CHASE BREXTON HEALTH CARE
Transcription
CHASE BREXTON HEALTH CARE
CHASE BREXTON HEALTH CARE ANNUAL REPORT FISCAL YEAR 2013 Every community, every patient, every day: everyone’s health matters. “I have been coming to Chase Brexton for 11 to 12 years. I have gotten equal care, insured or uninsured. It is the one constant, supportive, great thing I have had that whole time. You are really amazing, and thank you.” Patient, Randallstown Center Patient Satisfaction Survey, May 2013 2 Richard Larison, CEO & Kimberly Price, Board President A message to our supporters, funders, & partners It is has been said that the only constant in life is change. This sentiment certainly rings true for both health care in the US and Chase Brexton Health Care during the past year. Fiscal Year 2013 was a year marked by preparation and progress. We continued planning for the Affordable Care Act, expansion of Medicaid, and implementation of our patient-centered medical home model. We broke ground on renovations to the Monumental Life Building, the site of our expanded Mt. Vernon health center. We made significant moves, as an organization, to both strengthen our leadership team and decentralize management of our health centers. The addition of a chief quality officer was made to standardize care across all centers, while the appointment of administrative and clinical leads in each health center allows us to respond to the unique needs of our patients in each of our communities. We share a glimpse into the needs of our patients in the profiles featured throughout this report. We continued to see growth in our patient numbers. And we expanded our services to better serve the community. In August 2012, Chase Brexton became the onsite health services provider at the Maryland Institute, College of Art (MICA), providing acute and preventive care for students. In June 2013, we entered the planning stages to add obstetrics and gynecology services to our comprehensive care menu in our Mt. Vernon and Randallstown centers, recognizing the need to provide 3 A message to our supporters, continued... Baltimore-area women with wider access to such care. And, we continued to strengthen relationships with local health departments and hospital centers to identify and provide the services our communities need. Our primary focus remains delivering high-quality, compassionate, patient-centered care that improves community health and inspires wellness. But we must also grapple with rising costs. This year we closely examined our costs and developed a strategic plan to bring expenses and reimbursements closer in line. In short, the board and leadership team remain laser-focused on managing costs and ensuring Chase Brexton’s long term sustainability. In the face of all these changes, one thing never wavers: the entire Chase Brexton team is committed to improving the health of all individuals in our diverse communities. We know that many of our patients are otherwise marginalized by society, and many have slipped through the cracks of the current health care system. As we move forward through 2014 and beyond, with many more Marylanders having access to affordable health insurance, our role will continue to evolve. We embrace both the challenge of educating people on the options available and providing them with high-quality care. As we look ahead, we offer our deep thanks to all of our supporters, funders, and partners for another successful year at Chase Brexton. None of this would be possible without your continued support. 