Winter 2014 - KSB Hospital
Transcription
Winter 2014 - KSB Hospital
Winter 2014 SUMMER ‘09 G N I V I L T N A R B I V L A T I P S O HEA H ET B W A INE SH R KATHE healthy. happy. here. www.ksbhospital.com | 1 RURAL HEALTHCARE Retired CEO Honored As Rural Health Hero Two years after retiring as the President and CEO of KSB Hospital, Darryl Vandervort is still being remembered by healthcare professionals both in Illinois and around the country. In late November, Vandervort was named an Illinois Rural Health Hero by the National Center for Rural Health Professions (NCRHP). He was honored for his tireless work as an advocate for rural health in Illinois, specifically in the area of rural health professions training. “I am humbled by this honor, but it really isn’t about me,” said Vandervort, who was a KSB employee for 28 years, 23 as president and CEO. “We had a great management team in place and our employees are tremendous. There are none better anywhere. “When we say, it’s the people of KSB, it really is. I’ve said it before that no one person has all the answers. I have always had good people to work with.” Vandervort was honored at a reception in Rockford in conjunction with National Rural Health Day. During the reception, current President and CEO Dave Schreiner presented the retired CEO with a banner signed by KSB employees. The banner was displayed in the KSB Cafeteria for a week to give employees an opportunity to write messages to Vandervort. “Darryl was our leader, our mentor and our friend,” Schreiner said. “He was a great role model and showed me what it was like to be a great CEO. He has always believed in rural health and in preparing future professionals to serve in hospitals like KSB.” Under Vandervort’s direction, KSB Hospital in 1996 became one of the first collaborating hospitals for the Rural Medical Education (RMED) Program. It continues to accept students for their four-month rural health immersion experience each year. Vandervort has served as a member of RMED’s Recruitment and Retention Committee, a Retired President/CEO Darryl Vandervort volunteer group made up of rural health professionals and community members from various geographic locations in Illinois that assists the program in selecting pre-medical students for entrance into RMED. KSB, under Vandervort’s leadership, partnered with NCRHP to start a rural inter-professional summer internship for health professions students and a regional site for the Illinois Area Health Education Center (AHEC) program. In 2004, the hospital and the University Of Illinois College Of Medicine at Rockford established a progressive, 3-year rural residency training track for family medicine physicians. Throughout his tenure, Vandervort led KSB Hospital in many roles and was visible in the hospital and community for his leadership. “The KSB trustees, administration, physicians and staff are very proud that our retired CEO received this recognition for the impact he has had on the rural health workforce,” Board of Directors Chairperson Bill LeFevre said. “Congratulations, Darryl, and thank you for once again representing KSB Hospital in a most positive and 2 | Spring 2012 Vibrant Living 2 | Winter 2014 Vibrant Living honorable manner.” The reception in Vandervort’s honor was held in the lobby of the University Of Illinois College Of Medicine in Rockford. The event also featured a “This is Rural Health” photo contest, viewing of NCRHP’s rural health video, picture taking by the tractor, “meet and greets” with current rural medicine and pharmacy students and displays of past community projects by RMED students. RMED this year celebrated its 20th year of educating and training physicians for primary care practice in rural communities. Like many states, Illinois suffers from long-standing shortages of many types of medical personnel in rural communities. For example, 68 of 83 rural counties in the state do not have enough primary care doctors, including internal medicine, family medicine and pediatrics. About 500 doctors in rural locations are near retirement age. To create a pipeline of physicians to fill those positions, RMED recruits between 15 and 20 students annually who grew up in rural Illinois and plan to pursue a career in rural primary care medicine. Since its inception, RMED has not only trained rural physicians but also has facilitated the return of young doctors to rural communities. Some 243 students – 187 in practice and 53 in primary care physicians – have gone on to serve in Illinois. Candidates considering the program participate in a dual application process, applying to both the University of Illinois COM and RMED. In addition to the regular medical school curriculum, RMED students participate in monthly rural-focused sessions or activities. During their fourth year, RMED students complete a four-month primary care clinical rotation in a rural Illinois community and complete a community-oriented primary care project within that same community. Some 35 rural physician/educators