PMCF quarterly newsletter: The importance of reflection as we move forward
Update from Saad Ehtisham, President
I believe in the importance of reflection because it allows us to find gratitude for what we’ve accomplished as a team and as a community. I hear stories of courage, compassion and personal excellence among the members of our team. Our vaccination efforts continue across all the communities we serve, ensuring that access is not just available but equitable.
Our team members rise to challenges by the day, the hour and, sometimes, the minute. They continue to show up, to provide patients with the best possible care.
In addition to the community supporting our team, our team has supported one another once again through Giving. Serving. Together., our fundraising campaign for team members, despite the hardships of 2020. Team members gave more than $1.2 million to support each other and local nonprofits.
Hello from Jennifer Clifford, Chief philanthropy officer
These past few months have been busy ones for the team at Novant Health Presbyterian Medical Center Foundation. We’ve celebrated the grand opening of Caroline’s Corner, a long-awaited facility that will honor the life and legacy of Caroline Comly. We’ve celebrated our incredible team members, telling the stories of those courageous men and women who have meant so much to our patients and our community. We broke ground at Novant Health Ballantyne Medical Center, our new healthcare facility that will bring acute care resources to the growing suburban population in south Charlotte. And we’ve continued our work on the Martin Truex Jr. Foundation Children’s Emergency at Novant Health Huntersville Medical Center, a state-of the-art facility that, when complete, will be the first children’s emergency department in the Lake Norman-Huntersville area.
Planned giving
The power of legacy
When Sharon Harrington is asked to speak about her role at Novant Health Foundation her face lights up as she speaks instead about the philanthropists with whom she interacts. One memorable story of helping connect donors to the impact they hope to make in their community was of a couple she worked with on their investment through Novant Health Foundation. As retired educators, “They care deeply about ensuring that quality healthcare is available to all members of the community, particularly underserved communities,” Harrington said.
“In additional to current gifts, they have supported multiple community engagement programs including our Hope for Remarkable Team Aubergine Fund (COVID-19 Disaster Relief Fund). Their most impactful gift will be through legacy giving where they will provide healthcare access for underserved minority women and families across the Charlotte region. They have selected Novant Health to extend their legacy and deep commitment to improving the health of our communities, one person at a time.”
The mission of promoting health equity is an important one for these donors, both of whom are ordained ministers and academic leaders.
Harrington loves that her position as chief of staff enables her to serve donors in exploring strategic gift options, including those involving estate and retirement planning. She is passionate about matching an individual’s philanthropy with the right program, gaining support for Novant Health’s patients, families, care team, and service lines through creative, flexible tools such as bequests, charitable income gifts, gift of life insurance, gifts through retirement plans, and other vehicles.
Looking for a way to leave your own remarkable legacy? Consider a gift to Novant Health Foundation — either today or in the future. As Harrington said, donors make our healthcare organization great. Do your part and give today.
Update on Community Health Workers
Hard at work on community health
Last year, Novant Health Presbyterian Medical Center Foundation received a $150,000 grant to fund salaries for three community health workers. These team members specialize in engaging with the community around the overall determinants of health. They help patients in at-risk populations with both health education and advocacy. After getting to know patients, they then connect them with community resources when necessary. And their work is already making a profound impact in the community.
East Charlotte mass vaccination site
Community health workers are present at the east Charlotte mass vaccination site and are able to connect with patients to provide resource connections (food insecurity, housing insecurity, finding primary care providers and more). Patients can opt for a follow-up telephone call after their vaccination appointment if they have additional needs.
Novant Health Michael Jordan Family Medical Clinic
Community health workers are embedded at both locations of the Michael Jordan Family Medical Clinic to support patients with complex and/or long-term resource needs. They are working closely with clinic social workers to provide comprehensive social care.
In addition to those significant initiatives, the team is also hard at work helping patients get access to the following:
Much-needed dental appointments
Updated eyeglasses/prescriptions
Motorized wheelchairs
Disease-specific diet plans that are realistic for the patient’s budget
Coordinating with primary care physician offices to look for alternative prescriptions that meet the patient’s medical needs and are also affordable
Rescue placement for animals that patients can no longer care for
So far, the data shows those combined efforts are producing powerful results:
Reduced emergency room visits by 2.5 visits per patient, per year
75% decrease in hospital readmission in the first 30 days among high-risk COPD patients
41% of patients demonstrate improved medication adherence
Support Our Community Health Workers
Huntersville Peds ED update
The Martin Truex Jr. Foundation Children’s Emergency
Thousands of children in the Lake Norman and Huntersville communities require some level of urgent care annually, yet their residents have limited access to nearby emergency services. To address this growing concern, Martin Truex Jr. and Sherry Pollex partnered with Novant Health to introduce the Martin Truex Jr. Foundation Children’s Emergency at Novant Health Huntersville Medical Center. This new state-of the-art facility will be the first children’s emergency department in the Lake Norman-Huntersville area.