4 Richard L. Larison Kimberly Price Chief Executive Officer President, Board of Directors “I think the thing that says the most is that I have had such good care and experience with Chase Brexton that I now contribute money out of every paycheck…I love you guys! Most competent, culturally sensitive care anywhere in the area. I live in Greenbelt but drive to Baltimore for you.” Patient, Mt. Vernon Center Patient Satisfaction Survey, May 2013 Our Mission & Vision Our Mission To provide compassionate, quality health care that honors diversity, inspires wellness, and improves our communities. Our Vision Chase Brexton will advance our mission by: • Delivering accessible and exceptional health care throughout the lifespan; • Modeling excellent customer service provided by empowered and committed staff; • Becoming renowned as a prominent health care provider for the LGBT community; • Becoming nationally recognized as a leader in HIV care; • Fostering a culture that promotes staff development and satisfaction; and • Transforming community health through research and advocacy. 5 In every patient, hope lives. It was Valentine’s Day 2010 when Angela Lovella Chester changed her mind and decided she wanted to live. A year before that, she had grown weary of living with the physically and psychologically taxing symptoms of being HIV-positive, a diagnosis she received in 1990. She’d stopped eating, drinking water and taking her medications. After suffering nine “mini-strokes,” losing her hair, and developing such a severe case of psoriasis that it had spread to her mouth and made it painful to swallow her medicine, Chester says she simply was tired of fighting to feel better. So, she decided to let herself die. Today, she thanks the staff at Chase Brexton’s Easton Center team for refusing to give up on her, and helping her see that she had plenty of reasons to live. “They had so much love and concern,” says Chester, 44, who lives in Cambridge, MD. “They don’t give up on you, even when you’re ready to give up on yourself. They didn’t give up on me.” In 2009, before she met the providers and team at Chase Brexton, Chester had her ninth stroke. And, she’d lost her will to live. After a two-week stay at a hospital in Cambridge, she decided to check herself out of the hospital against medical advice. It was then a hospital psychiatrist confronted her with an ultimatum that would spark her wake-up call: either she started taking her medicines or he would be forced to take her then 16-year-old son away from her. Not willing to lose her son, Chester checked herself into Johns Hopkins Hospital on Valentine’s Day 2010. She agreed to have a feeding tube inserted to help her regain her strength, and began taking her medication again. During this hospital stay, Chester says she felt herself getting stronger. This is also when she was introduced to Chase Brexton – a meeting she had no idea would change her life so dramatically. Her primary care provider agreed that Chase Brexton could provide better resources to help treat her HIV and, with her provider’s blessing, Chester switched to Chase Brexton for her primary care and HIV health care needs. She says she finds Chase Brexton’s staff trustworthy and knowledgeable. “They don’t give up on you, even when you’re ready to give up on yourself. They didn’t give up on me.” - Angela Lovella Chester 6 Its medical team and case managers have been instrumental in helping her manage her disease and improve her symptoms, Chester says. They have made sure she has access to the right medications and, importantly, in the right dosages. They also helped her get enrolled for Medicaid to help cover her medical expenses. Their attention has helped her take charge of her life – making it possible for her to better care for her son. “They direct you in the right places to go and what to do,” she says. “It’s up to you and how you take it, but if you follow what they say, things will work out wonderful.” About a week after being released from Hopkins, Chester talked to her Chase Brexton provider and said she was ready to have the feeding tube removed. She recalls her provider initially expressing concern; was it too soon to stand on her own two feet, could she be trusted to eat properly and take her medicines? But Chester says she was determined to prove that she was serious about living the best life she could and was newly committed to taking care of her health. “Most doctors don’t sit down with you and talk with you or ask about your family and what are your plans 10 years from now, but they do that at Chase Brexton,” she says. “They talk to me like a person, not like a patient.” 