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Bon Secours Virginia Health System response to Sisters’... Bon Secours Virginia Health System and the Sisters of Bon Secours join the Benedictine Sisters in asking for prayers for all those involved in Sunday's tragic accident. Our...

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Dr. Katz on Food, Part 1 - Changing our diet can prevent... "Out of the top six causes of death... four are preventable by dietary changes." - Dr. Marc Katz In this video, Dr. Marc Katz, Cardiac Surgeon and Chief Medical Officer...

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Project SEARCH: 6 gifted students who touched our hearts In June 2010, Bon Secours Richmond, in partnership with Virginia Commonwealth University as well as Richmond City and Henrico County schools celebrated an amazing achievement:...

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Big Hearts Doing Hard Work

Category : Employees, patients

It is difficult to be put in a position of confronting injustice. We often feel challenged to take an action we know is right, but hesitate because the repercussions are out of our control.

(Left to right: Patty Hall, Bonnie Price, Sara Jennings)

Patty Hall, a volunteer with the Regional Hospital Accompaniment Response Team (RHART) since November 2009, and the Forensic Nursing Team at St. Mary’s Hospital face the after effects of domestic, sexual or interpersonal violence every day.

“It’s not like on TV. Exams can take two to four hours, not including paperwork,” said Bonnie Price, Clinical Coordinator of the Forensic Nursing Program. “The amount of time takes a toll on patients, which is why RHART volunteers like Patty, make a real difference.”

Known for her compassion and selflessness, Patty is a true testament to the phrase good help to those in need. Bonnie describes an instance where Patty reached across traditional volunteerism boundaries to help console a patient.

“It is late in the evening and the pager goes off. The St. Mary’s Hospital ED is calling about a patient brought in by police and a forensic exam is being requested. The patient has no family or friends at the hospital with her. The next call I make is to the Regional Hospital Accompaniment Response Team (RHART) Hotline. RHART is a team of specially trained volunteers, who provide emotional support for patients who have been a victim of sexual and/or domestic violence. Moments after arriving at the emergency department, Patty Hall walks in. Patty, a Bon Secours RHART Volunteer, immediately began to put the patient at ease with her soft, calming voice and her cheerful yet sympathetic smile. Patty stayed with the patient for hours, while the forensic exam was completed. Upon completion of the exam, the patient was asked by police to return to what was believed to be the scene of the crime with them, in order to confirm the location and in hopes of finding additional evidence. Without a moment’s hesitation, Patty offered to go with the patient; an offer which the patient quickly and gratefully accepted. Patty’s selfless act made a difference in the life of our patient. At Bon Secours, not only is our staff World Class but also our volunteers!”

When asked why the RHART volunteers and Forensic Nurses do what they do, Sara Jennings, a Forensic Nurse Examiner, replied, “It’s a wonderful rewarding job. Being able to help and seeing the effect on the patient makes all the difference.”

RHART is a collaboration between Bon Secours, Hanover Safe Place, Safe Harbor, and the YWCA of Richmond. Trained RHART volunteers are called in by Bon Secours Richmond Health System hospitals to provide accompaniment during forensic or medical exams. RHART volunteers provide supportive counseling, crisis intervention, advocacy, resources and referral information. They also connect patients to additional domestic and sexual violence follow-up services, including counseling, court advocacy and emergency shelter.

Celebration of Empowered Employees

Category : Employees, Mission & Values

Today, we celebrate our employees—for they are some of the most engaged individuals in Virginia. At Bon Secours, we create an environment where employees are motivated to reach their potential, empowered to respond to the needs of our patients and behave as “owners” in the organization.

“Bon Secours has created a culture where employees are empowered to behave as owners. We have been given the latitude to ensure that our patients and their families are comfortable,” said Megan Walworth, Customer Relations Manager. “We know more moments of good help happen when all 12,000 Bon Secours Virginia employees are engaged in the process of creating world-class environments of care.”

As part of our series celebrating the dedication and compassion of our employees, here are a few of our “WOW” stories—examples of good help happening every day.

Empowered Solution Seeker

Sandra’s story is an example of a fully engaged employee who behaves as an owner of
Bon Secours. Sandra is truly an empowered solution seeker.