on staff at 25 hospitals in Illinois host RMED students for this rural immersion experience. It’s almost as if it was in the DNA for Dr. Joseph Welty to become a family medicine doctor. Then, after making the commitment to pursue that profession nearly 40 years ago, Welty was destined to rise to the top, as he has done by being named Illinois Family Physician of the Year by the Illinois Academy of Family Physicians (IAFP). Welty got his first exposure to the medical world through his mother, who was a nurse in his native Amboy for Dr. Wayne Spenader. As a teenager, Joe worked part-time in the office washing windows, emptying trash cans and cleaning the waiting area. Because Dr. Spenader’s practice covered three different towns, Welty’s mom often functioned like our current-day nurse practitioner. “I witnessed the tremendous impact family medicine can have on the lives we care for and about,” Welty said. “During my high school years, I formulated a dream, and subsequently a plan, to become a family physician. “With the incredible support of innumerable people along the way, I continue to live that dream today.” Welty has been practicing family medicine for 28 years, all of it in Dixon, since graduating from the University of Illinois College of Medicine and completing a residency at MacNeal Memorial Hospital in Berwyn, IL. Today, nearly three decades later, Welty is paying it forward as a key participant in KSB’s Rural Training Track (RTT) Family Medicine Residency program. From day one, he has been the advisor to third-year resident Dr. Emilee Bocker, who nominated Welty for the Family Physician of the Year award. And this past school year, Welty was voted Faculty Physician of the Year by all of the residents in the RTT program. Bocker has known her mentor for about two years, she said, and thought he was the epitome of what the award represents. “I’m just so happy that he won,” she said. “I was so excited for him, and it wasn’t really surprising because I thought he was very deserving.” Welty has made an impact on Bocker and the other residents ever since she first met him in July 2011. He has taken the time to listen and help her and other residents, employing the same personal approach he takes with his patients. “I have a number of four-generation families,” Welty said. “I’ve taken care of what are now great-grandparents, grandparents, parents and children. It’s very rewarding; it really is. Again, I’m very honored and humbled people think highly enough to give me that privilege.” Dr. Tim Appenheimer, the first director of the Rural Training Track residency program and now KSB’s Chief Medical Officer, has known Welty since he arrived in Dixon nearly 30 years ago. They have served together in numerous teaching, practice and leadership roles, and Appenheimer holds the utmost respect for his colleague. “During his career here in Dixon, Joe has quietly and steadily earned the respect of patients, colleagues and administrators,” Appenheimer said. “There certainly is no one more deserving of this award than Joe. “He lives his straightforward, personal approach each and Joseph Welty, M.D. (right), accepts the Illinois Family Physician of the Year Award from Dr. Edward Blumen, president of the IAFP. every day and with each of his patients.” As dedicated as Welty is to his practice, his patients and to the young physicians he is helping to mold, he’s just as dedicated to the community and to his personal passion of running. For the last 15 years, Welty has been a team physician for the Newman Comets football program. His many games on the sidelines have included three state championships, the most recent one coming just three weeks ago at NIU in DeKalb. Welty has been a lifelong runner and is passionate about competing in his hometown Reagan Run every year during the Petunia Festival. His passion also has led to his participation in 10 marathons, including four Boston Marathons. In fact, this past April, Welty had just completed the Boston Marathon and was only blocks from the finish line when the terrorist explosions rocked the area. Welty is the second KSB doctor in the past four years to win the Illinois Family Physician of the Year award. Dr. Risha Raven, then a doctor at the Polo clinic and now a full-time faculty member with the residency program, won the award in 2009. Dave Schreiner, KSB’s President and CEO, said KSB and the community are very fortunate to have physicians like Welty on staff. “The communities that KSB Hospital serves are better for his presence and his unwavering dedication to those he cares for,” Schreiner said. “His passion for what he does and the compassion and caring he shows his patients are unmatched. “Dr. Welty also is a role model not only for our young residents but for all of us at KSB. There is no finer representative of our organization than Dr. Welty, and we are all very proud that he has been recognized like this.” healthy. FAMILY MEDICINE SUMMER ‘09 Joseph Welty Named Illinois Family Physician