7 In every language, health is the goal. Her patients live all over Columbia – a suburban city situated in Howard County, the country’s third-richest jurisdiction and Maryland’s most affluent – and its neighboring areas. But that doesn’t mean they all earn six-figure incomes. In fact, Dr. Kari Alperovitz-Bichell’s patients are as likely to live in trailer parks as they are to live in the prosperous county’s mini-mansions, she says. And while plenty were born and raised in the United States, many have immigrated here; many legally, though countless others remain undocumented. Of the more than 8,000 patients at Chase Brexton’s Columbia Center, more than 40 percent are uninsured – by far the largest proportion across all of Chase Brexton’s centers. None of this matters to Alperovitz-Bichell, the Center’s medical director for the past six years. “We’ll see anybody – from the NSA scientist with [private] insurance to the patient with no insurance,” Alperovitz-Bichell says. “And we are committed to giving the best care possible to each of them.” Chase Brexton’s Columbia Center draws a large following of patients who are uninsured or many who are undocumented. They come from Mexico, Burma, Romania, and beyond. They hear about Chase Brexton at church, the grocery store, health fairs, and other places throughout the community. Almost entirely by word of mouth, the message travels among relatives and neighbors alike that Chase Brexton provides. high -quality care regardless of ability to pay. “We don’t look at who is documented and who is not documented because we take care of anybody,” Alperovitz-Bichell says. At Columbia Center, that often means bridging cultural and language barriers to ensure patients receive the care they need. Alperovitz-Bichell says she and her Uninsured Patients by Center - CY 2012 41 12 23 Columbia Center Easton Center Mt. Vernon Center % 8 % % 15 % Randallstown Center “I feel that my provider takes a personal interest in my situation and health care.” Patient, Columbia Center Patient Satisfaction Survey May 2013 Kerry Alperovitz-Bichell, MD, MPH, (to the right) has been providing care at Chase Brexton since 2007. staff must be especially mindful of cultural and language barriers. To help in this effort, the staff relies heavily upon a translation service that enables them to patch in a translator via speaker phone during a patient’s visit in the exam room. The service provides translations in over 200 languages. The most common languages encountered at Chase Brexton’s Columbia Center include Spanish and Korean, as well as several Middle Eastern and African languages. “We have to be especially diligent about communicating clearly,” Alperovitz-Bichell says. “We have lots of experience working with patients from all over, so we try to anticipate the best way to communicate to them what they need to know so they can live healthy lives.” Chase Brexton’s unwavering commitment to providing compassionate care to underserved populations is what inspires Alperovitz-Bichell and the Columbia staff of nearly 40 medical, dental, behavioral health, pharmacy professionals and assistants, including physicians, nurses, and infectious disease specialists. “We’re all human beings and everybody needs health care,” Alperovitz-Bichell says. “I couldn’t imagine working anywhere that you couldn’t take care of people because they don’t have the money.” 