Recently, a gentleman came into the Tidewater Surgical Specialists office looking for his dialysis center. He was in the wrong place and was very confused. He had been dropped off at the facility by his brother and could not get in touch with him. Seeing an opportunity to be of good help, Sandra took charge! After learning the name of the gentleman’s dialysis center, Sandra called to let them know he would be there shortly for his appointment. Instead of giving the patient the address and sending him on his way, Sandra took ownership of the situation and sought a world-class solution. Knowing he did not have transportation and needed to make his appointment, Sandra drove the gentleman to the dialysis center herself.

“Owning” the Unexpected

Every so often, our employees find themselves in unexpected situations. Just last week, Sonia Figueroa, a tech with Richmond Community’s Radiation Department, found herself in a situation she never could have expected.

A patient inexplicably set off the sprinkler system on Richmond Community’s third floor, causing flooding which quickly spread to the first floor CT area. Sonia had two choices: call Engineering or respond herself.

Considering herself an owner of Bon Secours, Sonia responded quickly by covering the CT equipment in plastic and containing the water to one area. Sonia’s quick thinking avoided flooding of the control room and a potentially disastrous situation. Her response saved the equipment, avoiding major expenses and repairs. Her response demonstrated her commitment to Bon Secours and her passion to always do what it takes for her workplace and her hospital.

Good Privacy: Improved email encryption comes to Bon Secours

Category : news

E-mail has become a preferred method for communication for most of us. In order to maintain the confidentiality of private information and ensure compliance with privacy regulations Bon Secours Health System is implementing a new e-mail encryption service. The service will improve our ability to protect personal information of our patients, physicians, employees, and others from undesirable external parties on the Internet.

Bon Secours has always made privacy a hallmark of our electronic systems. Traditionally, any sensitive data had to be manually encrypted before it was emailed.

Beginning Tuesday, June 22, 2010, e-mails to or from Bon Secours Health System and containing confidential data will be automatically encrypted. This improvement means that our patient data is even more secure than it has been in the past.

Bon Secours’  Enterprise Security Engineer Jesse Crim, MSIA, CISSP shared his thoughts about the new system in this Q&A.

Q. How do you think the new email encryption service helps bring good help to those in need?

A. The new email encryption is essential to our Connect Care and EMR (electronic medical records) initiatives because it further safeguards the sharing of information between the patient, physician and health system, so that [the patient's] medical care is seamless.

Q. How many emails are sent at Bon Secours Richmond Health System in a day?

A. Around 60,000 emails.

Q. What kind of information is encrypted?

A. Personal information (such as social security numbers), financial information (such as account and credit card numbers) and personal health information.

Q. How do you retrieve an encrypted email sent by Bon Secours?

A. You will be asked to click on a link in the e-mail, which will connect you to our secure message center. There you will register a private password to retrieve and reply to your secure messages.

Below is a diagram outlining how our email encryption works.


Pastor David Wright, MD teams with Bon Secours for Haiti relief

Category : Mission & Values

In less than 4 weeks my son, Joshua, and I – along with a team of doctors and nurses – will be traveling to Haiti to help in a medical mission clinic run by the Church of God in Christ. We will be seeing nearly 400 patients a day.

After 27 years away from the medical field, I feel so inadequate, but I also feel so much compassion for our desperately needy brothers and sisters in Haiti.

We leave April 11 for Haiti, the 147th of 177 poorest nations in the world and the poorest nation in the Western hemisphere. Over 1.3 million people are living in make-shift tents for housing, approximately 300,000 people may have died and as many are injured, sick, and in great need of medication, nutrition and toiletries.

Dr. David Wright (pictured above with wife Ella), a full-time pastor at Community Church United partnered with Bon Secours Virginia two weeks ago to bring much needed aid to Haiti.

“It is amazing and humbling to look at what we take for granted like shoes and undergarments compared to what are necessities for them [the Haitian people].”

Dr. Fred Mcglynn treats a young boy in Haiti during the Salva Vida mission earlier in 2010

Dr. Wright, along with the Bon Secours’ team, sent canned food, toiletries, bandages, saline, pain medications, gloves and much more to the devastated island nation.

