Employee News Child Life Rocks!
Transcription
Employee News Child Life Rocks!
FEBRUARY 2011 Employee News Child Life Rocks! On the web: CareConnect: A New Name for UCLA’s EHR Patients and families at Mattel Children’s Hospital UCLA were all smiles when singer/songwriter Avril Lavigne stopped by for a visit last month. The electronic health record program will now be called CareConnect, a name that reflects both the breadth and benefits of the program. Kourtney Najar, who had been in the hospital for 176 days following a small bowel and pancreas transplant, presented Avril with a calendar that included photos of herself receiving treatment at UCLA over the last year with cover art she designed herself. For many kids at Mattel Children’s Hospital UCLA, the hospital is their home away from home. UCLA’s Child Life/Child Development Services provides social, emotional and developmental assistance to patients and families, and also helps arrange welcomed distractions such as Lavigne’s visit to our patients. While the CareConnect program is using Epic Systems technology, the actual implementation will be tailored to UCLA’s needs. CareConnect builds upon the mission of delivering leading-edge patient care by streamlining our processes and systems. For more information, visit: www.ehr.uclahealth.org Matttel Children’s Hospital UCLA patient Kourtney Najar with Avril Lavigne. Chamber Music in a Hospital? That’s the concept behind the newly created Music at the Med concert series. The program debuted on Jan. 28 with a beautiful performance by the award-winning Angeles Saxophone Quartet. A collaboration between the UCLA Health System’s Volunteer Department and the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music, the series of six concerts was created as a unique way to offer respite to patients and caregivers. It is also an opportunity for some of UCLA’s elite student musicians to perform for a new audience who appreciates and benefits from their talents. Mark your calendar for these upcoming Music at the Med performances: Feb. 25 Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons”; March 18 Belles Aires Woodwind Quintet; April 15 Music Made in Los Angeles; May 20 Monaco Brass; June 3 UCLA Camarades String Ensemble. The free concerts are held at noon in the RRUCLA Tamkin Auditorium. Seating is limited. To watch a video, visit: www.uclaahealth.org/music IN THIS ISSUE UCLA People 3 Vinod Mangal Provides Food for Thought Inside Stories 2 Project SEARCH Students Graduate 2 UCLA Ensures Blood Product Safety 4 Former Pediatric Patient Gives Back 5 Santa Monica Bay Physicians Join UCLA 5 UCLA Health System Getting Greener Wellness Initiative 6 Managing High Blood Pressure News Shorts 6 UCLA Physicians Named Super Doctors 6 2011 Run/Walk to Cure Brain Tumors 6 February Healthcare Recognition UCLA Employee Plays National Role in Ensuring Blood Product Safety Project SEARCH Celebrates Project SEARCH proudly recognized Lauren Levine, Patrick Zegler, Joshua Chen and Corinna Hitchman in January with a special graduation celebrated by department managers, community agency leaders, UCLA Extension leadership, Hospital Administration and Human Resources staff. Project SEARCH is a program adopted by UCLA Health System and UCLA Extension to provide education and training to young adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities through an innovative workforce and career development model that benefits the individual, workplace and community. This six-month school-to-work program was launched at UCLA in July and allows four students to intern with the Food Services and Material Management departments at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. The students work in positions such as return items technician, office clerk, mail delivery technician and food service worker. During their internships, the students are able to acquire on-the-job training and gain invaluable employment skills from their on-site job coaches, such as time management, appropriate workplace behavior and communication. At the end of each day, the interns participate in a one-hour classroom/group instruction where they reflect on their day, review curriculum relevant to succeeding in the workplace and journal what they’ve learned. “The interns were a very positive addition to our teams. Our managers were able to learn as much from these special individuals as they learned from us, which was evident from the large turnout at the graduation,” notes Robin Ludewig, Director Recruitment and Workforce Planning, UCLA Health System, Human Resources. 