9 In every patient, health is at heart. After years of being shunned by doctors who didn’t want to work with a transgender patient, Kathy Schulz* says Chase Brexton has been a lifesaver. At Mount Vernon Center she has found primary care providers and health care workers who not only are willing to treat her medical conditions, they are interested in getting to know her as an individual. “In the past, most doctors wouldn’t deal with transgender people because everybody thought all transgender people have AIDS or they refuse to treat them for religious reasons,” Schulz, 68, said recently from her Parkville home. After being married for 34 years and raising two children, about 10 years ago she came to terms with the realization that she had felt transgender since childhood. It was then that she decided to live openly as a woman. But finding a doctor to help her with the transition process – and also help her manage her diabetes and general health care – became an ordeal. She recalls that when she would disclose that she was transgender and then try to make an appointment, she would be told the doctor had no appointments available. In one case, where she didn’t initially reveal she was transgender, when she finally told the doctor she was transgender and wanted to start hormone therapy, the doctor became “cold” and refused to prescribe the hormones she needed. “For me, it was important to have a doctor who understood my transgenderism,” she says. “At Chase Brexton, I’ve found doctors who listen to me and who have my health at heart.” She raves about how pleasant and helpful the health care providers are at Chase Brexton’s Mount Vernon Center, which she visits about every three months. She talks about how the registered dietician helped her learn about eating more healthful food to help manage her diabetes. And she swears that if her provider, Tyler Cornell, CRNP, were to ever move to another location, she would follow her wherever she goes. “She understands me. She has never tried to talk me out of being transgender,” she said, in summing up what it is she likes most about working with Cornell. “The doctors here really care and are more interested in patients as individuals, and not just being a doctor. They are really interested in my well-being. I consider myself to be in good care here.” “For me, it was important to have a doctor who understood my transgenderism. At Chase Brexton, I’ve found doctors who listen to me and who have my health at heart.” - Kathy Schulz 10 *Name changed at patient’s request. Patient Mix by Insurance Type (Payor Mix) 8% 18% Medicaid Commercial Insurance 50% Uninsured 24% Medicare Chronic Disease Management Statistics - UDS Data*; CY 2013 Success of Chase Brexton’s medical team in managing chronic diseases is, in most cases, significantly higher than our FQHC counterparts throughout Maryland and in the United States as a whole. 72.3 68.1 60 60.8% 60.7 70.0 63.6 64.4 *The Uniform Data System (UDS) of the US Health 78.0 Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) 73.8 73.0 80.6% 77.2% 77.8 tracks a variety of information from community 80 health centers like Chase Brexton, including patient 86.2% demographics, services provided, staffing, clinical 96.3% indicators, utilization rates, costs, and revenues. 100 40 Chase Brexton Maryland FQHCs 20 National FQHCs 0 Asthma Treatment (Appropriate Treatment Plan) Cholesterol Treatment (Lipid Therapy for Coronary Artery Disease Patients) Heart Attack/ Stroke Treatment (Aspirin Therapy for Ischemic Vascular Disease Patients) Blood Pressure Control (Hypertensive Patients with Blood Pressure <140/90) Diabetes Control (Diabetic Patients with HbA1c ≤ 9%) 11 Statements of Activities For the years ended June 30, 2013 & 2012 Revenues and Gains 2013 2012 Net Patient Services Revenue 43,107,224 38,593,097 Grant Revenue 6,776,696 7,206,008 Managed Care Revenue 1,954,583 3,227,045 845,404 (75,891) 1,818,608 1,493,700 Investment Income Other Income Total Revenues and Gains 54,502,515 50,443,959 Operating Expenses 2013 Program Services 43,870,497 37,815,863 Supporting Services 7,773,480 7,715,870 Total Expenses 51,643,977 45,531,733 Increase in Net Assets 2,858,538 4,912,226 “My services have completely helped and changed my life for the better!” Patient, Mt. Vernon Center Patient Satisfaction Survey November 2012 12 2012 Statements of Financial Position As of June 30, 2013 & 2012 Assets 2013 2012 Current Assets 18,337,991 37,647,083 Property at Net Cost 36,734,397 13,579,583 Other Assets 21,445,910 34,332 Total