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healing gifts
Building healthier communities through charitable giving — Spring 2014
Rebounding from a heart
attack: Meet Joe on page 4
Teen overcomes traumatic
brain injury
Advocate expertise saves
Lombard man
Couple exemplifies
philanthropic partnership
Advocate Children’s Hospital
insert: Pediatric orthopedics
D234236.indd 1
5/1/14 1:54 AM
features
h
in this issue
2 A team effort
Ryan Ranft made a miraculous recovery from a
traumatic brain injury thanks to his trauma team and
support from his friends and family.
4 Change of heart
Joseph Pompa believed healthy eating and exercise
kept him in top shape, until a heart episode caught
him by surprise.
6 A second chance
Facing pancreatic cancer, Jose Velazquez entrusted
his life to an Advocate specialist.
10 Better together
Advocate supporters Andy Tecson and Nancy Hagen
demonstrate the power of philanthropic partnership.
departments
1 Letter from the president
12 Making the rounds
16 Make a gift through Advocate Charitable
Foundation
Visit Advocate Charitable Foundation at
advocatehealth.com/giving to make a gift, RSVP
for an upcoming special event or learn more about
current fundraising priorities.
Healing Gifts is the magazine of Advocate Charitable
Foundation. Twice a year, it brings you stories of those
whose lives are touched by your gifts.
D234236.r1.indd 2
Special insert:
Pediatric orthopedics
at Advocate
Children’s Hospital
Get connected
facebook.com/AdvocateHealthCare
youtube.com/AdvocateHealthCare
twitter.com/advocatehealth
twitter.com/advocategiving
5/2/14 2:04 PM
healing gifts
welcome to
Advocate Health Care, named
among the nation’s Top 5 largest health
systems based on quality by Truven Health
Analytics, is the largest health system
in Illinois and one of the largest health
care providers in the Midwest. Advocate
operates more than 250 sites of care,
including 12 hospitals that encompass
11 acute care hospitals, the state’s largest
integrated children’s network, five Level
I trauma centers (the state’s highest
designation in trauma care), three Level II
trauma centers, one of the area’s largest
home health care companies and one
of the region’s largest medical groups.
Advocate Health Care trains more primary
care physicians and residents at its four
teaching hospitals than any other health
system in the state. As a not-for-profit,
mission-based health system affiliated
with the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America and the United Church of
Christ, Advocate contributed $614
million in charitable care and services
to communities across Chicagoland
and Central Illinois in 2012.
C
“
heck your heart.” That’s the message Advocate
has been sending via billboards, Facebook and other media,
and it’s an important one. Just ask Advocate Sherman Hospital
patient Joe Pompa, whose story you’ll read in this issue.
Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the U.S., and
its symptoms often go undetected.
More people trust their hearts to Advocate than to any other
hospital or health system in Illinois. When gratitude for care is
expressed through gifts from the heart, we are empowered to
enhance the care we provide to our patients even further.
You and nearly 20,000 generous fellow donors make charitable
Advocate BroMenn Medical Center
gifts to support Advocate’s hospitals and programs. We send
Advocate Children’s Hospital – Oak Lawn
this magazine not only to thank you for your commitment, but
Advocate Children’s Hospital – Park Ridge
Advocate Christ Medical Center
Advocate Condell Medical Center
Advocate Eureka Hospital
Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital
Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital
Advocate at Home/Advocate Hospice
Advocate Illinois Masonic
Medical Center
also to share the many heartwarming ways you help others
through your kindness.
We are grateful for your partnership. Thank you!
Randy A. Varju, FAHP, CFRE
President, Advocate Charitable Foundation
Advocate Lutheran General Hospital
Advocate Medical Group
Advocate Sherman Hospital
Advocate South Suburban Hospital
Advocate Trinity Hospital
Dreyer Medical Clinic
Spring 2014 – healing gifts – 1
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5/1/14 1:54 AM
a team
effort
Ryan Ranft made a miraculous recovery from
a traumatic brain injury thanks to his trauma
J
team and support from his friends and family.
enny and Jim
Ranft were out
of town in May
2013 when they
received a call from
their 16-year-old son’s
number. But it wasn’t
their son on the other
end. It was one of his
friends telling them
that Ryan had been
in an accident and
was unconscious
and bleeding from his
head. Jenny asked
if he had called 911
and he said yes. She
then told him to make
sure they took Ryan to
Advocate Lutheran
General Hospital,
and immediately tried
to find the fastest way
home from California.
When Ryan arrived in the emergency department,
the trauma team was standing by to assess his injuries.
Scans showed that Ryan had a traumatic brain injury that
included a crack in his skull and severe swelling. Doctors
continued to monitor Ryan and administered medicine
to try to bring down the pressure on his brain. The initial
prognosis was not good.
Back in California while en route to the airport, Jim
was able to speak with the physicians at the hospital as
well as one of the paramedics. It was then he realized the
seriousness of Ryan’s injuries. “I could hear the urgency
in the paramedic’s voice,” remembers Jim. “He told me to
get there as soon as possible—that Ryan’s spinal fluid was
leaking and his head injuries were severe.”
The frantic parents boarded a plane not knowing if their
son was even going to make it through the night. Because
Jim is a Chicago firefighter, he knew that Lutheran General
Hospital is a Level I Trauma Center. So they were confident
that Ryan would be in the hands of the best trauma
physicians and surgeons in the area.
The waiting
game
Ryan’s parents arrived
at the hospital the next
morning to see about
30 friends and family
members gathered
and were finally able
to learn the extent of
their son’s injuries.
Traumatic brain injuries
can cause a host of
physical, cognitive,
social, emotional and
behavioral effects,
and outcomes can
range from complete
recovery to permanent
disability or death. So
the physicians were
not able to provide the
family with any longterm prognosis until they saw how things progressed.
Ryan had been transferred to the surgical intensive
care unit for continued monitoring. By the next afternoon,
Ryan’s brain was still swelling. Doctors decided to put
Ryan into a medically induced coma and inserted a drain
into his head to try to reduce the cranial pressure. After
36 hours, they started to bring Ryan out of the coma only
to have his level start to rise again. He was put back into
a coma for more than a week.
“Ryan’s caregivers were very supportive and
comforting, but very honest with us,” remembers Jenny.
“They always explained what they were doing and why.
We were so grateful for the care Ryan received.”