Of Year REHAB SERVICES SUMMER ‘09 Anti-Gravity Treadmill Proves Life-Altering Lewie Frye works out on the AlterG with Physical Therapist Brooke Smith. Ever wonder what sensation astronauts feel when they float through space weightless and without the pull of gravity? You can experience just that sort of thing with the new AlterG Antigravity Treadmill that’s now operational in KSB Hospital’s Rehab Services Department in Commerce Towers. The treadmill is designed to help the rehabilitation process for patients recovering from major surgery or who are suffering from pain in their legs and joints. However, even healthy athletes can reap the benefits of working out on the AlterG. “It takes away up to 80% of a person’s body weight in specific increments,” Director of Rehab Services Lori Jarrett explained. “So a person who is experiencing pain in their leg or joints can walk without all the weight-bearing on their body. “For athletes, it allows them to increase their training without putting all of the wear and tear on their body. It has many uses for both patients and healthy people.” The technology of the AlterG was first designed by engineers at NASA, so it’s not surprising that the principles and effects are similar to the weightlessness experienced by astronauts. Users step into a plastic-encased chamber that draws air out to create a vacuum. A comfortable and uniform lifting force is then introduced into the chamber that removes as much body weight as you desire up to a maximum of 80%. “One of the main purposes of the Alter G is to allow the patient to ambulate with less body force or weight than normal,” Physical Therapy Supervisor Mike Sarno said. “If the patient has hip pain or leg pain, it allows them to walk on a treadmill without all that body weight being there. It allows us to walk our patients who have some type of lower extremity restriction. “For instance, maybe the doctor states that the patient can only put 50 pounds of weight on their legs. Before the Alter G, we did not have a precise way of doing this in our department.” among the patients who are perfect candidates to rehab on the AlterG are those who are overweight and can only work out by 4 | Winter 2014 Vibrant Living reducing body-weight stress, those who have had spinal cord injuries, those who have had joint replacement surgery or even those who have had an amputation. Patient Lewie Frye falls into the latter category. He had an amputation of his leg in the spring, and by the end of the summer he was walking on the AlterG treadmill. “I’ve been doing work conditioning therapy for a couple of months on the antigravity treadmill,” Frye said. “It takes weight off my hips and knees and allows me to walk much easier. “This helps me make sure I am walking correctly and the PT can make adjustments to my gait. It’s allowed me to rehab much sooner. I can bear full weight now when I walk, but initially it was beneficial to remove some of the weight when I was on the AlterG.” Monitoring a patient’s gait is aided by three cameras built into the AlterG that show a front view and both side views. “There are three cameras, so we can get left, right and oblique views,” Jarrett said. “The Continued on page 6 KSB Hospital’s Community Wellness Department has had a ton of influence on local residents attempting to lose weight. Or, more accurately, two tons, which is how much weight people have dropped in 2013 thanks to KSB’s Operation Move To Win program. The second installment of the weight-loss program concluded just before Thanksgiving, and 426 people from 16 different companies lost a total of 1,488 pounds. For the first year of the program, 943 participants dropped 4,408 pounds. “Operation Move To Win is a weight-loss program, but it’s much more than that,” Community Wellness Coordinator Chris Scheffler said. “It’s really about promoting lifestyle change so that the people who lose weight can sustain it and keep it off. “We want participants to alter the way they look at eating and combine it with exercise and healthy choices. The goal is to move people to commit to these changes, leading to a much healthier lifestyle for them.” The winning company for the fall Operation Move To Win program was UPM Raflatac of Dixon. Its employees lost 151 pounds, or 3.6% of their body weight, from August through November. The company won $319 for its designated charity, which was Toys for Tots. Individual weight-loss champions were Janice Borum of Anchor Coupling in the female category and Wally Garza of the Illinois Department of Transportation in the male division. Janice lost 36.6 pounds, or 16.07% of her total body weight, while Wally dropped 45.2 pounds, or 19.47% of his body weight. Each received $1,597.50 for winning their division. Second and third place in the female division were Leith Hammond of KSB Hospital and Lisa Talbott of UPM Raflatac, respectively. Leith lost 21 pounds, or 14.25% of her body weight, while Lisa lost 24 pounds, or 12.96% of her body weight. Leith won $958.50 and Lisa $319.50. In the male division, Chad Hammer of Raynor Manufacturing was second and Jack Skrogstad of Team Lee County third. Chad lost 32.4 pounds, 13.44% of his body weight, and received $958.50 while Jack dropped 28.8 pounds, or 12.53% of his body weight, and received $319.50. “We had a great group of participants this time, and the employers were very supportive of their employees’ efforts,” Scheffler said. “They allowed us to come onsite for weighins and to present nutrition, exercise and eating tips. “One of the biggest benefits of this program is giving the participants access to our wellness dietitian, Carrie Grobe, every month. Carrie is very motivational and provides a tremendous amount of knowledge and resources to help them set and meet their goals.” Some of the top tips Carrie offers to those attempting to lose weight include: • Eat one ounce of almonds in the afternoon to sustain you until dinner; • If you could exercise just 10 minutes a day, you will see results and feel better; and • You can have pizza, just don’t eat the whole pie; you can have a dessert, just not the whole pan. A special award presented during a luncheon to recognize the winners and honor all participants was the Most Dynamic Lifestyle Improvement Award. Chris Ekquist, a supervisor in KSB’s Dietary Department, received the Most Dynamic Lifestyle Improvement Award after losing 39.6 pounds, or 11.59% of her body weight. Chris was one of 16 participants from eight companies nominated for the Most Dynamic Lifestyle Improvement Award. The third 12-week installment of Operation Move To Win began the first week in January and runs through April 2014. happy. Janice Borum (center) receives her first-place check from Community Wellness Coordinator Chris Scheffler (right) and Wellness Dietitian Carrie Grobe. Wally Garza was the first-place contesstant in the male division of Operation Move To Win. UPM Raflatac was the winning company. COMMUNITY WELLNESS Weight-Loss Program Completes Successful 1st Year PHYSICIAN SERVICES SUMMER ‘09 Tips To Help Parents Navigate Winter With Their Children As Northern Illinois rapidly entered the deep freeze in mid-December, it brings to mind many issues that children face in the winter months. Among those are contending with the flu and other infections, the impact cold weather can have on asthma, and dressing warmly and safely for outdoor activities. The newest member of KSB Hospital’s staff of family medicine physicians is pediatrician Dr. Pratip Nag. Dr. Nag, who was a leading faculty member and practitioner at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston before joining KSB this fall, has some tips for parents to help them guide their children through a Midwestern winter. Question: Should my child receive a flu vaccination? Dr. Nag: Flu vaccines are very important for all children. All children over the age of six months should get a flu vaccination every year unless they are allergic to eggs, the primary ingredient in the vaccine. Children who are attending school are definitely at high risk of picking up the flu. And when they come down with the flu, they can’t go back to school for one or 1-1/2 weeks sometimes. That’s a lot of school for them to miss. Some children, especially those who have asthma or other lung conditions or chonric diseases, will suffer even more from the flu. So it’s very important to get a flu vaccination. Question: How do I prevent my children from getting other infections? Dr. Nag: We know that when the temperature gets cold outside, there are more viruses that come out. When there are more viruses floating around in schools and other public places like grocery stores or libraries, there’s a higher probability of a child getting sick. People normally believe that exposure to the cold makes you sick, but that is not true. It’s just that there are more viruses out when the temperature is cold. The majority of infections we actually give to ourselves. We do this when we don’t wash our hands before touching our nose or our mouth or our eyes. We touch our face all the time without washing our hands with something simple like Purell. If we can teach our kids to constantly work on washing their hands instead of Pediatrician Pratip Nag, M.D. concentrating so much on them wearing heavy coats, we will be giving them the right message. So, yes, make sure they are bundled up against the cold with coats buttoned or zipped and wearing hats, gloves and scarves. But the far more important thing to do in the winter is to have children wash their hands a lot with soap and warm water or hand gel before touching any part of their face. Question: Why do children with asthma have more problems in the winter? Dr. Nag: As I mentioned before, during the winter there are more viral infections out and kids can have asthma problems when a viral infection gets in their lungs. So in addition to making sure they are washing their hands a lot, kids with asthma also should be taking their preventative medicine every single day. This helps protect them from having an asthma attack and keeps their airways open and not constricted. It’s also important to make sure your child has a rescue inhaler at each of the places they are at during the day, at home, at school, at day care – and clear instructions from the physician. Kids with asthma should always get their flu shots once a year. The flu has a much worse effect on kids who have asthma. And make sure a child with asthma sees their physician every six months to make sure the asthma is under control. Question: What should a child do when playing outside? 