familyhealth spring 2011

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VISIT US ON THE Web www.northfieldhospital.org FamilyHealth N ORTHFIELD H OSPITAL & C LINICS Spring 2011 • Vol. 16, No. 2 507-646-1494 To sign up for our monthly e-newsletter, go to our clinic home page at www.familyhealthclinics.org/northfield 3 New CT scanner will benefit patients 6 Eating for the right reasons? 4 Eye surgery changes lives Hospital to expand clinic space for Infusion Services/Chemotherapy Northfield Hospital & Clin- ics plans to redesign space in the hospital’s main corridor to pro- vide for the clinical expansion of Infusion Services/Chemotherapy and Sleep Medicine. The $2 million remodeling project will create customized outpatient clinic space for those services, improving the patient experience with better access and more privacy. Work is expected to get under- way in July with completion com- ing in the first quarter of 2012. The clinical expansion will require relocation of some non- clinical services. In anticipation of that, Northfield Hospital & Clinics recently purchased the former Village School at 1100 Bollenbacher Drive in North- field. It will be the new home to Patient Financial Services, Health Information Services and Finan- cial Services. “We see this as the most economical approach to improv- ing these services at Northfield Hospital,” said Mark Henke, president and CEO of Northfield Hospital & Clinics. “Space now used for non-clinical functions will be redesigned to better meet the needs of our chemotherapy and infusion services patients. It will also allow us to improve the space we dedicate to diagnostic sleep studies.” With the expansion of these outpatient services in the hospi- tal’s main corridor, the admission desk will be moved closer to the front entrance of the hospital, a conference room will be expand- Juliana Sayner, RN, BSN and OCN, clinical coordinator of Infusion Services, be- gins a therapy regimen for Ellis Lysne. THE PATIENT EXPERIENCE WILL BE ENHANCED WITH NEW, DEDICATED SPACE FOR CHEMOTHERAPY AND INFUSION SERVICES. Continued, page 8

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Page 1: FamilyHealth Spring 2011

VISITUS ON THE

Webwww.northfieldhospital.org

FamilyHealthN o r t h f i e l d h o s p i t a l & C l i N i C s

Spring 2011 • Vol. 16, No. 2 507-646-1494

To sign up for our monthly e-newsletter, go to our clinic home page at www.familyhealthclinics.org/northfield

3New CT scanner will benefit patients

6Eating for the right reasons?

4Eye surgery changes lives

Hospital to expand clinic space for Infusion Services/Chemotherapy

Northfield Hospital & Clin-ics plans to redesign space in the hospital’s main corridor to pro-vide for the clinical expansion of Infusion Services/Chemotherapy and Sleep Medicine.

The $2 million remodeling project will create customized outpatient clinic space for those services, improving the patient experience with better access and more privacy. Work is expected to get under-way in July with completion com-ing in the first quarter of 2012.

The clinical expansion will require relocation of some non-clinical services. In anticipation of that, Northfield Hospital & Clinics recently purchased the former Village School at 1100 Bollenbacher Drive in North-field. It will be the new home to Patient Financial Services, Health Information Services and Finan-cial Services.

“We see this as the most economical approach to improv-ing these services at Northfield Hospital,” said Mark Henke, president and CEO of Northfield Hospital & Clinics. “Space now used for non-clinical functions will be redesigned to better meet the needs of our chemotherapy and infusion services patients. It

will also allow us to improve the space we dedicate to diagnostic sleep studies.”

With the expansion of these outpatient services in the hospi-tal’s main corridor, the admission desk will be moved closer to the front entrance of the hospital, a conference room will be expand-

Juliana Sayner, RN, BSN and OCN, clinical coordinator of Infusion Services, be-gins a therapy regimen for Ellis Lysne.

THE PATIENT EXPERIENCE WILL BE ENHANCED WITH NEW, DEDICATED SPACE FOR CHEMOTHERAPY AND INFUSION SERVICES.

Continued, page 8

Page 2: FamilyHealth Spring 2011

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A D O L E S C E N T H E A LT H

DEAD AT THE SCENE!That will be the fate of two

characters in the mock car crash planned for Tuesday, May 24, 1 p.m. at Northfield High School. The fatalities will be an adult and a teen, fictional casualties of an under-aged drinking and driving episode.

The event, called “One For the Road,” is a reality-based portrayal of a car crash and the subsequent response by first responders, emergency medical personnel and law enforcement agencies. The audience will be some 600 juniors and seniors at Northfield High School.

According to Brian Edwards, manager of Emergency Medical Services (EMS), Northfield Hos-pital & Clinics and a coordinator

of the event, the purpose of the exercise is to impress upon stu-dents the serious consequences of drinking and driving.