Assets 76,518,298 51,260,998 Liabilities and Net Assets 2013 2012 Current Liabilities 12,943,811 5,234,326 Long Term Liabilities 9,075,966 -- Total Liabilities 22,019,777 5,234,326 Undesignated Net Assets 38,968,535 45,612,219 Board Designated Net Assets 14,630,548 Community Development Block Grant 400,000 400,000 Temporarily Restricted Net Assets 499,438 14,453 Total Net Assets 54,498,521 46,026,672 Total Liabilities and Net Assets 76,518,298 51,260,998 13 In every Center, health care is an art. What’s one of the things that Dylan Beatty, an 18-year-old freshman at Maryland Institute College of Art, likes most about receiving his medical care at the Chase Brexton-run MICA Student Health Center in Baltimore? “They laugh at all my jokes,” he says. If it sounds like Beatty isn’t taking this whole health thing very seriously, quite the contrary is true. “They’re all very open and light-hearted even though they are dealing with a bunch of sick 20-somethings,” he says. “It helps them connect with the students here.” And that’s what really keeps him and other students coming back, says Beatty, who learned about Chase Brexton’s services during a campus tour that included a stop at the health center. Convenient access to Chase Brexton’s medical staff through the college’s health center was a key reason that Beatty chose MICA over an art school in Chicago, he says. Because he must visit the health center for bi-weekly allergy shots, Beatty said he was impressed with the college’s emphasis from the beginning on helping students tend to their physical and mental health to help them meet the challenges of their studies. In addition to receiving his allergy shots there, Beatty has visited the health center for sinus infections, stomach bugs and recently because he thought he had fractured a finger during a basketball game. Fortunately, the finger wasn’t fractured, just badly jammed; the Chase Brexton staff bandaged him up and he was on his way. The film and photography major said he appreciates that the staff is always mindful of students’ hectic class schedules and tries to make appointments as convenient as possible. Though he grew up in nearby Towson and his family still lives there, he prefers to see the Chase Brexton staff for medical care. “Having this location on campus is a tremendous benefit,” he says. “You don’t have to worry about getting a friend to drive you across town. And you don’t have to worry about having to schedule an appointment with a doctor you don’t know. Here, they introduced us to the staff from the get-go and they are really nice people.” 93 % 14 Percentage of patients satisfied or very satisfied with Chase Brexton Health Care overall. Patient Satisfaction Survey May 2013 Preventive Health Screening & Services Statistics - UDS Data*; CY 2013 60 59.4 57.6 57.2 52.3 52.0 53.9% 58.8% 46.7 41.0 40 *The Uniform Data System (UDS) of the US Health 67.4% Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) 80.5% 80 tracks a variety of information from community 84.7% health centers like Chase Brexton, including patient 100 demographics, services provided, staffing, clinical indicators, utilization rates, costs, and revenues. Success of Chase Brexton’s medical team in providing appropriate screenings and services for patients is, in most cases, significantly higher than our FQHC counterparts throughout Maryland and in the United States as a whole. 42.5 30.2 27.3 Chase Brexton Maryland FQHCs 20 National FQHCs 0 Cervical Cancer Screening Adolescent Weight Screening Tobacco Cessation Colorectal Cancer Screening Counseling for Tobacco Users Childhood Immunization 15 Locations and Services MT. VERNON CENTER 1111 North Charles St. Baltimore, MD 21201 SERVICES OFFERED: Pediatric Primary Care Adult Primary Care OB/GYN General Dentistry Behavioral Health HIV & Hep C Medical Case Management HIV Testing Nutritional Counseling Full-service Pharmacy On-site Lab MICA STUDENT HEALTH CENTER 1501 W. Mt. Royal Ave. Baltimore, MD 21217 SERVICES OFFERED: Adult Primary Care (Students