“We also saw 760 patients that week. Most of the illnesses and conditions we treated included urinary diseases, worms, gonaria and some individuals with diabetes.” Dr. Wright said. “Many of our patients walked 11 miles to our clinic.”

Dr. Wright and the Bon Secours team set up their clinic in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti in the 5,000-seat National Cathedral, which was used as a worship center and clinic.

“We’re definitely going back the last week of June,” said the Community Church United pastor. “It’s encouraging to see people with that level of resiliency.”

For more information on Dr. Wright and the Community Church United, visit their website at http://www.communitychurchunited.com/.

How One Patient Used Twitter for Health Care

Category : patients

What would you do if you had cancer? Where would you turn to first? Would you go on the internet to find out more information on your condition?

According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project, e-patients with a chronic illness use online health resources to manage their illness, look up pertinent information before and after a doctor visit, as well as communicate with other patients in online support groups.

Jenn Michelle Pedini, former Disney performer and marketing professional and now mother of one, turned to the internet for answers after being diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma in 2008. After a six month battle with the cancer including 12 rounds of chemotherapy, Jenn Michelle was re-diagnosed with the illness and more aggressive treatments were scheduled for her.

With the recent outbreak of H1N1 virus, Jenn Michelle, who continues to battle the disease, turned to social media when her providers couldn’t help her find a vaccination. Having a H1N1 vaccination was a pre-requisite that Jenn Michelle needed prior to her stem cell transplant last fall.

“I was amazed that a hospital not affiliated with my care was willing to reach out and help,” said Pedini. “Bon Secours is the only health system that I’ve met and interacted with online.”

Bon Secours’ social media advocates picked up on Jenn Michelle’s request via Twitter in November 2009. Our social media advocates worked with our physician practices to find the right fit. Theresa Kimbrough, Practice Manager at Bon Secours Patterson Avenue Family Practice, jumped at the chance to help and was able to schedule Jenn Michelle within one day.

“The doctor’s office was ready for me as soon as I called to set up an appointment,” said Pedini.

Follow Jenn Michelle’s journey on her blog, www.bitsofmyself.com, or on Twitter at @BitsOfMyself. You can also connect with Bon Secours on Twitter at @BonSecoursRVA

Jenn Michelle has generously consented to share her story with us and our online community.

National Healthcare Decision Day

Category : Events

If you, at some point, were unable to make your healthcare decisions, would a loved one or someone you trust be able to make them for you in accordance to your wishes?

05Chapel image two.jpgCommunicating your health care preferences with your loved ones or someone you trust is hard. On April 16, Bon Secours is proud to be part of National Healthcare Decisions Day. Our team is available to assist patients in answering questions about advance medical directives. Information displays and chaplains will be available in our hospitals’ lobbies to answer your questions and help you complete your advance medical directive.

Advance medical directives, which are also referred to as a “living will” or “health care power of attorney,” allow you to name a friend, family member or other individual as your “agent” to make your health care decisions—to accept or refuse health care—for you if, at some point, you can’t make them for yourself.

Medical decisions covered under an advance directive include, but are not limited to medication, surgery, mental health treatment, health facility admission, hydration and nutrition by tubes and machines that breathe for you.

Under the Health Care Decisions Act, your agent can’t make healthcare decisions for you that he or she knows goes against your religious beliefs, basic values and stated preferences.

According to the Pew Research Center, 42% of Americans have had a friend or relative suffer from a terminal illness or coma in the last five years and for a majority of these people and 23% of the general public, the issue of withholding life sustaining treatment came up.

For more information about National Healthcare Decisions Day at Bon Secours, visit www.bonsecours.com/calendar or call (804) 237-PRAY[7729]. Advance Directive forms are also available at http://www.vhha.com. You can also follow the conversation on Twitter via the #HaveTheTalk hashtag.

Service in Its Highest Form

Category : Mission & Values

As a system of caregivers, Bon Secours employees are called to bring compassion to health care and to be good help to those in need. St. Francis Medical Center and Chesterfield EMS share strong values in how we provide care to our patients.