2 An estimated 20,000 people nationally and 400,000 people globally are living with hemophilia, an inherited bleeding disorder in which the blood does not clot properly. Worldwide, only 25 percent of people with hemophilia receive adequate treatment for the disorder. In the United States, however, as many as 70 percent of hemophiliacs receive specialized care in federally funded Hemophilia Treatment Centers (HTCs) and experience mortality and hospitalization rates that are 40 percent lower than others with the disorder. The outlook for hemophiliacs in the U.S. has not always been so bright, recalls Judith Baker, director of the federal HTC network for Region IX, which has been based at Mattel Children’s Hospital UCLA since 2006. “When I began this work in the 1990s, the HIV crisis was in full swing,” says Baker. HIV and Hepatitis C (HCV) contaminated the nation’s blood supply in the 1970s and 1980s, and because the medicine that people with hemophilia depend upon was made from blood, large numbers of hemophiliacs became infected with those viruses, she explains. “HIV was a fatal disease at that time because effective medications had not yet been developed,” Baker says. “One of my first challenges was to identify ways to meet the immediate medical and psychosocial needs of our HIV- and HCV- infected patients, while also developing the capacity and infrastructure that would enable us to deliver modern hemophilia care to diverse and underserved populations in the long term.” From 1990 to 1996, Baker produced 16 HIV/HCV risk Judith Baker reduction retreats for affected patients statewide. In the late 1990s she helped establish the first ever federal HTCs in Guam, Hawaii, Nevada and central California. Region IX, the largest in U.S., now includes 14 HTCs. Baker provides regional leadership and oversight of several federal and private grants that support multidisciplinary clinical care, outcomes surveillance, research, state/federal advocacy, education, outreach and discount pharmacy services for more than 6,000 people with rare inherited blood disorders. Baker’s expertise has also been tapped to inform and influence health policy makers, including the Food and Drug.Administration (FDA) advisory committees on blood products and tissue spongiform encephalopathy (mad cow disease), the CDC/NHLBI Healthy People 2020 work group on blood disorders, and a number of other national and state committees. For example, Baker served as the sole consumer advocate on the FDA committee charged with evaluating the clarity of proposed instructions for over-the-counter HIV testing kits. According to Baker, who holds a masters degree in Health Services Administration (MHSA), and is currently a doctoral student in the UCLA School of Public Health, UCLA is the ideal environment to not only strengthen direct patient care, but also influence the policies that impact how care is delivered and financed. UCLA people Vinod Mangal, Principal Food Service Manager, UCLA Health System Food for Thought Through Catering As Principal Food Service Manager in charge of At Your Service catering for UCLA Health System’s Nutrition Department, Vinod Mangal is responsible for overseeing 200 catered events — which feed about 2,500 people — every week. Vinod Mangal has been at UCLA since 2003. He started as a cook and worked his way up to patient service supervisor before being promoted to principal food service manager three years ago. Mangal has worked in the food service/catering industry since 1985 and has had previous jobs as a catering supervisor at Tawam Hospital at the Alain University in the United Arab Emirates and assistant manager of Kentucky Fried Chicken. breakfasts, 13 lunches, nine appetizer/snack meals and three dinners. I work very hard to stay within my budget, which means sometimes I have to help out, pushing carts, delivering meals, doing whatever I have to do to get the job done. When someone makes a last-minute request, I have to go to four different places to make the change. Sometimes we get change requests while we are in the process of preparing or delivering the food. That can be difficult. What are your goals for At Your Service catering? With a staff of five servers, the catering department sets up, delivers, takes down and sometimes serves everything from five-star sit-down dinners to casual buffet breakfasts and lunches. We are trying to offer healthy choices with good nutritional value. Our salads are healthier than they used to be