“This exercise is designed to deliver an emotional punch,” said Edwards. “We want stu-dents to understand on a gut level what can happen when stu-dents engage in risky behavior.”

Kelli and Ron Landsverk of Faribault will be the impact speakers following the crash simulation.

The event will be held at the Northfield High School’s east parking lot. The public is invited to attend.

Mock crash illustratesconsequences of bad choices

Northfield Area YMCA and a multitude of community partners are sponsoring Healthy Kids Day, Saturday, May 7, 9 a.m. to noon at Northfield High School. There will be safety demonstrations, emergency vehicles to tour, and inter-active displays by community agencies and local businesses. The event is free. “The Y holds Healthy Kids Day to teach healthy habits to kids and inspire a life-time love of physi-cal activity,” said Virginia Kaczmarek, executive director of the Northfield Area YMCA. “At a time when the Centers for Disease Control reports that one in three children in the United States is over-weight or obese, developing healthier habits that include increased physical activity is more important than ever.” For more information, contact the YMCA at 507-645-0088 or go to: www.northfieldymca.org.

A coalition of community groups is sponsoring a FREE parent workshop on Thursday, May 19, 7 to 9 p.m. at the Northfield High School Audito-rium. Behavioral expert Kirk Martin and his teenage son, Casey, will offer practical parenting advise you can use when you go home. Their presen-tation is informative, humorous and engaging. Their advice is designed to give parents tools they can use to sidestep the power struggles and improve kids’ focus and behavior both at home and at school. For a preview of Martin’s presentation, go to: www.celebratecalm.com/work-shops.html.

Healthy Kids Day

Parenting seminar

Saturday, May 79 a.m.

Northfield High School

Thursday, May 197-9 p.m.

Northfield High SchoolAuditorum

Page 3: FamilyHealth Spring 2011

H O S P I TA L N E W S

3

Emergency air service is just seven minutes away from Northfield Hospital.

Since 2009, North Memo-rial Air Care has had a flight base in Lakeville, making air ambulances more accessible to hospitals in the south metro area.

Northfield Hospital Emer-gency Department flies a minimum of five patients a week to Level I hospitals in the Twin Cities or Rochester. North Memorial transports more than half of them.

Deb Maestri, RN, manager of Northfield Hos-pital Emergency Department, says the air services’ base in Lakeville has made a big difference.

“It’s really decreased the transport time a lot,”

she said. “We make one phone call and they are here.”

North Memorial air ambulances’ top speed is 180 mph. They can travel to metropolitan hospitals in 20 minutes or less.

Air transport is close at hand

Northfield Hospital is add-ing a new high-end Computed Tomography System (CT) to its diagnostic imaging repertoire in June. The 64-slice system promises higher quality images with less radiation exposure for patients. It will also expand the number of diagnostic procedures that can be done at Northfield Hospital, reducing the need for patients to travel out of town for their health care.

Sandy Mulford, director of Diagnostic Imaging at Northfield Hospital & Clinics, said this scanner will help create a better patient experience. The ability to

scan 64 slices at one time makes the scan very fast, so a patient can get on with their day more quickly. In addition, the donut that surrounds the patient during the scan is larger in cir-cumference to accom-modate larger people, reducing a patients’ sense of confinement.

Because of the advanced technology of the system, patients will be exposed to less radiation during the procedure. A special software program that the hospi-tal has purchased will reduce the radiation dose up to an addition-

al 68 percent, Mulford said.Computed Tomography

is available 24 hours a day at Northfield Hospital. Emergency Department physicians com-

monly use it to evalu-ate abdomen and chest pain, rule out blood clots in the lungs and to evaluate other parts of the body. With the addition of a 64-slice scanner, Northfield

Hospital will be able to also perform CT angiography, a non-invasive way to look specifically at the arteries in the body, brain and extremities.

New CT scanner will benefit patients

MRI

1,229Mammograms

1,753Ultrasounds

3,775CT Scans

4,005Patient Imaging

Servicesfor 2010

Page 4: FamilyHealth Spring 2011

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S U R G I C A L S E R V I C E S

“I wanted to be able to see their faces, so I could see how much in love they were,” said Sharon, a retired Human Devel-opment Advisor at Laura Baker Services Association.

Michelle Muench, MD, an ophthalmologist with Northfield Eye Physicians & Surgeons, made it happen. She operated

on Sharon’s right eye days before the wedding. Sharon was able to witness the momentous event in all of its radiant clarity.

“It was a beauti-ful wedding,” Sha-ron remembers.

Dr. Muench said she is constantly

impressed at how life-changing cataract surgery can be.

“People ask me all the time: ‘When is it time to have cataract surgery?’ said Dr. Muench. “I say have your surgery when your vision starts to interfere with the things you like to do.”