Critical care nurse Kathy Voss, RN, spent a lot of
time with the Ranft family during Ryan's stay at the
hospital. “We strive to provide a holistic approach to care
for the whole family, not just the patient,” she says. “The
Ranfts rarely left Ryan’s bedside. We wanted to make
sure that everyone in the family was cared for physically
and emotionally.”
2 – healing gifts – Spring 2014
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Back in action
Ryan was slowly brought out of the coma and started
responding in small ways—moving his arm, blinking and
trying to talk. The family recognized there was a long
journey ahead before Ryan would be the active, athletic
teenager they knew.
“Ryan is a fighter. Not only is he young and strong,
but he had so many people pulling for him, including
his brother, Ben, and his buddies and teammates from
school,” says Jenny. “The day he gave me a kiss on
the cheek was one of the best. Even the doctors were
surprised to see how much progress he was making.”
After 23 days at Lutheran General Hospital, Ryan was
ready to move on to the next phase of his recovery at a
rehabilitation center, where he spent a month learning to
walk and eat again, rebuilding his muscles, and working
on cognitive and memory issues.
“Ryan was so determined to regain his strength and get
back to the life he knew,” says Jenny. “He defied the odds.
He will not let this define him.”
To the amazement of his doctors and therapists,
Ryan went back to school last fall at St. Patrick’s High
School on Chicago’s Northwest Side. He works out with
the football team, gets good grades and recently got
Exceptional emergency care 24/7
As one of Chicagoland’s largest providers of
emergency and trauma care, Advocate Health Care
stands ready to serve patients with urgent care needs.
With the most trauma centers in Illinois—five Level I
(the state’s highest designation in trauma care), and
two Level II trauma centers—Advocate’s patients have
access to some of the best emergency treatment and
clinical expertise in the country.
Philanthropy plays an essential role in Advocate’s
ability to provide lifesaving care across the region—
expanding facilities to meet growing demand, funding
specialized programs aimed at training the next
generation of emergency medicine professionals,
and conducting leading-edge research.
Advocate currently seeks community support for the
following projects and programs:
• A renovation project at Advocate Lutheran
General Hospital's emergency department will
increase capacity by nearly 50 percent, easing
his driver’s license.
Ryan and his family went to visit the fire station where
the first responders work, and no one could believe he
was walking and talking. “Things went right,” says Jenny.
“A lot of things went wrong that night, but Lutheran
General Hospital and the trauma team got it right.” ■
overcrowding and reducing long waits. Advocate
Christ Medical Center—the state’s busiest trauma
center—is also planning an expansion of their
emergency department.
• Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) programs
at Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center,
Advocate South Suburban Hospital and
Advocate Condell Medical Center provide
expert, compassionate care for victims of sexual
assault. Donated funds help purchase equipment
and provide training opportunities for nurses.
• Charitable gifts support research projects and
continuing education programs for nursing students,
residents, x-ray technicians and EMT professionals
across the system to improve patient care and
health outcomes.
For more information or to make a gift, visit
advocatehealth.com/giving or call 630.929.6931.
Spring 2014 – healing gifts – 3
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change of heart
Our hearts beat as one
Advocate Sherman Hospital’s Heart and Vascular
Center offered Joe Pompa the very best cardiac
care from diagnosis through recovery. An
accredited Chest Pain Center with Advanced
Certification in Heart Failure, the hospital’s longestablished, award-winning program is focused on
preventing, diagnosing and treating a wide array of
heart conditions. That focus is shared throughout
the Advocate Health Care system. With services
ranging from community screenings to pediatric
cardiology research to heart transplant surgery,
Advocate has earned the trust of the most heart
patients in Illinois.
Funded in part by generous gifts from philanthropic
community members, projects to improve
cardiovascular services across Advocate are
ongoing. Fundraising is now underway to boost
three major projects designed to better serve heart
patients by combining convenience and efficiency
with the most advanced technology and expertise:
• Heart and Vascular Institute expansion at
Advocate Christ Medical Center—Christ
Medical Center has expanded its facilities for
outpatient services within the Heart and Vascular
Institute. Charitable funds will also help purchase
leading-edge technology and equipment, as
well as fund preventive services, community
education and outreach.
• One-stop heart care at Advocate Good
Samaritan Hospital—Good Samaritan Hospital
is renovating more than 21,000 square feet on
the ground floor of its main building to bring
together cardiac diagnostics, catheterization,
rehabilitation, observation and recovery services
into one convenient location.
• New Heart and Vascular Center at Advocate
South Suburban Hospital—South Suburban
Hospital’s new outpatient facility will consolidate
all cardiovascular programs, including a
dedicated congestive heart failure clinic, into
one space to make treatment more convenient
and efficient.
For more information, please call 630.929.6931.
Joseph Pompa believed healthy eating
and exercise kept him in top shape, until
a heart episode caught him by surprise.
J
oseph Pompa recalls October 9, 2013, in great
detail: He exercised for an hour and a half in the
morning, worked in the yard cutting branches, ran
errands and enjoyed dinner out with his wife, watched
television from 8-9 pm, and then climbed 15 stairs—with
no problem—to get ready for bed. As he bent over to
squeeze toothpaste onto his toothbrush, he experienced
sharp chest pain. Believing it was a pulled muscle, he
walked around while massaging the area, but the pain
started to radiate across his chest and intensify. At that
point, he went downstairs and told his wife she needed
to drive him to Advocate Sherman Hospital.
State of emergency
On the 14-mile drive from Joe’s home in Marengo to
Sherman Hospital in Elgin, he realized he should have
allowed his wife to call an ambulance. He fought the
reality of his increasing pain by thinking about how he had
always eaten well, worked out five or six times a week
and had not experienced any warning signs of health
problems. He was an active 72-year-old. Even when the
EKG technician in the emergency department informed
him “Sir you are having a heart attack,” it was something
Joe could not fully comprehend. “But fear set in when I
heard those words,” he explains. “I had been so active all
my life. What was my life going to be like if I survived?”
That night, Joe underwent angioplasty to open a
blocked artery, followed by a nine-day hospitalization.
His heart was very weak, so he was discharged with an
external defibrillator to wear in anticipation of receiving
an implant. His ejection fraction (EF)—an important
measure in determining how well the heart is pumping
out blood and in diagnosing and tracking heart failure—
was less than 30 percent (a normal EF is usually
between 55 and 70).
After discharge, Joe relied heavily on support from the
Heart Failure Clinic and still does today. He repeatedly
stresses how wonderful the staff and nurses in the clinic
are—always taking as much time as he needs to talk
through questions and answers to ensure he has clarity.