and we’ve eliminated most of our cream sauces. We offer baked or grilled entrees and have also cut down on carbohydrates. We used to have a lot of sandwiches and pasta, but now offer fresh fruit, yogurt, several healthy salads including a Chinese chicken salad and a baby green salad with grilled chicken, and gourmet vegetables with dipping sauce. Is all of the catered food prepared at UCLA? About 80 percent of what we serve is cooked here. The other 20 percent comes from outside vendors such as El Pollo Loco, Lucia Pasta and Pizza and Tomodachi Sushi. What’s the most challenging part of the job? Balancing all of the events with the staff we have available. Most days we have around 15 What are your most popular meals? Our crusted pine nut chicken, grilled salmon and porcini mushroom ravioli are the most popular dishes we serve. For sandwiches, most people prefer chicken, tuna and turkey; very few take the roast beef. Between fish and chicken, fish is more popular, especially salmon and sea bass. Between chicken and beef, you’ll have more orders for chicken, unless it’s a special occasion, like a holiday party. Then, people like steak or tri-tip. Do you and your wife ever meet for lunch? “Passing customers in the hallways and hearing rave reviews about a past event is really rewarding.” My wife, Carol Lubos, works as a care partner at RRUCLA. We drive to work together but we never see each other for lunch. We both understand that she’s busy with her patients and I’m busy with my job. Most of the time, when I can go eat lunch, it is her busiest time and when she is available, it is my most busy time. Do you have any pointers for making a dinner party for 20 people? How much notice do you need to cater a party? We generally request two days notice. If it’s a big party with more than 150 guests, I like to have two weeks notice, but sometimes I don’t get that luxury. What’s the most rewarding part of the job? We always get good feedback from our customers. Hearing the gratitude and appreciation they express for what we do is great. Passing customers in the hallways and hearing rave reviews about a past event is really rewarding. First, make sure you have enough tables and chairs. If you’re going for a sit down affair, you need one chef and two servers. You can pre-set the silverware, napkins and glasses. The salad and rolls should be served first. If you want to keep the costs down, have one entrée — chicken is usually a good choice. It’s nice to have a vegetarian option for two or three people. That way, if one of your guests wants seconds, you have some food left over. 3 Former Pediatric Heart Patient Sponsors Cardiac Fellowship Tyler Gilbert, who suffers from a rare congenital heart defect, was 16 years old when a cardiologist told his parents that his current physicians had “done everything they could” and referred him to UCLA for a heart transplant. But the pacemaker Gilbert received instead was such a success that the aspiring composer was able to go on a three-month solo trip through Europe and the Middle East in 2008 and write a self-published book about the experience called “Epic Journey: 21 Countries at 21.” To express his gratitude for the surgery that allowed him to live a normal life, Gilbert, now 23, has decided to use money from a family foundation set up in his name to fund a $60,000 research fellowship in cardiac surgery at UCLA. “I hope that the research this fellowship funds will help develop new techniques that not only could save my life in the future but also other people’s,” Gilbert says. Gilbert, who had received a recording studio from the Make-A-Wish Foundation when he was on the heart transplant waiting list, is earning a bachelor’s of fine arts in music composition at California Institute of the Arts. An affable young man who wears a neat beard and glasses, his quiet exuberance for music, writing, theater and philanthropy makes him seem mature beyond his years. Gilbert and his mother Deborah Gilbert, a pastry chef, recently returned to UCLA to visit with Hillel Laks, M.D., the renowned thoracic surgeon who had performed one of Gilbert’s many operations. Dr. Laks talked with Gilbert about some of UCLA’s cutting-edge clinical trials and thanked the Gilberts for sponsoring a fellowship, which will allow a young scientist or clinician in cardiac surgery to do a research project in the field. “These gifts are very important, especially in these times when there are so many budgetary constraints,” says Richard Shemin, M.D., chief of the Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery. “They give us more flexibility and create opportunities for people to advance their education and make new discoveries that hopefully benefit patients.” Gilbert’s great-aunt, Frances Gilbert of Escondido, set up the Tyler Gilbert Heart Transplant Survivor’s Foundation before she died three years ago. From left to right: Dr. Hillel Laks with Tyler Gilbert “When Tyler was going through these surgeries, she was cut to the core and said ‘I just want to buy him a new heart’,” Deborah Gilbert says. “We had no idea until she passed away that she started this foundation in Tyler’s name.” Gilbert, who still uses the recording equipment he received from the Make-A-Wish Foundation, says he will also direct his namesake foundation to fund two wishes for needy children every year. Gilbert explains that he is directing foundation money to research and granting wishes because, “I’m interested in two things: saving lives and enhancing lives.” Gail Abarbanel and RTC Recognized by House of Representatives Congratulations to Gail Abarbanel, director of SMUCLA’s nationally known Rape Treatment Center (RTC), who was recognized by the U.S. House of Representatives at its session on July 31, 2010. The resolution, H.R. 716, acknowledges Abarbanel and our RTC for their efforts in assisting sexual-assault victims by addressing their medical, social and emotional needs, and creating the Fast-Track Forensics Program to help prevent delays and eliminate backlogs in processing rape kits. Gail Abarbanel The resolution also urges Congress to support programs that facilitate timely processing of DNA evidence to assist local law-enforcement agencies. It was introduced by Rep. Patrick Kennedy, who toured the RTC. The resolution passed through the House and its Committee on the Judiciary. President Barack Obama has signed the official resolution. 4 © Jack Barron UCLA Health System Getting Greener Seated, left to right: Mark Needham, M.D.; Bernard Katz, M.D.; David Feinberg, M.D. and Patricia Kapur, M.D. Santa Monica Bay Physicians Join UCLA Medical Group In January 2011, the Santa Monica Bay Physicians joined UCLA Medical Group to expand access to UCLA Health System for Westside and Santa Monica residents. Now known as UCLA–Santa Monica Bay Physicians, the group will function as a business unit within the UCLA Faculty Practice Group and includes approximately 34 board-certified primary care physicians in eight offices throughout the Westside. Physician specialists in endocrinology, general surgery, neurology and ophthalmology who were integral to Santa Monica Bay Physicians have also joined the UCLA Faculty Practice Group, and thereby the greater UCLA Medical Group. UCLA–Santa Monica Bay Physicians also brought along two walk-in urgent care centers with extended evening and weekend hours, located in Santa Monica and Marina Del Rey, which UCLA will continue to operate within the UCLA-Santa Monica Bay Physicians business unit, available to any patient in the UCLA Health System. “The Santa Monica Bay Physicians is an established practice with a long-standing reputation for providing excellent clinical patient care in a friendly community setting,” says Patricia Kapur, M.D., interim co-president of UCLA Medical Group. “We believe this will be a positive and complementary partnership that will benefit our patients and the community.” Like UCLA’s long-established Community Physician Network (CPN), a component of the UCLA Faculty Practice Group that serves adults and children of all ages in medical offices located in Brentwood (which also has Saturday/Sunday walk-in hours), Malibu, Manhattan Beach, Santa Monica and West Los Angeles, UCLA-Santa Monica Bay Physicians will also continue to provide community-based care to Westside residents as physicians with full-time appointments in the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, having access to UCLA Health System facilities and resources. UCLA–Santa Monica Bay Physicians serves approximately 50,000 patients, having participated in a large provider network for the Bay Area Community Medical Group, an independent practice association in West Los Angeles. These patients can stay with their doctors and will now access their UCLA–Santa Monica Bay Physicians by way of the UCLA Medical Group provider network. According to Dr. Kapur, the partnership created by Santa Monica Bay Physicians joining the UCLA Health System team represents an important additional step in positioning UCLA for the new era of healthcare. “There