6 | Winter 2014 Vibrant Living Dr. Nag: Children in the Midwest spend a good deal of time outdoors during the winter. Be sure to keep them protected from the cold and properly dressed for outdoor activities. It’s important that children have scarves covering their mouth and nose to warm the air before it enters a child’s lungs. It’s also important to keep body heat in by wearing hats, gloves and warm boots with their coats. Finally, make sure your kids wear proper protective gear when participating in outdoor activities like ice skating and sledding. This includes helmets and elbow and knee pads. And never allow your child to play on a lake or pond unless you’re absolutely sure it’s frozen solid and the ice is at least six inches thick. Dr. Nag will begin a Facebook feature in early 2014 in which he will offer weekly tips to parents on how to keep their children healthy and successful in school. Watch for them on KSB Hospital’s Facebook page. AlterG... Continued from page 4 patient and the therapist can monitor the gait and get additional feedback from the video.” Sarno said there is a lot of flexibility in what Rehab Services staff members are able to do with a patient on the Alter G. He pointed to Frye on the machine. “He’s walking at 70% of body weight right now,” Sarno explained. “We can take it down to as low as 20%, which is where we started with him. We can toggle back and forth between the three cameras as he’s walking.” Approximately two dozen patients and a handful of high school athletes have used the AlterG Antigravity Treadmill so far. Rehab Services is selling punch cards so that any member of the community may use the AlterG. The price is $100 for eight 30-minute sessions or $200 for unlimited 30-minute sessions in a onemonth period. “A lot of places charge by the minute, so this is a pretty good deal,” Jarrett added. “The AlterG is a machine that’s applicable to multiple populations of patients. We are getting more and more patients using it. What began as a somewhat routine knee replacement surgery turned into something much more for KSB Hospital patient Tom Kitson. Kitson, one of the original “students” in the KSB Joint Academy, successfully underwent knee replacement surgery the first week in May. What followed, however, was anything but routine when Kitson suffered a heart attack while recovering from the surgery. “My leg was in the thing to exercise it and I was having a little indigestion,” Kitson explained. “I asked for Zantac, but it wasn’t going away, so then I asked for a nitro pill. The nurse was wonderful and followed all of the protocol for a heart attack. “She called the cardiologist on call and within minutes I had an X-ray. Dr. El Bzour came running in my room and said I was having a heart attack, his team was on the way and they were going to take me to the cath lab. “They were all very professional but at the same time very caring and comforting. I still get very emotional about it. I’m tickled to death to be here today and thank God I’m alive. It’s all because of them.” Kitson said he now totally understands the hospital’s recent marketing slogan, “it’s the people of KSB.” Even before suffering his heart attack, the experience of going through the Joint Academy was a positive one. For years he had been bothered by a bad left knee to the point where the pain was impacting his life. “My left knee was bothering me so bad I could no longer stand on it,” Kitson said. “Now I can walk on it as well as stand on it. This is something I should have had done a long time ago.” Kitson was a member of the first class of patients to enter the Joint Academy, which is designed to help guide people through the process of having a knee or hip replacement procedure. A classroom session is held to explain every step of the process and allow patients an opportunity to ask questions before they undergo their surgery. “I learned a lot from it,” Kitson said. “For instance, my wife thought she was just going to drop me off for the Tom Kitson of Dixon films a testimonial outside KSB Hospital. His message was played for employees at their annual meeting in December. surgery and come back after it was over and pick me up. We didn’t realize I needed to spend a couple of days in the hospital.” Surgical Coordinator Martha Dailey, RN, leads each Joint Academy class, at which patients also receive a binder of information. Included are what to expect during the