“Many times medical lingo and having multiple physicians
4 – healing gifts – Spring 2014
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5/1/14 1:54 AM
can be overwhelming,” explains Christina Hanson,
clinical nurse specialist in the Heart Failure Clinic. “We
are available to help patients like Joe navigate through
it all—to support them by teaching ways to monitor
for symptoms of heart failure and to learn about their
medications.”
Joe also started cardiac rehab three times per week.
Although he was doing well during his sessions, later he
would randomly experience shortness of breath that had
to be controlled with multiple medication adjustments
under the close watch of his doctor. In January, Joe
underwent another surgery to have three stents placed—
opening two arteries that were 70 percent blocked and a
third that was “cemented shut.”
“I was told it would take six to nine months to recover,
and don’t get discouraged by bad days,” remembers
Joe. “That is a lot easier said than done. It’s such a
humbling and difficult experience having to watch my
wife outside clearing the snow; I have felt so helpless and
frustrated that I can’t do anything.”
Despite the physical and emotional challenges, there
have been blessings throughout his journey as well.
There was the nurse during his first hospital stay who
found a recliner so Joe could sleep sitting up, since he
experienced too much pain when he would lie down.
There are the neighbors who shoveled his driveway and
told him to “worry about getting healthy and we’ll worry
about the snow.” There are his family members who
continue to visit and call with words of encouragement
when he needs it the most. And there is “his angel,”
his wife, Maria, who keeps up with the medication and
appointments—and is the core of his support system.
A new reality
Joe’s recovery requires ongoing efforts. He continues
rehab and now attends five times per week. After
learning that drastic changes could signify fluid retention,
he carefully monitors his blood pressure and weight
daily for fluctuations. The medication he takes to help
his heart heal has yielded progress so he was able to
stop wearing the external defibrillator in February. He
hopes to continue to make steady progress to ultimately
receive confirmation by this summer that he won’t need
an implant.
“I feel blessed that my care team has brought me this
far, but I’m impatient and I want to be fully recovered
tomorrow,” says Joe. “I just have to keep working hard to
get back to where I want to be—100 percent for my wife,
my family, my grandson and my granddaughter who will
be born this spring. I need to be here for them.” ■
Spring 2014 – healing gifts – 5
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5/1/14 1:54 AM
a second chance
Facing pancreatic cancer, Jose Velazquez
entrusted his life to an Advocate specialist.
A surprise attack
A retired telecommunications engineer, Jose Velazquez
takes good care of his health—and gets up weekdays at
4:30 am to work out. He and Rosemary, his wife of 41
years, live in a lovely home in Lombard with their beloved
dog, Charlie. The couple’s children, Melissa and Gabriel,
are now successful adults who live close enough to visit
their parents often—and they do. Jose has every reason
to be content with his life. But less than two years ago,
he got some very bad news.
It started with the symptoms of a gallbladder attack.
Jose saw his primary care physician, Anthony Lin, MD,
a member of Advocate Physician Partners. Dr. Lin
sent him to Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital for
an ultrasound of the gallbladder and a consultation with
surgeon Mohan Airan, MD, an expert in laparoscopic
surgery to remove the gallbladder.
Dr. Airan listened carefully, and Jose’s description
of pain that radiated around his back made the doctor
suspect something else was wrong. A second ultrasound
proved him right: Not only did the gallbladder have to
go, but there was also a tumor on the pancreas. Upon
hearing this, Jose says, “I was devastated, anxious,
depressed—a little of everything. Then I started to worry.”
In good hands
Jose needed a pancreatic surgery specialist, so
Dr. Lin referred him to Ajay Maker, MD, at Advocate
Illinois Masonic Medical Center’s Creticos Cancer
Center. Jose’s very protective son, Gabriel, researched
oncology surgeons and went with him to see Dr. Maker.
Favorably impressed, Gabriel pronounced, “He’s the
one you want, Dad.”
Was the tumor on Jose’s pancreas cancerous? Over
a few weeks that seemed like an eternity, test after test
came back inconclusive. He was wheeled into surgery
on August 20—still not knowing if the tumor was
malignant or benign. Trusting in Dr. Maker’s judgment and
not wanting to have another surgical procedure, Jose
authorized him to remove any organs he needed to. That
turned out to be his gallbladder, his spleen, and part of
the pancreas, along with the tumor.
6 – healing gifts – Spring 2014
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5/1/14 1:54 AM
Throughout Jose’s hospital stay, he came to appreciate
not only the clinical expertise, but also the kindness of
his surgeon. “Dr. Maker would come into my room to talk
with me. He expressed genuine concern and answered
all of my questions, whether it took 10 minutes or an
hour,” Jose says.
Although he was required to walk twice a day, Jose
chose to push himself with a personal goal of six times a
day. But he was still on strong medications and hooked
up to an IV—and too weak to walk alone.
Fortunately, the nursing staff at Illinois Masonic Medical
Center responded cheerfully to requests for walking
assistance any time of day or night. Jose says, “They
were all just great—and so supportive.”
Good news at last
After several days, Dr. Maker reported that the pancreatic
tumor was, indeed, cancerous. Although this was hard to
hear, there was also some good news: All of the cancer
was removed surgically and no chemotherapy or radiation
was required. It was a slow-growing type of tumor, so
D234236.indd 7
periodic scans would show whether any further
treatment was needed.
A changed life
Determined to get well and stay well, Jose got on with
his life. Just a year after the surgery, he and Rosemary
were given a trip to Italy for their 40th anniversary, and
he felt well enough to enjoy the attractions of Venice,
Florence, Cinque Terre, Siena, Rome and Sicily. Over
the winter of 2014—one of the harshest on record—
he kept busy driving a snow plow!
Without a gallbladder or a spleen—and only part
of his pancreas—Jose must follow certain dietary
restrictions (no sugary or greasy foods) and take some
special precautions to protect his immune system. But
he regards that as a small price to pay for his health.
Grateful to be alive, Jose says of his scare, “It changed
my life, but it also gave me a second chance. I feel
pretty healthy, pretty good.” ■
Spring 2014 – healing gifts – 7
5/1/14 1:54 AM
“One-stop” access to coordinated care and services
For patients like Jose, one diagnosis may require
multiple treatments by doctors from different
• Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital is
renovating 21,700 square feet on the ground
disciplines. It can be a confusing and stressful
floor of its main building to consolidate
experience for patients, which is one reason why
cardiovascular care and services—from
Advocate Health Care has made new, user-friendly
diagnostics through rehabilitation—in one
outpatient facilities a priority:
easy-to-access location.
• Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center
is building a new home for its Creticos Cancer
• Advocate Christ Medical Center opened a
state-of-the-art Outpatient Pavilion on March 31.
Center, Center for Digestive Health, and Ambulatory
The nine-story building includes dedicated floors
Surgery Center. The three-story Center for
for the multidisciplinary Cancer Institute, Heart
Advanced Care will foster multidisciplinary
and Vascular Institute, and Neurosciences
collaboration and allow for better-integrated,
Institute, among other services.
more customized patient care.
All of these projects are being partially funded
by philanthropic contributions from community
members. For more information or to make a
gift, please call 630.929.6931.
8 – healing gifts – Spring 2014
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5/1/14 1:54 AM
PHILANTHROPY at
Advocate Children’s Hospital
News and views for our generous friends
Spotlight: Pediatric Orthopedics at
Advocate Children’s Hospital
For children with bone and joint disorders
resulting from birth defects, illnesses or
injuries, daily life can be an uphill struggle—
physically, socially and emotionally.
Orthopedic problems can stunt their growth,
restrict their activity and often impair their
appearance.
Advocate Children’s Hospital is renowned
for its exceptional orthopedic care for
children and adolescents. The hospital’s
pediatric orthopedic experts are specially
trained to treat the unique orthopedic needs
of children’s active and still-growing bodies.
Our team is committed to helping improve
children’s musculoskeletal health and
function, allowing children to enjoy a more
active, carefree childhood.
The expertise of Advocate Children’s
Hospital staff and the extraordinary
breadth of the cases they handle combine
to create the perfect arena for pioneering
improvements in care that make a big
difference for many patients. Philanthropic
funds for medical education and research
help lead to advances that dramatically
improve quality of life for children with
orthopedic problems.
For more information or to make a gift,
visit advocatechildrenshospital.com/giving.
To Walk in her shoes
Born with a short femur, Claire Jerome waited until a new
technology was available to lengthen her limb in a safe and
less invasive manner.
Like many little girls, Claire Jerome wanted a pair of light-up
shoes. However, she was never able to wear them because
until recently, Claire had to use a special lift in her left shoe that
would only fit in certain footwear.
Claire was born with her left femur six centimeters shorter
than the right, making her one of the 100,000 people who are
diagnosed with limb-length disorders in the U.S. each year. If
left untreated, the condition can result in chronic leg and back
pain and other debilitating conditions.
When Claire was 6 months
old, her parents, Marsha and
John Jerome, took her to
see Andrea Kramer, MD, a
pediatric orthopedic specialist
at the Illinois Bone and Joint
Institute who is on staff at
Advocate Children’s Hospital
– Park Ridge. Dr. Kramer
thought it would be best to
monitor Claire’s growth and
perform corrective surgery—
but not right away.
“At the time I met Claire the
Claire Jerome and her mom, Marsha
common treatment option
for leg lengthening was an external fixator, which has pins and
a frame on the outside of the leg—making the patient more
susceptible to infections and potential fractures after the
lengthening,” says Dr. Kramer. “We were aware that a new
technology was being pioneered that would make the process
much easier and safer for the patient. Waiting for that new
procedure was the best option for Claire.”
continued on the inside...
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5/1/14 2:47 PM
continued from the cover...
Hip Hip Hooray
for Brock
A toddler tackles a serious infection
without ever missing a step.
Dr. Kramer compares the before and after results with Claire and her mother.
In the meantime, Claire wore a lift in her
shoe to allow her to walk and run, as
well as to relieve any discomfort caused
by the limb-length discrepancy. But she
still had a noticeable limp.
“People would stare or make
comments, but Claire would always just
say, ‘This is the way I was born, and
the shoe helps me walk better,’” says
Marsha. “Nothing was going to stop
her from being an active little girl. She
loves the outdoors and animals and
even played softball.”
In 2012, the new technology was
proved to be an effective and safe
alternative to the external fixator.
The surgery is less invasive and less
painful, and the equipment is much
easier for the patient to manage. During
the procedure the surgeon inserts a
telescopic rod into the bone. Using a
magnet and an external remote control
to extend the rod and pull apart the
bone allows new bone to fill in.
Dr. Kramer performed Claire’s surgery
in December 2013, when Claire was
8 years old, at Advocate Children’s
Hospital – Park Ridge. Dr. Kramer
showed Marsha and John how to
use the simple device at home in
Charleston, Indiana. The goal was to
add 55 millimeters to her leg, so they
were instructed to use the handheld
D234236_inserts.indd 3
controller to manipulate the bone three
times a day, lengthening it
1 millimeter per day for 55 days. Claire’s
parents found the machine very easy
to use and painless for Claire, and were
relieved not to have to deal with the
external fixator.
“Dr. Kramer is so good with kids.
She made us feel so comfortable and
explained everything to us so that Claire
was never afraid,” shares Marsha. “Dr.
Kramer and her staff are like family
to us. We had been preparing for this
since Claire was 6 months old.”
By the time the lengthening process
was over, Claire’s bone had grown
to fill in the gap making her legs the
same size. She still has a slight limp,
but continues to work on her gait in
physical therapy. Claire was so
excited when she recently received
the go-ahead to get back to gym class
and playing softball.
Since Claire no longer needed a shoe
lift, Marsha was excited to take her
daughter shopping to get any shoes
she wanted. “I couldn’t wait to buy
her the light-up shoes she always
dreamed about,” says Marsha. “But
when we got to the store, Claire
decided she was too old for the
light-up kind and selected a fun pair
of Sketchers instead!”
Brock Lenzen is everything you
would expect in a 2-year-old
boy. He loves trucks, helicopters,
blocks and cars. All smiles and
giggles, he is a happy, healthy
toddler who climbs anything he
can grab onto and runs around
at near warp speed. But just over
a year ago, a winter cold and
relentless fever resulted in a trip
to the emergency room at a local
hospital that ultimately led to a
serious and scary diagnosis.
“They told us Brock had a double
ear infection and to follow up
with our pediatrician if he didn’t
improve,” remembers his mom
Jill. “He was very clingy, he wasn’t
getting better, and we noticed he
stopped putting weight on his
left leg so we wound up at our
pediatrician’s office.”
Thanks to his orthopedic surgeon,
Brock Lenzen is now an active 2
year old.
5/1/14 5:47 PM
“It was a crazy, scary experience but the doctors and nurses-absolutely everyone
at Advocate Children’s Hospital- were amazing.”
