine health maintenance issues to complex, high-risk pregnancies, to advanced laparoscopic surgery. Northeast Montana STAT Air Ambulance FMDH is a proud member of this cooperative. It was formed by FMDH with the Phillips County Hospital and northeast Montana Health Services to ensure Labor, Delivery and the residents of northeast Recovery (LDR) Montana have access to The LDR suites are inclusive Registered Nurses with adso all parts of the delivery provanced training in the care cess can be done from that and risks associated with room. A childbirth preparation class is also available to inform and introduce transporting critically ill patients. It presently conducts mothers to the facility and staff. FMDH has an Obste- approximately 300 flights per year with the majority of trician/Gynecologist as well as Family Practice Physi- transports from Northeast Montana to Billings. cians with training in Obstetrics on staff to care for mothers who choose to have their children at FMDH. Nutrition Services The FMDH staff of dietitians provide nutrition assessments and education to inpatients and outpatients Laboratory Services Lab professionals are available on-call to our physicians (by referral). Nutrition consultation is also provided to 24 hours a day 365 days a year. The department is a other facilities including nursing homes and the WIC Clinical Laboratory that performs diagnostic laboratory program. work on blood, urine and other body fluids. These tests include work in: Hematology Chemistry dh.org • FMDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t 19 Occupational Therapy Offering a full service Occupational Therapy program for patients receiving outpatient or inpatient care. Including services for infants and toddlers under 3 years of age. Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine Located within the facility and offers a full-time Orthopaedic surgeon and a Certified Physician Assistant. The department specializes in sports medicine, arthroscopic surgery, total joint replacement and shoulder conditions. Outpatient Infusion/Chemotherapy Providing a one-on-one nursing service in the privacy of individual rooms, Outpatient Infusion Therapy clinic offers the service delivery of various infusion medications including, but not limited to, chemotherapy. The rooms are equipped and decorated to make receiving treatment as comfortable as possible. Physical Therapy Serving patients in both Glasgow and Malta, the department’s primary patient load consists of musculoskeletal injuries or orthopaedic injuries. However, they also work with neurological disorders, provide instruction on work-place injury minimization and treat dysfunction throughout the whole body. Respiratory Therapy This department performs oximetry studies, pulmonary function studies (both pre and post), fits patients with ventilators, and conducts referrals. Surgical Services The department of Surgical Services (DSS) provides care to patients of all ages and acuity undergoing elective or emergency surgery. This department consists of Outpatient Surgery, Anesthesia, Operating Room, Peri Anesthesia Care Unit, Sterile Processing and Outpatient Procedure Lab. Pain Management Pain interventions, in the form of injections, to help manage pain. FMDH has three CRNAs specializing in anesthesia and pain management. Statement Of Operations Years ended June 30 Total Operating Revenues Total Operating Expenses Gain From Operations Net Non-Operating Gains Increase in Unrestricted Net Assets 20 • F MDH 2 011 A n n ua l 2011 $28,224,037 26,308,782 1,915,255 509,530 2,295,087 2010 $28,233,175 25,584,953 2,648,222 540,498 $3,188,720 Re p o r t • www.fm F M D H i s Q u ality Focused The Joint Commission is an independent not-for-profit organization that has accredited hospitals for more than 50 years. Today it accredits more than 15,000 health care organizations and programs in the United States. Joint Commission accreditation and certification is recognized nationwide as a symbol of quality that reflects an organization’s commitment to meeting certain performance standards. To earn and maintain The Joint Commission’s Gold Seal of Approval™, an organization must undergo an on-site survey by a Joint Commission survey team at least every three years. Joint Commission standards address the hospital’s performance in specific areas, and specify requirements to ensure that patient care is provided in a safe manner and in a secure environment. The Joint Commission develops its standards in consultation with healthcare experts, proYears ended June 30 2011 2010 viders and researchers, as well Assets as measurement experts, pur- Total Current Assets $17,561,070 $18,032,604 chasers and consumers. Plant, Property and Equipment 9,658,657 9,725,571 Balance Sheet A Hospital Quality Alliance Participant designates that a hospital has agreed to submit performance measures for publication on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) website. Information about the safety and quality of accredited hospitals is available to the public at Quality Check®, www. qualitycheck.org. dh.org • FMDH 4,276,952 4,672,586 1,778,713 6,842,765 0 1,604,203 $38,014,892 $35,340,569 $2,302,703 Long Term Liabilities Total Liabilities Net Assets $2,882,593 0 3,388,722 34,626,170 0 3,009,486 32,331,083 Total Liabilities and Net Assets 38,014,892 $35,340,569 Long Term Investments Note Receivable Other Assets Total Assets Liabilities and Net Assets Total Current Liabilities 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t 21 Production Credits If you would like additional copies of the Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital Annual Report, or for more information, please contact: Marketing Department Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital 621 3rd Street South, Glasgow, MT 59230 Phone: (406) 228-3643 Fax: (406) 228-3535 This report has been published as a service to the patients of Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital in accordance with reporting requirements for 501(c)(3) Tax Exempt Organizations. The cost to print and mail this report to you was less than $0.80 Randall Holom, Chief Executive Officer Nickolas Dirkes, Director of Marketing Megan Haddix, Projects Coordinator Board and Health Care Provider Photographs Courtesy of Image Photography 22 • F MDH 2 011 A n n ua l Re p o r t • www.fm Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital (406) 228-3500 or 1-800-322-3634 23 Re p o r t A n n ua l 2 011 FMDH • dh.org MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH Frances FMDH Mahon FMDHDeaconess FMDH Hospital FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD 621 3rd Street South FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH 59230 MDH Glasgow, FMDH MT FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH and FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH rthopaedics MDHport FMDH FMDHicine FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH Of FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD 221 5th Street South 3rd Street South FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH 621 FMDH FMDH MT FMDH FMDH Glasgow, 59230 Glasgow, MT 59230 MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD (406) 228-3400 (406) 228-3536 FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH OB/GYN FMDH of FMD Home Oxygen FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH Durable MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDHMedical FMDHEquipment FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD 621 3rd StreetSouth Street South FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH 621 3rd FMDH FMDH Glasgow, MT 59230 Glasgow, MT 59230 MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD 228-3618 228-3684 FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH(406) FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH(406) FMDH FMDH MDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMDH FMD O S Glasgow Clinic s Med FMDH & Milk River FMDH