Only) RANDALLSTOWN CENTER 3510 Brenbrook Dr. Randallstown, MD 21133 SERVICES OFFERED: Pediatric Primary Care Adult Primary Care OB/GYN General Dentistry Behavioral Health HIV & Hep C Medical Case Management HIV Testing Nutritional Counseling Full-service Pharmacy On-site Lab COLUMBIA CENTER 5500 Knoll North Dr., Suite 370 Columbia, MD 21045 SERVICES OFFERED: Pediatric Primary Care Adult Primary Care General Dentistry Behavioral Health HIV & Hep C Medical Case Management HIV Testing Nutritional Counseling Full-service Pharmacy On-site Lab “I just wanted to say that I have been delighted to be a patient of CBHS since 2000. I get the best service and care from everyone here. Keep up the awesome job!” Patient, Mt. Vernon Center June 2013 16 EASTON CENTER 8221 Teal Dr., Suite 202 Easton, MD 21601 SERVICES OFFERED: Adult Primary Care HIV & Hep C Medical Care Case Management HIV Testing Nutritional Counseling Service Utilization NUMBER OF PATIENT VISITS NUMBER OF MEDICAL PATIENTS 14,522 15000 200000 148,869 150000 156,852 153,545 12000 10,858 11,741 9000 100000 6000 50000 3000 0 2011 2012 2013 NUMBER OF DENTAL PATIENTS 6000 5,380 5,599 5000 0 2011 2012 2013 NUMBER OF MENTAL HEALTH PATIENTS 2000 1,763 5,193 1,619 1500 4000 3000 1,331 1000 2000 500 1000 0 2011 2012 2013 FILLED PRESCRIPTIONS 199,570 200,000 0 2011 UNCOMPENSATED CARE (IN DOLLARS) $5,500,000 178,823 175,000 150,000 5,018,213 $5,000,000 145,994 2012 2013 4,813,010 $4,500,000 4,121,110 100,000 $4,000,000 0 0 2011 2012 2013 2011 2012 2013 17 Annual Fund Support Chase Brexton Health Care gratefully acknowledges the many donors whose support of our programs allows us to continue to advance the mission and vision of the organization. Special thanks to those individuals and organizations who give annually; your dedication to our mission keeps us moving forward. $20,000 + Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS CareFirst BlueCross Blue Shield France-Merrick Foundation, Inc. Gilead Foundation Horizon Foundation Susan G. Komen Maryland® $1,000 - $4,999 AdNet/Accountnet, Inc. Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc. Anonymous Joe O’Neill, MD, & Walter F. Atha, MD Karen T. Bellesky, RD, LDN Jeffery Jensen, MD, & Warren E. Conner Maryanne & Robert Facente GE Aviation Amy Johnson & Tracey L. Gersh, PhD Howard County General Hospital James F. Hart Ann M. Holmes Jermone Jenkins Joyce Jones, MD Barbara J. Kane Carolyn Kennedy Edward & Joanne Kraus Eric Lancaster Judy Lapinski, PharmD Daniel Levine Easter M. McLean Douglas L. Miller Miles & Stockbridge, PC Kim Price & Robin Mudge Yvette Oquendo-Berruz Neha Sethi Pandit, PharmD, & Kapil Vishnu Pandit PHH Arval PNC Bank Miss Figgy Pudding Judy B. Shahan, RN, MBA George Lavdas & Jeremy D. Walston, MD 18 $5,000 - $19,999 Combined Federal Campaign of the National Capital Area Delta Dental Knight Takes King Productions, LLC M&T Bank Charles Archer & Guy J. Van Tiggelen, CPA Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. $500 - $999 Jacqueline C. Adams Mark Angielski Anonymous J. Kevin Bonds Jack K. Boyson Susan Camardese George Chambers The Community Foundation for the National Capitol Region Richard Councill Jesse B. Craig Marc Cross David Drager & Judy Davidoff, MD Richard L. Larison & Darius A. Docena Emmanual Episcopal Church Employees Charity Organization (ECHO) of Northrop John J. Farley, Jr., MD Bradley Fine Robert Friedlander Eva Hersh, MD Jeffery Howard David Johnson Patrick M. Martyn Bret Minarik Thomas Moloney-Harmon Charles J. O’Connell Leslie H. & Joni Pitton, Jr. Jon Carneiro & Paul Robie Stephen Salny Alesia Shute Beverly A. Smith Sylvia Smith Johnson Andrea Speedie, MD Joe Ennd & James M. Spellissy Wendy Voshell Sunyna S. Williams FRIENDS OF CHASE BREXTON American Petroleum Institute Jason Kissel & Donald A. Abrams, MD John & Bonnie Adams Jacqueline A. Adams Jennifer Allard Thomas E. Allen, MD Regina Allen-Clayburn Anonymous Kari Alperovitz-Bichell, MD Takatsugu Amano Joseph F. Anastasio Ken Anderson Willis F. Arrington Kerry Avant Sarah