Jill Lenzen, Brock’s mom
Their pediatrician immediately sent them to Advocate
Children’s Hospital – Oak Lawn, where they learned
Brock’s ears were not the problem. Blood tests indicated
an infection, so he was admitted and just a few hours
later underwent a procedure to draw fluid from his left hip.
When pediatric orthopedic surgeon Prasad Gourineni, MD,
came into Brock’s room that evening, he explained that
Brock had a septic left hip requiring emergency surgery.
Jill and her husband were shown the fluid taken from his
hip, which should be clear but was instead yellow.
“Children with septic hip, which is a relatively uncommon
problem, have bacteria within the hip joint,” explains
Dr. Gourineni. “The infection can damage the cartilage
permanently; therefore it is critical that surgery is
performed quickly to clean out the infection to prevent
lasting joint damage.”
Within hours Brock underwent hip arthroscopy, a
minimally invasive method using a scope to flush out the
infection through one tiny incision. The procedure was
successful. Following an eight-day hospitalization, Brock
was discharged to go home with an intravenous line for
three weeks of antibiotics. His treatment also included six
weeks of oral antibiotics.
Brock and his mother, Jill, at home in Orland Park
“In the first sets of x-rays post-procedure, there was
concern that his left hip bone wasn’t forming,” Jill shares.
“His last x-ray showed it is now at 80 percent of what it
should be. That said, it hasn’t slowed him down at all.
You’d never know there was ever anything wrong.”
Thankfully, Brock did not require any physical therapy,
and he started walking without delay or complication at
12 months old and hasn’t stopped moving since. He has
x-rays taken every six months, all which have been clear
thus far. Brock will continue to be followed under the care
of Dr. Gourineni until he turns 14.
“It was a crazy, scary experience, but the doctors and
nurses—absolutely everyone at Advocate Children’s
Hospital—were amazing,” Jill says. “We look forward
to continuing our care with the orthopedics team there
and will go back in a heartbeat if we ever have any other
needs for Brock.”
Always on the move, Brock scoots around the living room.
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Preventing Children’s Sports injuries
Participation in any sport, whether it’s recreational bike riding or pee-wee football, can teach kids to stretch their limits
and learn sportsmanship and discipline. But sports also carry the potential for injury. You can help prevent your kids from
being injured by following some simple guidelines:
Use of proper equipment
It’s important for kids to use proper equipment and safety
gear that are the correct size and fit well. For example, they
should wear helmets for baseball, softball, bicycle riding,
and hockey. They also should wear helmets while inline
skating or riding scooters and skateboards.
For racquet sports and basketball, ask your child’s coach
about protective eyewear, like shatterproof goggles. Also
ask about the appropriate helmets, shoes, mouth guards,
athletic cups and supporters, and padding.
Protective equipment should be approved by the
organizations that govern each sport. Hockey face masks,
for example, should be approved by the Hockey Equipment
Certification Council (HECC) or the Canadian Standards
Association (CSA). Bicycle helmets should have a safety
certification sticker from the Consumer Product Safety
Commission (CPSC).
Also, equipment should be properly maintained to ensure
its effectiveness over time. In the United States, the National
Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment
(NOCSAE) sets many of the standards for helmets, face
masks and shin guards.
Maintenance and appropriateness of playing surfaces
Check that playing fields are not full of holes and ruts that
might cause kids to fall or trip. Kids doing high-impact
sports, like basketball and running, should do them on
surfaces like tracks and wooden basketball courts, which
can be more forgiving than surfaces like concrete.
The team coach should have training in first aid and
CPR, and the coach’s philosophy should promote players’
well-being. A coach with a win-at-all-costs attitude may
encourage kids to play through injury and may not foster
good sportsmanship. Be sure that the coach enforces
playing rules and requires that safety equipment be used
at all times.
Additionally, make sure your kids are matched for sports
according to their skill level, size, and physical and
emotional maturity.
Proper preparation
Just as you wouldn’t send a child who can’t swim to a
swimming pool, it’s important not to send kids to play a
sport they’re unprepared to play. Make sure your child
knows how to play the sport before going out on the field.
Your child should be adequately prepared with warm-ups
and training sessions before practices, as well as before
games. This will help ensure that your child has fun and
reduce the chances of an injury.
In addition, kids should drink plenty of fluids and be
allowed to rest during practices and games.
© 2014. The Nemours Foundation/KidsHealth®. Used under liscense.
This is an abridged version. For the full article, visit
advocatechildrenshospital.com.
Adequate adult supervision and commitment to safety
Any team sport or activity that kids participate in should
be supervised by qualified adults. Select leagues and
teams that have the same commitment to safety and injury
prevention that you do.
KID-Focused Care
Learn more about philanthropy at Advocate Children’s Hospital:
advocatechildrenshospital.com/giving · facebook.com/AdvocateChildrensHospital
Sarah Cutrara at 708.684.5231 (Oak Lawn) or Mary Kozil at 847.723.8144 (Park Ridge)
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Leave a legacy of service
“I believe in the
leadership and vision
of my local Advocate
hospital, and I want to
leave a legacy that helps
the hospital continue
to grow in quality and
service. I can’t think of
a wiser investment in
the future than the very
best health care for
my community.”
Annette Goetz
Donor and Volunteer
Advocate Good
Samaritan Hospital
As a faith-based, not-for-profit organization, Advocate Health Care
relies on the generosity of supporters like you to sustain and advance
excellence. One way you can help is to include a gift to us in your will
or living trust. It is a great way to invest in the future of your favorite
Advocate hospital or program. It costs you nothing now—and leaves
a legacy of service.
If you have already remembered Advocate in your will, thank you for
your kindness. Please consider letting us know of your bequest so we
can recognize you now for your future gift. Notification does not make
your bequest binding or irrevocable.
To learn more, please contact Susan or John in Gift Planning at
Advocate Charitable Foundation:
Susan M. Mongillo, 630.929.6940, [email protected]
John C. Holmberg, 630.929.6945, [email protected]
Spring 2014 – healing gifts – 9
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better together
Advocate supporters Nancy Hagen and Andy Tecson
I
demonstrate the power of philanthropic partnership.
f Andy Tecson and Nancy Hagen had never met and
gotten married, they would probably still be admired
for the way they give of themselves to help others
live their best possible lives. Andy would still be sharing
his legal expertise to help not-for-profit organizations
and faith communities build the systems and support
networks they need to fulfill their missions. Nancy would
still be meeting others’ basic human needs, both physical
and spiritual, whether providing food and shelter for the
Chicago law firm distinguished by its commitment to
philanthropy. “My parents taught me the importance of
giving back to the communities you live and work in,
while Nancy’s taught her that we are all citizens of the
broader community of the world.”