Compassionate, holistic care begins the moment EMS arrives at the home and lasts throughout the continuum of care. Kevin Rochelle and David Watson of Chesterfield Company 7 exemplify how important it is for the patient, as well as the family to focus on holistic care, not just symptoms. Kevin and David, as well as St. Francis Medical Center Critical Care nurses Mary and Mo cared for Eileen Schneble and her family when they needed it the most.

Lori Ross, Eileen’s sister, reflects on her experience at St. Francis and pays homage to her sister in a publisher’s letter found in Boomer Life Magazine.

God bless the angels of this world – and the next

In December, I said a permanent good-bye in this lifetime to my No. 1 fan, my sister Eileen. As each day passes, she fills my thoughts and heart – with memories, her presence, and also with the realities of settling her estate and giving away her possessions.

Of course there is sadness involved, but one of the beauties of human nature is our resilience, and with each passing day I learn to accept and internalize all that I want to keep of her life and this experience. All of us go through these moments in our lives, and this is just my time.

I will hold inside the way my sister and family were cared for by normal people doing jobs every day that involve service in it’s highest form. To the two EMT gentlemen who came into Eileen’s room at 2:30 a.m. when the rest of the world slept, you performed  miracles in your ambulance and comforted me. May God bless you for being there. To “Nurse Mary” in St. Francis CCU, you voluntarily took  on an extra 12 hour shift because you promised the night before to do all you could  and you knew that your experience with her case would increase her chances. May God bless you for caring so much. To “Nurse Mo”,  thank you for being stronger than I was and guiding our family on the morning when we stopped machines and we stood vigil for the day. May God bless you, too.

I will internalize the way my family and friends loved Eileen.  Especially to my husband, John, sons Brian, Craig, Johnny and Jared, and daughters-in-law Stephanie, Phalica, and Katharine, granddaughters Jessica and Jasmine, and in laws Gayle, Andy and Lin – thank you for the last five years of welcoming Eileen into our Richmond family experience and loving her the way you did. May God bless you, too.

And to Eileen, I have always held inside how you watched over your little sister with complete love. You remain my sister and guardian angel.

God will bless you, Eileen.

Lori

Jeepers That’s Dedication!

Category : Facility News

With the recent onslaughts of wintery mix, snow and sleet, Bon Secours Richmond employees and medical staff have had difficulties getting to and coming home from work. As an organization dedicated to providing good help to the community, the community responded in our time of need.

Last weekend, Chris Saunders and the Southside Jeepers (SSJ), a local club of Jeep enthusiasts, came to the aid of the St. Francis Medical Center employees. Having driven at least 1,300 miles, Saunders and the Southside Jeepers volunteered their time and vehicles to help keep the hospital operating.

As a family-oriented club based in Chesterfield, Virginia, SSJ gives back to the community and works with several charities in the area. Saunders, an avid volunteer, founded the Southside Jeepers in late 2007 when he noticed that other Jeep clubs in the area required membership dues and mandatory attendance to meetings.

“Volunteering is very rewarding for me. With all the snow we’ve had over the past few weeks, I wanted to help people stranded at home get to work, but I didn’t know where to start,” said Saunders. “A few of the [club] members’ wives worked at St. Francis, so when Martha McAloon, the Emergency Preparedness Coordinator, reached out to me last Wednesday, it seemed like a great opportunity to help out.”

When inclement weather advisories are issued, McAloon schedules four-wheel drivers, providing MapQuest directions to make the process easier. With 11 SSJ members and other four-wheel drivers in the community available, McAloon and Saunders were able to get physicians, nurses, as well as housekeeping and administrative employees from the hospital to their homes and back.

“We all want to be here to help. When one of the guys would come in, he’d pick up another person and go back out,” Saunders said. “All of the guys either work the day or night shift, so we’d schedule them around when they had to be at work.”

The partnership with the Southside Jeepers is the first of its kind for St. Francis Medical Center, since it opened its doors in 2005.

“We formed a partnership [with the Southside Jeepers] to strengthen our ability to provide care,” said McAloon. “The club’s efforts reflect Bon Secours’ mission and values.”

For more information about the Southside Jeepers, visit www.southsidejeepers.com. You can also follow the SSJ on Facebook and Twitter.