State News
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Catholic Hospice Names
Maylen Montoto Manager of Community
Relations
Catholic Hospice has named Maylen
Montoto Manager of the Community Relations
Department. As Manager of Community Relations, Mrs. Montoto
is responsible for the managerial functions associated with the planning,
organization and implementation of various public relations activities designed
to increase public awareness and understanding of hospice programs, services
and policies, and to promote citizen participation and volunteerism for the
organization. Mrs. Montoto will oversee the
department's fundraising efforts and the coordination of all special events.
She assumed her responsibilities on June 12, 2006.
Duties and responsibilities include acting as a
public information officer, representing Catholic Hospice at various functions,
planning and coordinating events, developing informational materials, preparing
news releases, and responding to citizens' requests for hospice information.
Mrs. Montoto
has extensive experience in the Public Relations, Fundraising and Special
Events sector, most recently organizing special events for the YMCA of Greater
Miami, America Online Latino and Museo del Hogar de Transito. She has also worked on a variety of joint
efforts with local non-profit organizations in the
"Mrs. Montoto brings a wealth of experience to her new post and
has ties to numerous organizations and leaders in our community," said
Sister Elizabeth Anne Worley, SSJ," President and CEO of Catholic Hospice.
"She has demonstrated the ability for bringing people together to serve
common goals, build partnerships and collaborate with others. We are delighted
that she is a part of our Catholic Hospice team."
Catholic Hospice is a not-for-profit health care
organization sponsored by the Archdiocese of
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“A Proud Past, A
Promising Future”

On May 18, 2006
Hospice by the Sea celebrated at the beautiful Broken Sound Club in
Over these years
the hospice has served over 60,000 patients and has grown to an average daily
census of 350 and a budget of over $30 million dollars. Today, over 500
employees call Hospice by the Sea their employer. In 2002, the hospice had
achieved the status of the 5th largest hospice in the United
States.
None of this
could have been possible without the leadership of Trudi
Webb, the President and CEO since 1985. According to Trudi,
she took the challenge of taking the small organization and achieved the goal
of the Board of Directors, “to be the best hospice, and I think we’ve done
that.”
Trudi Webb
Trudi has also served
Florida Hospices and Palliative Care (FHPC) as treasurer and served on the
National Hospice and Palliative Care (NHPCO) board as well. She has presented
at numerous conferences and symposiums.
Sid
Silverman
She wrapped up
her career at the May 18 retirement celebration just after receiving the
Professional Hero Award from the Palm Beach Medical Society for her service to
the South Florida community. The evening was filled with special tributes and
roasts from staff and friends. “The eldest volunteer, “Sid
Silverman shared his experience with hospices and how his encounter has now
translated into over 8,500 hours of volunteer service. One of the most
touching moments was shared by Jerry Gotkin whose
wife was served by hospice and said that “hospice was the last special gift”
his wife gave him.
Sid
Silverman
Truly, Trudi, thank you for your service and sacrifice. May all who
come behind you be as faithful. The retirement of CEOs
like Trudi Webb and others throughout the state
should humble all of us who are entrusted with the future of hospice by our
management of today. Succession planning is important to our future, the
maintaining of our core values and principles.
Paula Alderson
Because
Hospice by the Sea, and Trudi Webb, planned for the
next chapter, their succession plan is working. The new President and CEO,
Paula Alderson is on board and moving forward.
Change is never
easy, but as one employee of Hospice by the Sea said, “It really is good.”
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Lifepath Hospice Names New Executive
Director for
Polk, Hardee and Highlands
Counties
LifePath Hospice and
Palliative Care, Inc. has named John McElligott
executive director of Good Shepherd Hospice, which provides hospice services in
Polk, Hardee and
“John has vast
health care experience and will be a tremendous asset to Good Shepherd
Hospice,” said Roxanne Riley, executive vice president – Programs and Services
of LifePath Hospice and Palliative Care. “We are very
excited that he has joined our organization.”
McElligott most recently
was president/CEO of Big Bend Hospice in Tallahassee. He previously held
positions with VITAS Healthcare Corporation in Miami and the VNA Healthcare
Group in Buffalo, N.Y. McElligott earned his
Bachelor’s of Art degree from Tarleton State
University in Stephenville, Texas and his Master’s of Science degree in Health
Administration from the University of Colorado in Denver.
LifePath Hospice and
Palliative Care embraces its mission to make the most of life by relieving the
suffering of patients and their families affected by life-limiting illnesses or
end-of-life issues. LifePath Hospice is a
community-based, not-for-profit hospice that serves Hillsborough, Polk, Hardee and Highlands counties in central
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Supporters Give Hospice
$200,000
Head Start Toward
New Facility
Even before
detailed plans for Hospice of Lake & Sumter’s
second Hospice House in this community have been drawn, an enthusiastic group
of Hospice supporters have raised nearly a quarter million dollars toward its
construction.
The Villagers
for Hospice, an independent, all-volunteer organization dedicated to raising
money for the Hospice organization, presented a check for $200,000 at a
luncheon recently, Hospice officials said. The group, headed by co-chairs
Arlene Bentz and Pat Reynolds, designated the money
to help pay for the second of an eventual four 12-bedroom residences for
patients unable to remain in their own homes.
