Spring 2015 Newsletter
Transcription
Spring 2015 Newsletter
Volume 1 Issue 2 Spring 2015 A newsletter of the Eldercare Foundation From Our CEO Greetings! As the first quarter and winter (or so it would seem) come to a close, we continue our work on the exciting plans laid out for 2015. Our system is dynamic —always growing and seeking innovative ways to protect, preserve and advance our region’s healthcare system. And, always re-defining the role we play in delivering high quality care to those who mean the most to us, our patients. Making sure we are proactive and poised to meet any challenge. For us, 2015 will be marked by a series of changes that will allow our system to evolve and better position us for continued growth. Expansion of VNA Homecare Options, our managed long term care plan, will enable us to serve more who are chronically ill, eligible for a nursing home level of care and wish to remain at home. Eldercare Social Day Program participants continue to enjoy the new space and the program continues to play an instrumental role in the health care continuum. Continued work with our new electronic medical record system will improve communications and increase productivity. We are also excited to embark on a capital campaign titled “Re-imaging Our Home: So we can bring care to yours”. The funds raised will enable us to transform our space into an operation that is even more efficient and effective. We love to share the excitement, so stay tuned; more information will come. Things are busy, but we remain consistently focused on delivery of our mission – giving it everything we have, knowing it will come to fruition. Thank you for supporting VNA Homecare and may 2015 prove to be just as exciting for you as we know it will continue to be for us! Kate Rolf, MBA, FACHE, CHCE President & CEO & VNA Foundation of Central New York Dr. David Murray to Be Honored by Eldercare Foundation at “Gift of Age” Cabaret May 2, 2015 T here are two principals that Dr. David Murray has lived by during his lifetime: Never answer a question with a question and never say “no” to a reasonable request. He has held true to these principles each and every day, whether working with patients and their families at SUNY Upstate or donating his time to the countless community organizations and committees he volunteers for. For his dedication and commitment to Central New York and to the people he has inspired throughout his 40-year medical career, the Eldercare Foundation will honor him as a “Champion” at their annual fund raising event, the “Gift of Age” Cabaret, on Saturday, May 2, 2015 at the Sheraton Syracuse University Hotel. The Eldercare Foundation is a division of VNA Homecare, a full-service home and community-based care system committed to making a profound difference in the lives of its patients by providing expert, highquality care where they want it most – in their homes. The Eldercare Foundation strives to increase the community’s awareness of the needs of aging individuals and their families, as well as to raise funds to better serve the community’s elders. “Dr. Murray is a class act who has contributed so much to both medicine and the community,” said Kate Rolf, president and chief executive officer of VNA Homecare. “He is a humble man whose good deeds are done without a want or need for recognition or praise. Dr. Murray did, and continues to do, his work with a true spirit of giving and for the betterment of the people he cares for.” Dr. Murray brought distinction to SUNY Upstate by building one of the premiere orthopedic surgery departments in the Continues, last page... VNA Homecare News Employee Recognition and Holiday Celebration VNA Homecare’s inaugural Employee Recognition and Holiday Celebration was a huge success, with more than 260 employees, family members and community leaders in attendance. Held at the Sheraton Syracuse University Hotel on Friday, January 16, the event included a cocktail hour, formal dinner, dancing and gift basket raffles. The highlight of the evening, however, were the employee recognition awards presented to employees who have made significant contributions to VNA Homecare throughout the course of the year. The 2014 honorees were: Mental Health Aide Specialist of the Year Rosemarie Dristle, Home Health Aide Hospice Aide Specialist of the Year The Late Teesha Hills, Home Health Aide Alzheimer’s/Dementia Aide of the Year Deborah Chesbro, Home Health Aide Aide of the Year Patsy Crain, Home Health Aide Outstanding Customer Service Randi Klossner, Scheduling Team Leader Craig Stevens, Driver Office Employee of the Year Sead Hozdic, Systems Technician Rookie of the Year Ken Stack, PT, MS, MSF, CSCS, Physical Therapist Nurse of the Year Michele Hettler, RN, BSN, Case Manager Clinician of the Year Patrick Remenicky, PT, CWS, Certified Wound Specialist Awards were also presented to employees who have achieved employment milestones with the system (e.g., 5, 10, 15, 20 and 25 years of service). 