surgery, recovery, how to carry out normal activities of daily living and pre- and post-surgery exercises. Kitson said he learned that he didn’t know a lot of what to expect in having his knee replaced. “You know to ask questions, but it’s not the right questions,” he said. “Now I know what to expect and I can tell other people who are going to have the surgery. “A surgical nurse was there and the ladies from physical therapy were there. It was a very complete presentation and I felt like I was prepared to have the surgery after it was done.” Dr. Stephen Gabriel performed the knee replacement surgery on Kitson. The other members of KSB’s orthopedic surgical team include Drs. Tyler Gunderson and Dr. Tommy Hernandez. Kitson said he would recommend anyone considering joint replacement here. surgery to consider becoming a student at KSB’s Joint Academy. “It seemed pretty routine,” he said. “I’ve been told it’s major surgery, but it didn’t seem that way to me. They had me well prepared. This is the first surgery I’ve ever had. “My knee had been bothering me so bad and now I have a new one that I can trust.” Kitson also can trust the staff at KSB Hospital. Whether it was the Joint Academy experience and his knee replacement surgery or the treatment he received during and after his heart attack, Kitson said the care he received at KSB was second to none. And that was because of the employees. “It may be their job, but it’s their passion for it that drives them to do what they do,” he added. “It’s a culture of passion that runs through KSB. It shows everywhere; the parking lot is clean, the building is nice, the flowers and grounds are all well-groomed. “I can’t thank the people of KSB enough for what they did for me and for the care I received.”ad little idea that her career path would take the same course as her older brother, who is a podiatric physician in the Chicago area. But today, Jacobsen is one of PATIENT CARE SUMMER ‘09 ‘It’s The People’ Rings True For Patient Tom Kitson Winter 2014 SUMMER ‘09 VIBRANT LIVING is published as a community service for the friends and patrons of KATHERINE SHAW BETHEA HOSPITAL, 403 E. First St., Dixon, IL 61021, phone 815-288-5531, www.ksbhospital.com. KATHERINE SHAW BETHEA HOSPITAL 403 E. First St. Dixon, IL 61021 Nonprofit Org. U.S. Postage David L. Schreiner, President & Chief Executive Officer Kimberli Guelde, M.D., Medical Staff President Bill LeFevre, Board of Directors Chairperson Tom Demmer, Director of Marketing & Strategic Planning PAID Midwest Mailworks If you have any concerns or specific questions about content that may affect your health, please contact your health care provider. Models may be used in photos and illustrations. Copyright © 2014 KSB Hospital. Board Of Directors Member Retires After 31 Years Donna Hoyle’s eyes welled with tears as fellow members of the KSB Hospital Board of Directors recently gathered at the main entrance to bid her a fond farewell. Hoyle, one of the longest serving members of the KSB board, retired after 31 years of service on Jan. 1. In her honor, the rest of the Board of Directors presented her with an engraved granite bench that now sits outside the hospital’s main entryway. She also received a wooden rocking chair that Hoyle immediately proceeded to donate to KSB’s The Birth Place so mothers can rock their newborns. “The thing I admire and love most about Donna is that her focus is always on our patients and our employees,” President and CEO Dave Schreiner said. “She is one of the warmest people I know. “From all of us at KSB, I want to thank Donna for all of her time and energy devoted to serving KSB. We will miss Donna.” As CEO of Hoyle Road Equipment Company, Hoyle brought many years of business acumen to the board. “In her own subtle way, Donna would always impact important board decisions,” Board of Directors Chairperson Bill LeFevre said. “Donna is very supportive of all hospital healthcare providers and the care given to our patients. “Donna and her 31 years of committed service to KSB will be missed.” The KSB Board of Directors placed a granite bench outside the hospital’s main entrance in honor of long-time board member Donna Hoyle, who retired on Jan. 1. Hoyle’s dedication in serving in the unpaid, volunteer board position extended to being an officeholder. She was Chairperson in 2005-06, Vice Chairperson in 2003-04 and also has held the offices of Secretary Pro-Tem, Treasurer and Past Chairperson. Hoyle is not going away entirely, though, Schreiner reminded. She will continue to represent KSB on the Board of Directors of the Northern Illinois healthy. happy. here. Cancer Treatment Center. “I am personally thrilled that she will continue as a board member of the Northern Illinois Cancer Treatment Center,” LeFevre concurred. “The KSB Hospital Board of Directors and Dixon community thank you, Donna, for a job well done.” Hoyle’s replacement to the KSB Board of Directors will be announced in January.
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