If Nancy has enlightened Andy, he has emboldened
her. “Andy’s cheerful and energetic and not afraid of
trying anything,” says Nancy, a one-time accountant
turned social entrepreneur whose many philanthropic
homeless or offering a comforting presence to grieving
children through the Tommy’s Kids program of St.
Thomas Hospice.
Andy and Nancy did meet and marry, however, and
their union helps prove the gestalt theory that the whole
is greater than the sum of its parts. Together they have
provided a temporary home for disadvantaged children
from around the globe who have come to the Chicago
area for medical treatment. They helped a childhood
friend of Andy’s develop and fund an organization—Clarke
Cares—that has bought 20,000 mosquito nets to protect
African villagers from malaria, elephantiasis and other
insect-borne diseases. And they have given generously
of their time, talent and treasure to support Advocate
Christ Medical Center and Advocate Children’s
Hospital—Oak Lawn. Just for starters.
“I’ve really grown in my sense of service thanks to
Nancy,” says Andy, president of Chuhak & Tecson, a
Andy and Nancy's partnership with Advocate Health Care
includes the health law expertise Andy provides to the
system's general counsel, Gail Hasbrouck (left).
ventures include founding Hope’s Front Door, a Downers
Grove-based ministry that assists community members
in financial crisis. “A sense of having no limitations has
opened up a lot of things in my mind.”
Open minds, open doors
One of the first things it opened up was the couple’s
Downers Grove home. When their sons Luke and
Matthew were young, the Hagen-Tecsons became a
second family to Hector, a boy from Dominican Republic,
following his brain tumor surgery at what is now known
as Advocate Children’s Hospital—Park Ridge. The
family ultimately took in a total of four children at different
times, for periods ranging from six weeks to six months.
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Partners in caring
“Nancy has a compassionate heart, and she’s always had
a global perspective,” Andy says.
They have also opened their home for some of the
many fundraising concerts they’ve organized: Andy
assembles a group of jazz musicians including himself,
while Nancy serves as conductor and event manager.
Both accomplished instrumentalists—Andy composes
jazz for the church and plays the saxophone and Nancy
plays the oboe and piano—the couple met when they
each were part of the music ministry at Grace Lutheran
Church in River Forest. Their shared passion for music
has strengthened not only the bond between them,
but also the Church Jazz Ministry of St. Luke Lutheran
Church in Chicago, among other churches and not-forprofit organizations.
One of those organizations is the Heart and Vascular
Institute at Christ Medical Center, which was the
beneficiary of a combination house concert–presentation
on advances in cardiac surgery they hosted. Andy and
Nancy have had many connections to Advocate Health
Care many times over the years. Among other things,
Andy provides legal counsel to the system—but they
had no personal experience of Advocate’s hospitals in
Oak Lawn until Vijay Singh recruited Andy to serve in a
volunteer leadership role there.
“Andy is the kind of person who gets his energy from
touching other people and helping them achieve their
potential,” says Vijay, a business associate of Andy’s who
has served as chair of the medical center’s Development
Council. “It is not work for him—he has a passion for it.”
That desire to enable others to achieve their potential also
inspired Andy and Nancy to make a generous charitable
donation to help start a pediatric autism program at
Advocate Children’s Hospital—Oak Lawn.
Rooted in faith
Underneath their countless hours of service, their
charitable giving and their enthusiastic championing of
causes within their extensive social and professional circles
lies a firm foundation of Christian faith. That faith draws
them to Advocate Health Care’s mission, which is rooted in
a fundamental understanding of human beings as created
in the image of God and deserving of dignity and respect.
“Advocate’s spiritual and emotional dimension is huge,”
Just as Andy Tecson and Nancy Hagen can do
more together than they can on their own, each of
Advocate’s hospitals is strengthened by groups of
volunteers who combine forces and resources to
help ensure quality health care close to home:
• Development Council members serve as
ambassadors in their communities, sharing
stories of the impact their local hospitals have
and inviting other residents, caregivers and
business leaders to join them in supporting
Advocate’s health care mission.
• Special event committees plan galas, golf
outings and other gatherings that raise funds
for programs identified as priorities by hospital
leadership. Events are also a great way to
introduce hospitals to prospective supporters.
• Auxiliaries and similar service organizations
raise funds through sales and other activities,
and then donate the proceeds to support
hospital programs they designate.
“Miracles happen in our hospitals every day, and
we get to see the tangible results of our efforts,”
says Terry Graber, who chairs Advocate Charitable
Foundation’s Board of Directors. “What could be
more rewarding than knowing you are making a
difference in people’s lives?”
For more information about fundraising
volunteer opportunities at Advocate, please
contact Jennifer Cosby-Thanos at 630.929.6915
or [email protected].
says Nancy, who wishes that her family had received
that kind of support when her father passed away from
multiple myeloma.
Andy agrees. “The concept that God has power to be
a healing force in the world really resonates with us,” he
says. “It goes beyond the miracle of modern medicine to
become something truly transcendent.”
The faith that sustains their commitment to Advocate
also explains their joyful spirits. “Andy and Nancy bring
a quality of compassion, love and humanity that inspires
and transforms others,” Vijay Singh says. “They’re a
wonderful team.” ■
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making the rounds
Every day, Advocate Health Care meets the health
needs of individuals, families and communities
across the Chicagoland area and Central Illinois.
A not-for-profit organization, Advocate relies on
partnerships with donors to expand access to
health care, enhance our patients’ experience,
enable innovation and improve health care
outcomes. In this section, we report on selected
philanthropy-related developments across the
Advocate system.
Associates help colleagues in time of need
been scattered throughout the medical center’s large
campus are now under one roof. Parking is attached to
the building, and there is a concierge service at every
entrance to ensure that patients know exactly where to
go in the building to receive care. Donors enjoyed a sneak
preview and thank-you reception several weeks before
the opening. Attendees included donors Dr. Melvin and
Mrs. Nancy Wichter. In recognition of their generosity, the
waiting room of the Neuroscience Institute on the seventh
floor is named in their honor.