E. Avery John M. Backer John A. Rudesill & Linda E. Baer Zandra Y. Bailes Joy Baldwin Astle Baltimore Hebrew Congregation Sisterhood Carlos Barrero Colleen Bartley Rick Barton Hellmut Bauer Brian Bayerle Marjorie A. Beatty Herbert J. Belgrad Stanley T. Bellamy Andrew C. Frake & Richard G. Bennett, MD Bernard Berkowitz Lisa M. Bess Sylvester Bieler Gail E. Birdsong Donna Blackwell Andrew Blair, PsyD Cecil H. Blake Paulette Bolden David J. Boone Robert Bowers Brick Bodies Health Clubs Daniel F. Broderick Beth Brolund Juli Buchanan, PsyD Ako D. Burley Norie A. Calvert Bertha M. Cameron Thomas Campanini Jennifer Carman Ira D. Carmichael Charlene E. Carr Bob Carroll Richard J. Caserta Amina Chaudhry, MD Nancy L. Clark Bradley V. Clark, CPA Eileen Clegg Reginald F. Clowney Coastal Business Machines Thomas Cole Connelly & Assoc. Fundraising, LLC Shirley E. Cooke Alan W. Cooper Robert Craithamel Amanda Cranfill Jill Crank Maureen Cunningham Scott Dale Kenneth F. Davies William H. Davis Jenine Davis Domario G. Davis Thomas Davison Patrick J. De Moss Michael A. Dean Deborah Deaver Paul DeLuca Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Columbia Alumnae Chapter Morgan Deshields-Green Dick Jones Sales, Inc. Carlo C. Diclemente Elizabeth Disney, PhD Michael Driscoll & Lawrence Doane William V. Doane Tahira Douglass Jean Marie Downing Joseph R. Duda Ronald E. Duncan Lisa Dungee John L. Dunn Deborah Dunn, MBA, PAC Gary W. Durrett Natalie Eddington Christine Endler Al Essien The Estate of Michael Dwyer Stacie Sanders & Benjamin D. Evans Opeyemi Falebita Kim R. Farabee Aiden J. Faust Maddy Feinberg Matthew C. Fenton Keirron D. Ferguson Sara & Kevin L. Ferguson, Sr. Shana P. Fischer John Fitzpatrick Lonnie R. Fleming Mark Flickinger Tommy Flow Doug Lea & Bob Fontaine Elizabeth & David Ford Andrew Marques & Becky Fowler Maureen Freyer Dottie Fromm-Geppi Mannie I. Funderburk Alicia Gabriel Sharen T. Gatling Lisa George-Svahn Holly Gersh Richard Gettings Paige L. Glaze, Jr. Paul Gleichauf Thomas R. Glenn Joseph Goeller, III John Goldthwait Charlotte Ober Goodwin Sarah Maria Grabenstein Leslie E. Grant Paul T. Graziano Kenneth R. Green Robert E. Greenfield Amy Gribble John Gullucci Vicki Hafer Griff Hall Mary A. Hampton John Palen & John Hannay Michael Harmon Robert Harr James D. Hayes W. Neal Haynie Patricia Heldorn Wayne Higgins Evelyn Hillman Andrew Histand Douglas W. Hoffman Mark A. Emmel & Ronald C. Hokemeyer Erin Holmes Kristine & Millard Holmes Marla D. Holt Carla C. Howell Jerry W. Huntley John Murphy & John Hurd Rhodesia M. Jackson 19 Stanley L. Jacobs Sarah Jacobsen Salima A. Jenkins Regina Jenkins Derrick J. Jett Patricia V. Johnson Shakira Monique Johnson Troy Johnson Lydia R. Jones Shawnta Jones JustGive.org Evelyn S. Kalanick Jon A. Kaplan Murray M. Kappelman Joyce S. Keating Ann Turner Kennedy Amanda Kennedy, RN Yale Kessler Eric C. King Donna L. King Nigel Knowles Kelly M. Kromm Haydn A. Kuprevich Pamela Kurowski Ray L. La Valley Carolyn Lacombe James Sinclair & Steven F. Lapsley John M. Le Bedda, II Kerry Lessard Stephen H. Levitt Natasha Lewis Elizabeth Lewis Debra Lichter LifeBridge Health Michael K. Lilly John R. Lion Michelle Lisenbee Luan S. Livingston Debra Lloyd Alan Sea & Stephen D. Lohrmann Luz Lopez-Ortiz, JD Wendy Lynham Warren A. Magruder Jemirror R. Manning Vonsetta Manns Karen D. March Kalinda Marshall Catherine Maslen Elizabeth C. Mason Christopher J. Mason Santhia Mathew Valerie Matthews Michelle Mattson 20 Eldery M. McColley Sharon Leah McCoy Aaron D. McCoy Dorothy McCutheon Darren J. McGregor Margaret McManus Paul Fowler, MD, & Franklin N. McNeil, Jr. Harold C. McQueen Arthur McTighe Joyce Meeks-Daniels Timothy D. Mercer Aaron Merki Marty Merritt Jack Meyerhoff Nancy A. Miller Andrew Miller Jamie Miller Josh Miller Michael Milligan Daniel W. Mills Patricia A. Moloney-Harmon Barbara A. Moore Christina Morgan Moveable Feast Gina S. Moxley Carolyn H. Mustafa Reginald T. Nash, Jr. Tim Naylon H. Naylor Renata Osinovskaya Mathew J. Palmer John N. Papagni