The new facility will be staffed with physicians and nurses who specialize in caring for kids. It will also staff a child life specialist to better meet the needs of our smallest patients.
Additionally, our new pediatric emergency department will include:
Nine private treatment rooms
Triage room
NASCAR-themed family-friendly waiting room
Advanced medical equipment specifically designed to treat children
Family consultation room
Flat-screen televisions
Treatment room for minor emergencies
Sleep chairs for late-night emergencies
We are almost to the finish line with raising funds to complete this facility. If you would like to support our work with a financial contribution, please click click the "Donate now" button below.
To learn more about the Martin Truex Jr. Foundation Children’s Emergency, contact Nichole J. Burton, philanthropy manager, Novant Health Huntersville Medical Center, at n.burton@novanthealth.org.
Novant Health Family Medicine Residency Program
Inside the Novant Health Family Medicine Resident Program
In 2016, Novant Health Presbyterian Medical Center established the Novant Health Family Medicine Residency Program to prepare the next generation of physician leaders to improve the health of communities, one person at a time.
The three-year program trains physicians specifically in the area of family medicine, and, in June, the members of the program’s third class will graduate.
We spoke with Mark Higdon, DO, program director, to collect some highlights from the past five years.
Belk House History
One of the most striking features of the Novant Health Presbyterian Medical Center campus is the Belk House, located at 220 Hawthorne Lane in Charlotte’s center city. William Henry Belk built this two-story, 16-room mansion back in 1924 to serve as his family home. He and his wife, Mary, raised six children there. William passed away in 1952, but Mary continued to live there until her death in 1968. In her will, she left the house to Presbyterian Medical Center.
Renovated back in 2012, the home is a stunning example of Colonial Revival/Classical Revival architecture, with a double ascending staircase, large entry vestibule and floor-to-ceiling windows. To this day, it remains part of the hospital’s campus as the home of the Presbyterian Medical Center Foundation and Community Engagement offices. After all these years, it is still affectionately referred to as the Belk House.
Breaking ground at Novant Health Ballantyne Medical Center
As part of our commitment to improving the health of communities throughout Mecklenburg County and beyond, Novant Health recently broke ground at Novant Health Ballantyne Medical Center. The $180 million investment will bring acute care resources to the growing suburban population in south Charlotte with a 168,000-square-foot state-of-the-art medical facility.
“The residents of Ballantyne and surrounding communities deserve advanced care services in their own backyard. As Charlotte continues to grow, we will continue to grow with it,” said Saad Ehtisham, president of Novant Health Presbyterian Medical Center and the system’s Charlotte market. “Cultivating a remarkable patient experience is our top priority. We’re thrilled to see our vision for a community-focused hospital that delivers safe, quality care in a welcoming environment come to life.”
The new 38-acre medical campus will include both a hospital and a 56,000-square-foot medical office building, offering services that include emergency care, inpatient care, women's care (including birthing suites), expanded diagnostic services and surgical services. The medical campus will also keep the tradition of community alive, with walking trails and space for community events, ensuring continued connection with south Charlotte residents.
Novant Health Ballantyne Medical Center is set to open in 2023.
National Nurses’ Day:
Reflections on remarkable care in 2020
Each year, we dedicate the first month of May to celebrating our nurses — those women and men on the front lines
of patient care. Over the past year, our nurses have dedicated countless hours to our patients, their fellow team
members and their communities. We are beyond grateful for their commitment and their sacrifice. Here are two
nurses we spotlighted this year.
Julie Guentner: The ‘mama bear’ of Novant Health Hemby Children’s Hospital
Wendy Cort: A nurse’s courage
Julie Guentner’s calling to be a nurse goes all the way back to the third grade.
“I was asked, ‘What do you want to be when you grow up?’” Guentner said. “I always said I wanted to be a baby nurse.” More than three decades later, Guentner is still following that path at Novant Health Hemby Children’s Hospital, where she’s known as the “mama bear.” It’s a role that has required her to grow over the years. She loves children, and she’s learned to bond with parents, as well.
Wendy Cort, a registered nurse, was one of the first volunteers when Novant Health began opening COVID-19 screening centers in March 2020. She loved every minute serving on the front lines – the hustle, the patients, even the long, but rewarding, 16-hour workdays. Most of all, she felt a sense of duty as a nurse to help contain and stop the spread of COVID-19.
Cort is a former critical care nurse with more than 30 years of experience, and, today, she is the manager of education and training at Novant Health Medical Group