The first
residence cost $2.7 million and opened in June, 2003, officials said. It
is located on CR 466 just west of the Morse Boulevard intersection and occupies
roughly one quarter of a 5+ acre land parcel donated by The Villages
developer. “We’d asked them for enough land to accommodate one Hospice
House,” explained Hospice CEO Pat Lehotsky.
“Instead, they gave us enough for four, saying that they wanted us to be
able to meet the area’s growing need for our services well into the future.”
According to Lehotsky, the first residence is adequately meeting
community needs at this time. “However, our census continues to rise
steadily as more people learn of the special benefits of Hospice care.”
While active planning for the second of the four houses hasn’t begun yet, the
CEO said it likely would start in the next few years.
In preparation,
The Villagers for Hospice have staged an array of major fund-raising
events. “Walkin’ in Rhythm” is an annual
variety show conceived and organized by Arlene Bentz,”
said Reynolds. Also, Villagers for Hospice run an annual golf tournament,
a “Hogs for Hospice” barbecue, a “Trees of Love” Christmas fund-raiser, and a
yearly cruise, Reynolds said. “Two years ago we went to Russia and
Scandinavia and this year we just returned from a cruise to the Greek Isles.”
In addition,
Ashley Hux, a former Miss Florida and current Miss
University of Florida, stars in an annual concert to help the group.
The Villagers
for Hospice also conduct smaller, ongoing fund-raising activities including the
sale of inscribed honor/memorial bricks for the walkway fronting the existing
Hospice House. Also, local businesses, clubs, organizations and
individuals often conduct their own fund-raising events to assist the Hospice
support group, Reynolds said.
And while the
$200,000 is an impressive amount, the Hospice volunteers know they still have
work ahead of them. “Construction costs have gone up considerably in the
past few years,” noted Reynolds. “We understand that the second Villages
Hospice House will cost somewhere between $3 and $4 million.” It will be
similar to the current 12-bedroom residence and, like that facility, will face
toward the Serenity Center, a meditation/prayer sanctuary for patients and
families, which eventually will be the central focal point for all four
hospice houses on the site.
Beyond the
$200,000 they’ve raised so far for the second patient residence, the Villagers
for Hospice have also collected a whopping $450,000 to help pay for the first
Hospice House and the adjacent Serenity Center, Lehotsky
stated. And all of that has taken place since the group created itself in 2003, she said. Like the Women for Hospice,
a similar but separate Hospice volunteer group based in the Mount Dora area,
the Villagers for Hospice play a critical role in ensuring that Hospice care is
always there for anyone who needs it, the CEO explained. “We rely heavily
upon both of these wonderful groups to enable us to do what we do for the
community.”
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Teleconferencing Technology Helps People Communicate Faster
|
Derinda Jo Hamilton has the ability to be in two or more
places at once. No, the information technology manager for Hospice of Lake
& Sumter Counties is not a character in the new “X-Men” movie.
Hamilton has something more powerful than any comic book hero - a sophisticated
package of video conferencing equipment, proprietary software, a high-speed
Internet connection, and a drive to bring something better to her co-workers
and the patients they serve.
While standing in the conference
room of The Villages Hospice House Thursday, Hamilton instructed two hospice
employees in the Kissimmee office on how to set up a new projector. She could
see them, and using a simple remote control device, she could control the
camera in their office to zoom in on faces, and on the equipment they were
working with, to give precise instructions.
In a few minutes, the new gear was up and running.
The signal was clear, the sound was crisp, and there was none of the
herky-jerky movement most webcam users experience.
“We installed this system in five of our offices, last February,” Hamilton
said. “The idea was to cut down on travel time. Our nurses always want
additional training. If we have a training program at one center or another,
we'd have to take nurses out of the field, away from patients. It would also
cost the organization time and mileage, but the important thing is that we were
taking a nurse away from a patient.”
According
to Roger Ralston, president of DirectView, the
company which installed the hospice system, a setup like Hospice of Lake & Sumter's runs about $5,000 to $7,500, depending
on the sophistication of the devices. Ralston was interviewed via
teleconference from his Boca Raton office.
“The coolest part of this technology is seeing people use it,” he said. “The
New York City Police Department is one of our biggest customers - they use the
system for traffic court. The Seminole Indians hold tribal meetings via
teleconferencing.”
After some initial camera shyness, Hamilton found that the staff adapted
quickly to the new technology.
“We also use it for employee orientation. We can do it in our main office in
Tavares with an employee in Kissimmee,” she said. “It's completely interactive
- you can ask questions and talk just like you were sitting in the room with
each other. People are asking if we'll be installing this in other offices.”
That interactivity has led Hamilton to add something to her wish list: a cart
which holds a TV, the conference calling equipment and a wireless connection so
that hospice patients who are too ill to leave their beds can speak to and see
far-off loved ones.
“We had a patient in February whose children were adopted out and living far
away,” Hamilton said. “She passed away just before we hooked up this system.