Tragedy hit close to home last November when
devastating tornados touched down across Central Illinois
and impacted several Advocate BroMenn Medical
Center and Advocate Eureka Hospital associates
and their families. Advocate associates across the
system stepped up to support their colleagues by making
monetary contributions to an internal associate crisis
fund, raising more than $22,000—as well as by collecting
clothes, food, gift cards and holiday gifts. “The hearts of
the caring associates throughout Advocate are amazing,”
says Larance Torman, a radiology technician at Eureka
Hospital who was at home in Washington with family
when a tornado completely destroyed their house. “To
receive such love and support during a time when life was
in shambles … I cannot begin to express how very much
appreciated your help is.”
Condell Rocks the Cure
New Outpatient Pavilion delivers “wow!” experience
Advocate's executive vice president and chief operating
officer Bill Santulli (second from right) attended the Condell
Rocks the Cure event with his family.
After nearly two and a half years of construction,
Advocate Christ Medical Center welcomed its first
patients to its stunning new Outpatient Pavilion on March
31. Outpatient testing and procedure areas that had
For the second year in a row, Advocate Condell
Medical Center associates, friends and donors
gathered at Austin's Fuel Room Saloon in Libertyville to
raise funds for the medical center’s Cancer Institute
and listen to live music. Top sponsors for the event
included North Shore Oncology & Hematology Associates
Ltd., Surgical Care Associates, Travelliance and Vogue
Printers. The Cancer Institute provides patients with
the most advanced radiation, infusion and supportive
treatments available, delivered with a “whole-person”
approach to care. Proceeds will support the new Cancer
Resource Center—a place where patients and families
can find navigation services, genetic counseling, wig
and prosthetic fitting areas, education, demonstrations,
and classes.
Funds support pediatric bereavement services
To help families cope with the loss of a child, Advocate
Children’s Hospital uses donated funds to provide
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grief support services at the time of death and beyond.
Charitable gifts permit the delivery of support packets to
grieving parents, siblings, grandparents and extended
family/friends at the hospital, as well as the mailing of
tailored bereavement resources to the home for the next
15 months. Funds also make possible a bereavement
photographer, available at the parents’ request, and
portable carts stocked with artistic and memory-making
supplies that patients can use to create positive memories
in the midst of grief. Additionally, remembrance services
are offered at each campus. “We are so grateful to our
donors who support bereavement services,” says Stacey
Jutila, vice president of mission and spiritual care at
Advocate Children’s Hospital. “They help make it possible
for us to support families during a very difficult time.”
New name for a special “baby”
This winter, Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital
threw a “baby shower” for a new infant mannequin and
its mother. The two are programmed to simulate high-risk
childbirth scenarios so caregivers can learn best practices
in an environment where it’s safe to make mistakes. At
the shower, about 40 guests were invited to participate
in a “name the baby” raffle drawing. The winner was
hospital auxiliary president Bob Hurdle (pictured), who
chose the name Sam (or Sammy). Bob likes that it’s
gender-neutral and fits with hospital nickname Good
Sam. Sam’s mother is named Maggie to show pride in
Good Samaritan Hospital’s designation as a Magnet®
facility, the nation’s highest award for nursing excellence.
Sam and Maggie reside with Malcolm, an adult male
mannequin, at the hospital’s DuPage Emergency
Physicians (D.E.P.) Simulation Laboratory in the Lipinski
Learning Center. Thanks to a generous gift from the
D.E.P. group, Good Samaritan Hospital is the first
Advocate site to have a designated simulation lab with
the most advanced equipment. It supports an extensive
training program that helps clinicians deliver the safest
and very best care for the most critically ill patients.
Another Advocate hospital earns Magnet designation
Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital is the eighth
Advocate hospital to achieve Magnet® recognition
for excellence in nursing services. Awarded by the
American Nurses Credentialing Center’s (ANCC) Magnet
Recognition Program, Magnet is the highest nursing care
distinction a hospital can receive and an honor shared
by only seven percent of U.S. hospitals. ANCC awards
Magnet status for a collaborative, interdisciplinary team
approach to care that recognizes nursing as a vital part
of the team. “Good Shepherd Hospital truly provides a
collaborative environment for all of us to practice and
to have the safest and best quality outcomes for our
patients,” said Thomas Meyer, MD, president of the Good
Shepherd Hospital medical staff. “The outstanding nurses
who have led this effort and our entire hospital team truly
are to be commended for their accomplishments.” The
hospital received Magnet status after a rigorous, two-year
evaluation process that was funded in part by charitable
giving. Research shows hospitals with Magnet status
have better overall patient outcomes, shorter lengths of
stay, higher rates of patient satisfaction and greater
cost-efficiency. Spring 2014 – healing gifts – 13
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making the rounds continued
Reaching out to the underserved
Many low-income people get health care only when
they are quite sick—if then. Advocate Health Care’s
Inner City Parish Nurse Ministry brings holistic, preventive
health services to residents of neighborhoods besieged
by economic hardship and chronic illness. Part of a
larger program serving 36 faith congregations across
the metropolitan area, parish nurses based in Humboldt
Park, Kenwood, Little Village, Logan Square, Roseland
and Uptown meet the needs of more than 14,000
Chicagoans a year. The beneficiary of a $90,000 boost
from philanthropy, the program offers nutrition education,
medication information, walking clubs, health screenings,
flu shots and assistance with Public Aid enrollment—along
with a listening ear and a healing prayer.
Ball brings in support for simulation
More than 3,000 babies are welcomed into the world at
Advocate Sherman Hospital each year. While most
are considered “routine” births, obstetric emergencies do
occur in women who have shown no previous signs of
complications. To ensure the very best and safest care
possible for mothers and babies, Sherman Hospital is
committed to utilizing simulation as an important training
tool—allowing caregivers to enhance their skills in a realworld, low-stress environment—to prepare for any birthing
scenario. The annual Sherman Hospital Auxiliary Gala,
The Bond Experience, was held March 1 and raised more
than $70,000, which will be used to purchase the Noelle®
birthing simulator, as well as bili lights to treat newborns
with jaundice.