Tyrone Parker Angel Patel Prajakta U. Pathak Debra Patrick Tara Patterson, MD Angela Patti Asher Perizigian Reginald A. Pinder, Sr. Carlos Plazas Sara Leonard & Ben C. Pointe William Cozart Pollard Joseph Pothen Andre R. Powell Theresa A. Price Robert Quilter Larry & Nancy Rentkiewicz Retro Electric Company Catherine Richard Linda Richardson Karen Richmond Joe Riemer Robert L. Rinehart Cicely N. Roberts Jodie Roberts-Chapman Isaiah L. Robertson Shireen Robinson Larry Rock Richard D. Rooney Harold Rose Richard G. Rosenthal Karen L. Ross Warren Ross-El Maria D. Rowlette Derek Rubino St. Mark’s Evangelical Lutheran Church Nabila Sadiq Michael O. Scherr Martin H. Schreiber, II Gregory Schroeder Evette G. Scott Mr. Michael Myers & Mark F. Scurti, Esq. Alicia Secada-Lovio Neal Serotte Vishal Sethi, MD Sheila M. Sferrella Larry Struebing & Bill Shelton Cathy L. Shipley Carole Sibel Melinda Sickle Rafay M. Siddiqui Mary C. Slicher Raymona Smith Michaela Smith Kimberly Smolen Lloyd J. Spivak Beatrice D. Sterling Terrell Quinn Stewart Thomas Stosur David Reed & Lawrence Strassner Ted Stuban Mary K. Sullivan Judith Summers Rodney Summersford & Diane L. Matuszak Marijke Sutter Angie Sutton Franz Rassman & Meg Taylor Ronald J. Taylor, MD Paul Thomas Michael Thompson William E. Thompson Theresa M. Thompson Mark W. Thompson Gerald N. Title, DDS Stanford L. Vann David Vann, Jr. Hilary L. Vice Walter J. Vickers Luis A. Villanueva Melissa T. Voigt David H. Shippee & Ann M. Volpel David Wallace J. H. Wannamaker, III Shirley Washington Ronald D. Waters Gina Weaver Jill Erica Weaverling Emmett Whitaker Silas White Michele White Zeke White Jesse L. Whitehead Kjell Wiberg, MD Everett Wicks Shelly A. Wiechelt Michael Williams, MD Mike Willis John Wilmot Dennis J. Wilson Kim V. Wilson James B. Winde Craig Newcomb & Mr. John Wingerberg Mary Winkfield Alim J. Wise Willow Witte Jay Wolvovsky Andre M. Wood Brooks Woodward, DDS Howard F. Wright Donna Yaffe Harry Zemel WALL OF COURAGE DONATIONS Anonymous Karen T. Bellesky, RD, LDN Beth Brolund Jeffery Jensen, MD & Warren E. Conner Christine Endler Maddy Feinberg Dottie Fromm-Geppi Debra Lloyd Michelle Mattson Margaret McManus Jodie Roberts-Chapman Nabila Sadiq Melinda Sickle Kjell Wiberg, MD WALL of COURAGE Dedicated in the loving memory of those who courageously lived with HIV disease The greatest care was taken in the preparation of this list. We sincerely apologize for any misspelled names or names we may have inadvertently omitted. If you have any questions, please contact the Office of Development at 410-837-2050, ext. 1331. 21 Board of Directors July 2012 through June 2013 It is a passionately involved Board that provides guidance on all aspects of Chase Brexton’s growth. We are honored by the time and dedication each of our Board members provides to us. Additionally, we appreciate the insight they bring to Chase Brexton; at least 51% of our Board are also our patients. General Membership Officers President Kimberly Price Walter F. Atha, MD Vice President Carolyn Kennedy, JD Jack K. Boyson Maureen Cunningham Marc Cross Treasurer Debra A. Patrick Samuel V. Fuller John A. Murphy Secretary Tommy Flow Luz Lopez-Ortiz, JD Leslie H. Pitton, Jr. Members-At-Large Kristine Holmes, RN Immediate Past President Joanne Fritz Kraus, LCSW-C Ronald J. Taylor, MD Neha Sheth James M. Spellissy Angelinia T. Sutton Immense gratitude goes to all our past Board Members. A special thank you to past Board President Guy Van Tiggelen whose service ended in December 2012. 22 “In the face of all these changes, one thing never wavers: the entire Chase Brexton team is committed to improving the health of all individuals in our diverse communities.” - Richard L. Larison & Kim Price CEO President, Board of Directors 23 Chase Brexton Health Care 1111 North Charles Street Baltimore, MD 21201 T: 410-837-2050 E:[email protected] W:chasebrexton.org Chase Brexton Health Services, Inc., dba Chase Brexton Health Care, is a 501(c)3 charity as recognized by the Internal Revenue Service.