That could be night-time driving for some; for others it would be sewing or reading the sports scores crawling across the bottom of the television screen. For Sharon it got to the point

where she could no longer read her Bible or follow the flow of her weekly card games.

“I just hadn’t realized how bad it was and what a difference surgery could make,” Sharon said. “I played cards yesterday, and I could see the cards laying in front of my partner.”

It’s not unusual for cloudy vi-sion to sneak up on a person. A

cataract develops when aging tis-sue or an injury begins to cloud the lens, scattering the light that passes through the eye and preventing a clear, well-defined image from reaching the retina.

The surgery involves remov-ing the clouded lens and re-placing it with an artificial lens implant. The procedure is well tolerated and the recovery time is brief.

Sharon saw results right away. Her vision was clear and colors were more vibrant. She can see

Eye surgery can be life-changing experience

Dr. Muench

“I SAY HAVE YOUR SURGERY WHEN YOUR VISION STARTS TO INTERFERE WITH THE THINGS YOU LIKE TO DO.”

– DR. MICHELLE MUENCH

LensRetina

Cornea

Iris

Iris

Sharon Collins’ one wish was to see her grandson get married – in living color, not through the muted tones and cloudy veil imposed by her cataracts…

Page 5: FamilyHealth Spring 2011

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S U R G I C A L S E R V I C E S

Eye surgery can be life-changing experience“I JUST HADN’T REALIZED HOW BAD IT WAS AND WHAT A DIFFERENCE SURGERY COULD MAKE.”

– SHARON COLLINS

Sharon Collins can now enjoy her weekly card games again thanks to her cata-ract surgery done by Dr. Michelle Muench.

the television and read better. It’s like discovering a whole new world.

“I’m noticing something new everyday,” she said.

Sharon said the staff at Northfield Hospital was a wonderful help, comforting and thorough, something she’s come to expect from the hospital. Dr. Muench says she receives compliments all the time on the good work done by the staffs in Same-Day Surgery and the Operating Room.

“I appreciate the personal-ized care my patients receive at Northfield Hospital,” said Dr. Muench. “I grew up in North-field, and we all appreciate that our patients are our neighbors, and we are looking for the abso-lute best outcome for them.”

Dr. Muench sees patients in clinic at River Valley Vision Centers and

operates at Northfield Hospital.

Page 6: FamilyHealth Spring 2011

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Don’t let your eating patterns control youAre you eating for the right reasons? Is it

nutrition or comfort?In this age of abundance, where we

are confronted at every turn with highly-processed foods, more and more people are overeating. Courtney Eby, RD, LD, a nutrition therapist at Northfield Hospital & Clinics, says many are eating for the wrong reasons. Their food consumption has taken on an addictive pattern that masks deeper psychological issues.

There is not yet an accepted medical definition of a food addiction. But Eby says it is present when someone is overwhelmed by their cravings for food and have lost the abil-ity to regulate their food consumption.

The biochemistry is similar to that asso-ciated with alcohol and drug addiction, she said. Today’s processed foods are engineered

with fats, salts and sugars to appeal to the brain’s pleasure centers. When food becomes your primary source of comfort, you have a problem.

“We see people eating all day,” she said. “They are trying to push back those feelings of anxiety, depression or bore-dom.”

Women seem to be more susceptible than men to a food addiction. Some of the warning signs of an addictive pattern are:• Being obsessed with meal preparation, food shopping, recipe collecting;• Eating in secret;• Hiding and hoarding food;• Feelings of guilt over eating pat-

terns;• Requiring food for comfort.• Exhibiting strong physical cravings for food.

“You have to learn to consume foods for nour-ishment rather than comfort,” Eby said.

She recommends people work with both a nu-tritional therapist and a behavioral therapist to get a handle on a pattern that will eventually compromise a person’s health. People need to observe their hab-its and develop strategies to control their use of food. Strategies include having a structured meal plan, controlling portions, learning to cope with cravings and avoiding situations where you will be tempted.

Eby suggests approaching food consumption in a studied manner. If you have questions about addic-tive eating or other nutritional issues, call 507-646-1410 and ask for Courtney Eby or Kristi Von Ruden.

Tips for becoming a mindful eater: –[ reserve at least 20 minutes for each meal

–[ eat while sitting down

–[ chew food well, don’t inhale it

–[ put down your fork between bites

–[ keep food out of your car, don’t eat while driving

–[ be present while eating – take time to taste the food and take in the whole dining experience

H E A LT H U P D A T E S

Eby

“YOU HAVE TO LEARN TO CONSUME FOODS FOR NOURISHMENT RATHER THAN COMFORT.”

– COURTNEY EBY

Page 7: FamilyHealth Spring 2011

H O M E C A R E

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Northfield Home Care makes house calls.