Hospice makes a dream come true
Every day, Advocate Hospice caregivers provide
comprehensive end-of-life care with a focus on each
patient and family’s unique emotional, practical and spiritual
needs. Charitable gifts help fund a range of supportive
services that are not reimbursed by insurance, but are
critical to fulfilling the program’s mission to make every day
count. Dedicated care teams deliver those services, but
sometimes they also go out of their way to make a special
dream come true. Patient Agnes Radzajewski, 85, had a
dream of returning to visit the pediatric hospital where she
had worked for 31 years as a surgical nurse. Through the
combined efforts of her hospice chaplain, social workers
and nurses, Agnes got her wish. On a tour of the hospital,
Agnes was warmly greeted by longtime employees who
remembered her from her working days. Viewing a brand
new surgical suite, Agnes said, “I spent my career working
with surgeons who took care of children. This was like
going home.” (photo above)
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Masons invite
others to join them
in building
for the future
One hundred years
after the Masons of
Illinois first took steps
to build or purchase
a hospital to serve
their community,
their continued
support of Advocate
Illinois Masonic
Medical Center was
celebrated at the May
cornerstone laying
ceremony for the new
Center for Advanced
Care. A million-dollar
leadership gift for
the building from the
Masonic Family Health
Foundation in early
2013 was followed by
a second million-dollar
commitment—from
the Grand Lodge of Illinois—in early 2014. When it opens
next year, the three-story outpatient building will provide for
an unprecedented level of technological advancement and
care coordination. “This facility honors the legacy of the
medical center, represents the bright future of our shared
endeavors and invites new partners,” says Masonic Family
Health Foundation chair Charles Gambill.
Advocate physician marries matrimony
and philanthropy
Advocate Health Care has a strong history of
exceptional patient care, medical education and service
to the community. Advocate physician Judith Gravdal,
MD, rolled those qualities into one when she and her
fiancé, Murray Gordon, were planning their wedding.
Because they did not need new china, appliances or other
household items, they encouraged their friends and family
to make charitable donations to honor the couple’s vows.
One of the beneficiaries they suggested was the Family
Medicine Fund at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital.
Dr. Gravdal joined the Family Medicine Residency faculty
in 1987, became the program director in 2004, and was
named the Morris M. Goldberg, MD, Chair of Family
Medicine in 2006. The Family Medicine Fund supports
initiatives of the Family Medicine Residency, faculty
development opportunities, and other department needs.
“My husband and I are blessed in so many ways, and we
wanted to share that with others while giving back to the
hospital, my patients, my fellow physicians, and the strong
educational programs here at Lutheran General Hospital,”
says Dr. Gravdal.
Hundreds of volunteers help save young lives
Every week in the U.S. 30 young people die of sudden
cardiac death resulting from medical conditions they often
didn’t know they had. To identify heart conditions that
could lead to tragedy on the playing field or elsewhere,
Advocate Medical Group’s donor-funded Young Hearts
for Life program trained 1,600 parents and other volunteers
to perform EKGs on 17,024 Illinois high school students
in 2013—many more than could possibly be screened by
medical professionals alone.
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making the rounds continued
Helping patients navigate the complexities of cancer
From diagnosis to treatment through survivorship, cancer is a complicated and
sometimes confusing journey. That’s why Advocate ensures our cancer patients
have a dedicated partner and adviser—a nurse navigator—to guide them stepby-step through the process. Nurse navigators offer an array of support including
Conrad Urban, MD, and Prakash Sane, MD (center L to R), South Suburban
Hospital's 2013 Founders Award honorees, are pictured at the Gala with
Ram Aribindi, MD, and hospital president Rich Heim.
providing educational assistance and materials, accompanying patients to
appointments and procedures, and assisting in coordinating care and identifying
needed resources. Proceeds totaling more than $100,000 from Advocate South
Suburban Hospital’s 2013 Gala benefited the oncology program to provide
critical funding for services, including nurse navigators.
New program connects chronically ill to community resources
With philanthropic support from the G.A. Ackermann Memorial Fund, Advocate
Trinity Hospital has launched Project HEALTH (Healing Effectively After Leaving
the Hospital) to help patients with common chronic diseases, including asthma,
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, hypertension, diabetes and sickle cell
disease. Patients with these diagnoses who are re-admitted within 30 days
of discharge receive a visit from one of six specially trained volunteers. The
volunteer makes sure the patient has a medical home and schedules a followup appointment with a physician. Volunteers also provide basic health education
and often learn of emotional concerns or practical needs the patient has not
shared with anyone else. Project director Jackie Rouse, the hospital’s manager
of community health and volunteer services, says, “We provide patients with
community support when they return home, whether they need social services,
a primary care physician, a call to the pharmacy—or just someone who cares.
We’re building enduring relationships that support lifelong health.” ■
Large or small, each
charitable gift helps
Advocate’s hospitals and
programs provide excellent,
compassionate care.
Giving options include…
■ Cash—Personal checks and
credit cards are accepted.
■ Pledge—Pledges can be paid
over time in cash or stock.
■ Stock—Receive a tax
deduction while avoiding
capital-gains tax.
■ Tribute or memorial—
Make a gift in honor of a
loved one, living or deceased,
or to recognize an Advocate
caregiver.
■ Matching gift—Some
employers will match, double
or even triple your charitable
gift.
■ Planned gift—Make a gift
through a bequest in your
will or trust, by establishing
a charitable gift annuity or
through another type of
planned gift.
To make a gift to a specific
program or hospital, use
the enclosed reply envelope,
call Advocate Charitable
Foundation at 630.929.6900
or give online:
advocatehealth.com/giving
Healing Gifts is produced
by Advocate Charitable
Foundation’s communications
and donor relations
department:
Kelly Coffey
Angela Hacke
Anna McKinley
Jeanne Rattenbury
Contributing photographers:
Warren Browne
John Martin-Eatinger
Contributing writer:
Gina Pryma
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What was
your sign to
take action?
“Dad and I were just having breakfast,
and he got me thinking — between
his heart attack and our family history,
it could happen to me.”
If you’re at high risk for heart disease,
one of our cardiologists will see you
within 24 hours. What is your risk?
Find out in minutes with the simple heart
assessment at iHeartAdvocate.com.
DON’t MISS YOUR SIGN.
Check your heart at iHeartAdvocate.com
D234236.indd 1
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Advocate Charitable Foundation
3075 Highland Parkway, Suite 600
Downers Grove, Illinois 60515
630.929.6900
advocatehealth.com/giving
facebook.com/AdvocateHealthCare
Nonprofit
Organization
U.S. Postage
PAID
Downers Grove, IL
Permit No. 638
Advocate Charitable Foundation supports the goals
and objectives of the Forest Stewardship Council™ (FSC®).
The FSC® promotes responsible environmental behavior
and sound forestry management. The paper used in
this publication is certified under the FSC® program.
face of philanthropy
Joanne and Bill Patejdl were among a select group of donors who were the first to tour Advocate Christ Medical Center’s
stunning new Outpatient Pavilion, which began welcoming patients on March 31. The high-tech, user-friendly facility centralizes
outpatient surgical procedures and patient clinic visits under one roof.
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