is an increasing emphasis on the critical role of population-based healthcare,” says Dr. Kapur. “We want to ensure we are positioned to provide comprehensive, high-quality medical care for a growing number of patients, in a wider geographic area, and to deliver the best possible care to these patients at every level of the healthcare continuum.” An independent assessment of UCLA Health System’s eco-friendly practices shows that the hospital system is well on its way to reaching sustainability goals for 2020, but still has room to improve. “Part of providing healthcare is being a leader in healthful practices,” says Paul Watkins, executive director of real estate and support services for UCLA Health System. The health system already has system-wide programs in recycling, energy efficiency and water savings. Every year, thousands of surgical towels are repurposed as cleaning rags, 63 tons of confidential paper is shredded and recycled and biohazard containers for sharps are being reused. To reduce chemical and water use, UCLA facilities switched from conventional wet loop mops to flat, microfiber reusable mops. An on-site aquifer reclaims and reuses cooling water and dedicated air handlers now shut down during unoccupied hours to save electricity, water and money. The assessment, which created a timeline of all the eco-friendly measures UCLA Health System has implemented over the past decade, also made some recommendations for further improvements, including: • e ducating patients and employees about eco-friendly choices, including the proper use of recycling and waste bins; • purchasing produce grown within a 200-mile radius of UCLA to reduce carbon emissions used to transport food; • d eveloping sustainability program structure to monitor our progress. “Sustainability is really about making a choice and knowing the environmental impact of that choice,” Watkins says. “Most of the choices are really cost-neutral.” 5 news SHORTS wellness INITIATIVE 2011 Run/Walk Miles for Hope: Moving Toward a Cure for Brain Tumors WELLNESS PRESENTATION ON MANAGING HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE Tuesday, April 5, 12:15 to 1:15 p.m. RRUCLA, Room B-124 A/B located on B-Level Sunday, March 13 at 9:00 a.m. Registration at 8:00 a.m. for 5K and 9:00 a.m. for 1 mile Fun Run High blood pressure increases your risk for developing heart disease and/or kidney disease, and for having a stroke. It is often referred to as the “silent killer” because high blood pressure does not have warning signs or symptoms. High blood pressure can be prevented and controlled by understanding the relevant risk factors and lifestyle behaviors. Woodley Avenue Park (adjacent to Lake Balboa Park) 6335 Woodley Avenue, Van Nuys Join Team UCLA for the Miles for Hope 5K Run/Walk benefiting the Brain Tumor Research Program, under the direction of Linda M. Liau, M.D., Ph.D. UCLA Physicians Named Super Doctors To register and/or donate, visit: www.MilesForHope.org A select 257 UCLA physicians were recognized as 2011 Southern California Super Doctors in the January 2011 issue of Los Angeles magazine. “Super Doctors” honors physicians who are highly regarded by doctors, nurse practitioners and nurse managers throughout Southern California. Ballots were sent asking, “If you needed medical care, which doctor would you choose?” to identify those doctors most highly recommended by their peers. Nominees were grouped into more than 30 medical practice areas, and nominees with the highest point totals from each practice area were invited to serve on a blue-ribbon panel to review, score and interview a list of doctors selected for their primary practice area. Point totals from the ballot surveys and the screening process were then added to arrive at a final point score. FEBRUARY RECOGNITION Please take a few minutes to recognize the February national healthcare observance for American Heart Month. For more information, visit uclahealth.org/superdoctors UCLA Health System Employee News Director of Marketing: Pattie Cuen | Marketing Communications Manager: Judi Goodfriend | Editor: Tiffani Quach Mendinueto Contributors: Amy Albin, Ted Braun, Kimberly Enard, Kim Kowsky Design: Oglesby Design | Photography: Jack Barron, Robert Hernandez, Margaret Sison Copyright ©2011 UCLA Health System. All rights reserved. email: [email protected] UCLA Health System Marketing | 10920 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 1850, Los Angeles, California 90095-6923 WWW.UCLAHEALTH.ORG 1-800-UCLA-MD1 (1-800-825-2631) 6