53 were awarded in total a huge testament to employee loyalty! VNA Homecare Options 89 -year-old Flora Giovinazzo can still remember the exact date she and her family started their new lives in America. “My husband, my three children and I arrived in Syracuse on July 27, 1963,” she said. “It was both the most exciting and the most frightening day of my life.” Natives of Brazil and Italy respectively, Flora and her husband, Francesco spoke little-tono English. Thankfully, her sister-in-law had moved to the area several years before. “She taught us what we needed to know to get by in those first few weeks,” Flora recalled. “She was the only family we had in the area, and we were so lucky to have her in our lives.” As one of eight children born to rural Brazilian farmers, the importance of both family and hard work were ingrained in Flora from a young age. Upon her arrival in America, she immediately enrolled her children in school and, shortly thereafter, began working for Learbury Clothes, a family-owned clothing company where she would serve as a seamstress for 17 years. Francesco found work as an electrician, bringing home just $1.50 for every hour he worked. Life in America wasn’t easy for the Giovinazzo family, but they were happy nonetheless. The children excelled in school, and all three went on to marry and have children of their own. Flora became active in the community, regularly volunteering for events at her church, and Francesco was hired by General Motors. Unfortunately, tragedy struck in the midst of their success; Flora’s daughter, Isabella, was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. The disease progressed quickly, and Isabella passed away when she was just 31-years-old, leaving behind a husband and a two-year-old daughter. life in the company of others and, with her opportunities for social engagement now severely depleted, she often found herself lonely and depressed. Knowing that their mother would want to remain in her own home for as long as possible, Flora’s sons suggested she enroll in VNA Homecare Options, VNA Homecare’s Managed Long Term Care (MLTC) plan. As a member, all of the care Flora needs is coordinated for her. Upon her enrollment, staff worked with her to design an individualized plan of care and services to keep her safe and healthy in her own home. She receives homemaker services from Home Aides of Central New York, skilled nursing services from the Visiting Nurse Association of Central New York and is a participant in the Eldercare Social Day Program. A member of the Options team also provides her transportation to and from doctor’s appointments and the Day Program. “As a member of VNA Homecare Options, I know that all of the care I’ll need as I age will be taken care of,” Flora said. “The people I work with, from my homemaker, to my nurse, to my driver, are truly special. I’m so lucky to be a member of such a wonderful program, where I’m surrounded by so many caring, compassionate people.” “It was too soon,” Flora recalled. “I miss her every day, but I know she went home to where she was meant to be.” Filled with gratitude for all she has, despite the many struggles she’s endured, Flora strives to remain positive each and every day. Following Isabella’s death, Flora retired from her job at Learbury. She spent her days caring for her granddaughter and providing daycare services at St. Peter’s Italian Church. Francesco passed away in 2006, leaving Flora alone in her Syracuse home for the first time in 40 plus years. An extrovert through-and-through, she had spent a considerable portion of her “I have so much to be thankful for,” she said. “I’m healthy, I have a beautiful family, and, thanks to VNA Homecare Options, I’m able to remain in my own home.” To learn more about VNA Homecare Options, please visit us online at vnahomecareoptions.org or call 315.477.9500. Q&A We sat down with Anita Lombardi, board chair of the Eldercare Foundation and VNA Foundation of Central New York Board of Directors, to talk about why her involvement with VNA Homecare is so close to her heart. What we found out will inspire you. You were not originally from Syracuse, what has made this your “home”? My parents were divorced – my father from Ithaca, NY and my mother from El Paso, TX. Most of my childhood and teen years were spent in Texas, but I came back to Ithaca to earn my bachelor’s degree at Ithaca College. After a couple of years, I went on to obtain my paralegal certification. During this period, my mother, who was a scrub nurse in Texas, was diagnosed with Hepatitis C and moved back to Ithaca to be closer to me and my brothers. When she died in 1991, I headed to Syracuse after securing a paralegal position for a local law firm, where I worked until I changed my career in 2000. I met my husband, Tarky Lombardi in Syracuse. Together with our two beautiful children, we have established it as home. Not only is it a nice sized city to raise a family, but it is close enough to stay in touch with my family in Ithaca. Tarky also has strong ties and roots in Syracuse, so it makes perfect sense that we stay here to raise our children near both of our families. My father-in-law is former New York State Senator Tarky Lombardi, who championed legislation known as “Nursing Homes Without Walls.” I love the sense of family, community and giving-back that this area offers. People are generous with their time and dollars, allowing organizations like VNA Homecare to transform and grow as the need for more home-based services increases within the community, from pediatrics to the elderly. What is the reason for your advocacy for home care in the