They would come here to visit, but if we had had this system, her children
could have gone to a location near them that had this system and they could
have been able to visit that way as well.”
Ralston said that there are about 2,000 locations worldwide where family
members could go for a tele-visit, and that if needed, it would be possible to make
other accommodations.
“We can put something together that is completely wireless
that will roll right into the patient's room,” Ralston said. “We'll be able to
facilitate a call right from their bed.
Once the system is set up, there is no additional charge for the call. People
could visit all day, and say prayers together before bed at night. It's
everything but handshakes and hugs.”
Ralston estimates that such a system will cost about $5,000 per unit. That is
something which is not in the hospice budget right now, Hamilton said.
“I know Roger helped hospice get the system we have because he could see we are
passionate about using it,” Hamilton said. “I'll be seeking donations so we can
buy that patient unit.”
The equipment is compact; perhaps a little bigger than a few good-sized stacked
telephone books. It includes a camera, a microphone, and the computer gear
which translate the signals into a digital signal which can be zipped to its
destination on the Internet.
Calls are placed almost like a telephone call, with the conferencing equipment
“ringing” to signal that someone wants to connect. Hamilton said the signals
are encrypted, making it difficult for an outsider to eavesdrop on the
connection.
Donna Riley-Lein is a reporter for the Daily Sun. She
can be reached at 753-1119, ext. 9255, or donna.riley-lein@thevillagesmedia.com.
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Honoring Florida Nursing
Assistants
Hospice of Lake and Sumter Certified Nursing
Assistants (CNA) Sharon Kofoed, Betty Luckhardt and Kathleen Wynn (from right) accept a
Proclamation from Lake County Commissioner Debbie Stivender
(far left) recognizing the caring services provided by CNA’s
in nursing centers, hospitals, home care settings, and other healthcare-related
areas throughout the state. The three Hospice CNA’s
represent the Lake and Sumter Chapter of the Florida Nurse Assistants
Association, which arranged for the June 6 presentation, marking National Nurse
Assistants Day.
The Florida Nurse Assistants Association is a
membership organization that offers education, networking and support on local
and state levels for the thousands of Certified Nursing Assistants working in
Florida.
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They Call It A
Hospice Heart
By Gail Gerntrup,
BSN, RNC, MS

They
call it a Hospice Heart. They say you have to have a Hospice Heart to work in
this specialty. I heard this phrase only recently. My nursing career spans 3
decades. I have worked in just about every nursing specialty and been certified
in two, but never stopped to consider whether I had a Hospice Heart. When I was
told by a friend that I might be the right person for a position with our local
Hospice, I reviewed my resume, skill set, work experience and everything lined
up great, except, did I have a Hospice Heart?
Mentally,
I reviewed periods in my career from a new perspective, a Hospice perspective.
One of my earliest patient experiences came to mind. When I was a 17 year old
nursing assistant, the nurse asked me to sit with an unresponsive 88 year old
lady who, I was told, was not going to live much longer. I spent 7 hours taking
vital signs every 15 minutes and reporting them to the nurse. Her daughter and
I spent the hours turning her, brushing her hair, washing her face, moistening
her lips, and talking about how she had been the greatest mother. She told me
wonderful stories about her mom. As the evening progressed, her vital signs
faded and she passed, quietly, pain free and surrounded by love. It occurred to me that this was hospice
nursing. And I was so moved by it, I remember it 35 years later.
I
remembered times during my PACU (post anesthesia care unit) years when I had
cared for many patients whose surgery had revealed life limiting conditions. I
had been there when they and/or their families were informed. My time was spent
managing their pain and providing emotional support as they coped in their very
diverse and very personalized ways. This too, was hospice nursing.
So,
being an oncology inpatient manager and part of the team that cares for hospice
patients in our hospital was not my only hospice nursing experience. Working
with Hospice RN case managers, social workers, nursing assistants, chaplains,
medical staff, volunteers, grief counselors, and hospital staff together to
help the patient and their family have the highest quality of life was just the
most recent experiences I had within the specialty. Among these recent
experiences were memories saddened by the patients and families that did not
receive the additional support the Hospice team provides because a referral
didn’t get made.
I
now know that anyone can and should make a Hospice referral for patients with
life limiting illnesses- not just cancer. That Hospice care is provided by a
multidisciplinary team of healthcare professionals that focus on each
individual’s quality of life, just like those I had cared for over the years.
Routine visits are made by the team as needed to patient’s home, skilled
nursing facility, assisted living facility or hospital room. When continuous care
is needed, like my first experience, patients may receive the care in their
home, facility, or in a hospice residence by a nursing assistant, and a
licensed nurse. As with all nursing
specialties, Hospice nursing requires professional and personal maturity (not
necessarily equated with years). And it does require a Hospice Heart that will
allow your humanity to connect with others when they need it the most.
How
great to realize I did indeed have a Hospice Heart. Do you?
Treasure
Coast Hospices is looking for healthcare professionals with Hospice Hearts.
Ms.
Gerntrup is the Fort Pierce Director of Clinical
Services for Treasure Coast Hospices.