Latest News from Community Memorial Hospital
By: John Hubbard
The Community Memorial Hospital Foundation Board has been chaired by Larry Baker since it was established in 2001 to raise funds in support of the hospital’s equipment and building needs.
The Community
Memorial Hospital Foundation Board of Directors reappointed its full slate
of officers at last week’s annual meeting.
Larry Baker remains as Chair, a position he has held since the fundraising organization was established in 2001. Joining him are Carolyn Gowan, who will be serving her second term as Vice Chair, along with Patricia Caprio, Secretary, and Ronald Cleveland, Treasurer, both original officers.
The four were presented to the Board by Barbara Wheler, Chair of the Nominating Committee, and they were reappointed unanimously.
“Community Memorial Hospital is fortunate to have outstanding volunteer leadership and this is exemplified by the Foundation officers,” said Hospital President and CEO David W. Felton. “Larry Baker, Carolyn Gowan, Patty Caprio and Ron Cleveland are civic, business and educational leaders who know how to get a job done. Their wealth of knowledge of the communities in the hospital’s service area is invaluable and their willingness to work hard matches their wisdom.”
The Community Memorial Hospital Foundation was established “to solicit, receive, invest and administer contributions, gifts, devises and bequests to or on behalf of Community Memorial Hospital.” The Foundation recently successfully completed the $1.1 million Golden Anniversary Campaign. Funds from the first phase of the campaign were used for the Ambulatory Surgery Center, which occupies a bright, cheerful and private wing adjacent to the operating suites and contains 18 beds. A second phase focused on the construction of the Hamilton Family Health Center and the purchase of a multi-slice CT scanner.
The Hamilton Family Health Center, near the hospital administration building, is open with two physicians and a family nurse practitioner and the CT scan is providing detailed images that provide invaluable diagnostic information.
“It continues to be a pleasure to be associated with so many talented and community-minded people who are working together for the sole purpose of ensuring the future of Community Memorial Hospital,” said Baker.
The
Foundation raises funds for building projects and capital equipment
purchases. Plans for a campaign in the near future are now underway.
Community Memorial Hospital Housekeeper Corey Morgan (left) returned a ring he found while cleaning and was rewarded for his honesty by Hospital President David W. Felton (right) and Director of Housekeeping John Heck who presented Morgan with a gift certificate from Adventure Bikes and Boards in Hamilton. Said Felton, “It’s employees such as Corey who make Community Memorial the hospital it is and one reason why we have such high patient satisfaction.”
Corey Morgan, a housekeeper at Community Memorial Hospital, was cleaning a bathroom after hours in the ambulatory surgery department earlier in April when he spotted a diamond studded ring sitting on top of the paper towel container.
“Oh, this looks expensive,” thought Morgan as he slipped it into his billfold. “Whoever is missing this is not happy.”
Actually, James Hyatt of Utica was feeling terrible and not because he had just had shoulder surgery. His wedding band, with eight diamonds, was an expensive piece of jewelry with even more sentimental value and now it appeared it was gone forever.
While Hyatt was being prepared for surgery, a nurse put tape over his wedding band but the surgical precaution was irritating. Hyatt took the ring off, gave it to his son, who put it on his finger for safekeeping. It quickly was apparent the ring was too tight and the younger Hyatt struggled to get it off. When he finally did, he put the ring on the towel dispenser as he washed his hands.
Just then the patient was being wheeled into the operating room and in the commotion the ring was forgotten.
Back home in Utica late that afternoon, James Hyatt called the hospital where there had been a shift change and no one could find the ring.
Morgan, in the meantime, held on to the missing wedding band until he returned to work, where he asked Nurse Missy Boehnert if someone had lost a ring. She described the missing band, Morgan said it was the one he found and turned it over. Boehnert gave it to Nurse Manager Diane Chase, who had been in contact with Hyatt, and the ring was promptly returned.
“Everybody at Community Memorial was absolutely wonderful,” says Hyatt, who is a member of the Department of Defense at the former Griffiths Air Force Base and the father of a New Hartford police officer. “The whole thing has been unbelievable.”
When Hospital President David W. Felton learned of the missing ring and its subsequent return he commended Morgan on his honesty.
“What was I going to do with a wedding band?,” said the 20-year old native of Sherburne.
“I was pleased first of all to hear the ring had been found and impressed Corey returned it,” said Felton, who recognized Morgan’s “good moral and ethical values” by presenting him with a gift certificate from Adventure Bikes and Boards in Hamilton.
“It’s employees such as Corey who make Community Memorial the hospital it is and one reason why we have such high patient satisfaction.”
Morgan was surprised by the attention. “Honesty is the best policy, especially in a hospital. If you’re not honest, you’re not communicating right and communication is the key to our teamwork.”