community? I was very close to my paternal Grandmother, who lived in Ithaca. As a child, my brothers and I would stay with her during our summer visits and I just loved spending time with her. She suffered from diabetes and aged very quickly – by the time I moved to Ithaca to finish college, the disease had taken most of her ability to walk and the majority of her eyesight. My grandparents were extremely proud of their family and especially their home – the one that they had worked so hard to obtain and maintain throughout their lives. To my grandfather, his home was one of the symbols of his lifetime success and journey from a poor boy from Italy to an upstanding citizen in America. Grandma’s increasing health care needs were difficult, and the thought of sending her to a nursing home, was, at first, simply not an option. It was the late 80’s, and Ithaca had just started a home care nursing program that was a godsend to my father and his siblings. While in college, I lived in a cottage behind my Grandparents’ home and saw the value of what it meant for them to stay in their home. Eventually, my Grandmother did have to be placed in a nursing home as her health deteriorated, but adding those additional years at home with her husband was a blessing. Subsequently, Grandpa received home health aide service until his death years later, fulfilling his wish to stay in his home. A few years later, I again found myself in the same situation, only this time with my maternal grandmother who lived in El Paso, TX. Her story was much the same – an immigrant from Mexico who worked hard all her life and was proud to have the opportunity to be an American and raise her family in a home that she owned. She never wanted to leave El Paso nor her home, and when she began to suffer from dementia, I was lucky to have been able to hire aides from the Visiting Nurse Association in her community to keep her home as long as I could. I also came to appreciate the services that New York State offers versus those in Texas – it was an eye opening experience to see the differences in care options, or the lack thereof, in comparison to New York. For my grandparents, I truly believe that the quality of their life was enhanced by having the ability to stay in their home as long as possible. And so that brings us to your involvement with the foundation boards of VNA Homecare... Yes, for me, the mission of the Eldercare Foundation was a perfect fit. We are addressing the “care gap” that exists between the number of people who will need supportive services to remain at home and the number of workers available to help them. Through the work of VNA Homecare, the lives of thousands of men and women, like my grandmothers, are affected. People are being given the option to stay at home in the comforts that they know and trust, with family and friends around them, but with professional healthcare assistance at their side. Anita is an Investment Adviser Representative/CCO at Everest Consultants, LLC. She resides in Jamesville with her husband and their two children, Tarky, 13 and Cecilia, 4. 1050 West Genesee Street, Syracuse, NY 13204 www.477home.org The Gift of Age Cabaret will be held 6pm, Saturday, May 2, 2015 at Sheraton Syracuse University Hotel. Tickets are $150 per person and can be purchased by calling 315.477.9301 or emailing amariani@477home.org. Sponsorship and advertising opportunities to congratulate Dr. Murray are also available. For questions, comments or story ideas, please contact Development Manager Aida Mariani at amariani@477home.org or 315.477.9301. If you no longer wish to receive the foundation newsletter, please email your name and address to amariani@477home.org. Dr. David Murray, Continued... world and by his international recognition as a gifted surgeon, physician-scientist and service to his profession. Dr. Murray joined the SUNY Upstate faculty in 1962 and was promoted to professor in 1969. He was named chair of the Department in 1966, a position he held for 30 years. While at SUNY Upstate, Dr. Murray graduated more than 120 orthopedic surgeons from the Department of Orthopedic Surgery’s residency program. The Eldercare Foundation also benefited from Dr. Murray’s vision and eagerness to succeed. He chaired the Foundation’s inaugural “Gift of Age” Cabaret in 2008 and generously volunteered in the same capacity in 2014, helping to raise thousands of dollars for the seniors in our community who wish to be cared for in the comfort of their homes. Dr. Murray retired from the Eldercare Foundation Board at the end of 2014. “I believed in the mission of the Foundation and what it does for the elderly population,” Dr. Murray said. “When you are asked to take the lead on something so meaningful to so many, you must succeed. People are counting on you.” “When working on this event, it was just as in his professional life - he gave his heart and soul,” said Angela Bernat, a long time Eldercare Foundation board member and Cabaret Committee member. Nancy Bottar, also an Eldercare Foundation board member and Cabaret Committee Member, agrees. “He is both dynamic and humble,” she said. “We are honored to know him and call him our friend.” Dr. Murray has three sons and six grandchildren. He resides in Syracuse with his wife Judith Sayles, who is a practicing attorney.