Sometimes its because pa-tients are transitioning from hospital to home. Sometimes its because they are recovering from surgery. Sometimes its because they have a chronic condition but want to live out their lives in the familiar surroundings of their own homes. All will find home care staff at their doorstep.

Take Kay Costa for instance. This Northfield woman recently had knee replacement surgery. During her recovery, she ben-efited from the full complement of home care services. Home care nurses were there for education and medication management. Home care aides provided per-sonal care and light housekeep-ing. Kay had physical therapy in her home twice a week, and an occupational therapist provided information and wise counsel to help her navigate her home in safety.

“I received more than I ex-pected,” Kay said. “Each of the providers seemed to anticipate

my every need and graciously offered sug-gestions to solve my dilemmas.”

Lorraine Tabor’s was a differ-ent story. A victim of polio in her

teens, Lorraine spent 60 years in a wheelchair. She died last year at the age of 80 in her home as she

wished. Lorraine was able to stay in

her home because of Northfield Home Care. She was a patient for 15 years. Home care staff saw her four times a day. They got her up in the morning, checked on her twice during the day and helped her into bed at night. Aides helped with shopping, cleaning, cooking and laundry.

Steve Hanson, a friend, said Lorraine’s desire was to stay at home. “She couldn’t have done this alone,” he said.

Kathy Bengtson, Northfield Home Care director, said Lor-raine considered the home care aides her family.

“She always used to say to me: ‘Kathy, it’s because of you girls that I’m able to be at home.’”

Home care sees a wide range of patients, for varying lengths of time. It’s cost effective and most patients do better at home.

“Without Home Care I would not have had the comforts of my own home and especially my own bed,” Costa said. ”I think my friends felt more comfort-able visiting me at home. There is something about the laughter and conversation of friends that speeds recovery as well.”

For more information about services provided by Northfield Home Care, contact

Kathy Bengtson at 507-646-1457.

Home care meets patients needs at home

Kay Costa

Tabor

“EACH OF THE PROVIDERS SEEMED TO ANTICIPATE MY EVERY NEED.”

– KAY COSTA

Page 8: FamilyHealth Spring 2011

N o r t h f i e l d h o s p i t a l r o u N d u p

FAMILYHEALTH is published as a community service for households served by Northfield Hospital & Clinics. Addi-tional copies are available by calling Community Relations, 507-646-1034.

MarkHenke DixonBond President and CEO Chair, Board of Trustees

RandyReister,MD ScottRichardson Clinic Medical Director Editor

Information in FAMILYHEALTH comes from a wide range of medical experts. If you have any concerns or questions about specific content that may affect your health, please contact your health care provider. Contents copyrighted. All rights reserved.

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Our focus is to provide a positive and healing environment that is patient centered. If you are interested in becoming a memberof our highly-skilled and compassionate staff, please view our employment opportunities at www.northfieldhospital.org.

FamilyHealth Medical Clinic – Northfield507-646-1494

2000 North Avenue Northfield, Minn. 55057

8 to 8, Monday, Tuesday and Thursday8 to 5, Wednesday and Friday

9 to 12, Saturday

FamilyHealth Medical Clinic – Lonsdale507-744-3245

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8:30 to 5, Monday through Friday

FamilyHealth Medical Clinic – Farmington651-460-2300

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8:30 to 5, Monday through Friday8 to noon, Saturdays

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8 to 4:30, Monday through Friday

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8:30 to 5, Monday through Thursday8:30 to 4, Friday

Northfield Eye Physicians & Surgeons507-645-9202

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8 to 4, Tuesday and Thursday

Clinic office hoursThe 50th Great Northfield, Minnesota Book

Raid, the Northfield Hospital Auxiliary’s annual book sale, will be Tuesday, April 26, to Saturday, April 30, at the Northfield Ice Arena.

Sale hours will be 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Tuesday, April 26; 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Wednes-day, Thursday and Friday, April 27-April 29; and 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, April 30.

The Hospital Auxiliary is dedicating funds raised this year to the expansion of clinical space for Infusion Services/Chemo-therapy at Northfield Hospital.

Auxiliary announces book fair dates

Great Northfield, Minn. Book Raid

50th

ed to allow for training functions and the Northfield Hospital Auxiliary’s gift shop, Kaleidoscope, will be moved next to the hearth waiting area. The Auxiliary is helping to fund this proj-ect with a pledge of $150,000 over the next five years.

Juliana Sayner, RN, BSN and OCN, clinic coordinator of Infusion Services, said the objective is to create a therapeutic environment designed specifically for oncology patients and non-oncology infusions. There will be space for consultations with oncolo-gists, nutrition therapists, and Social Services. The clinic will be more ac-cessible to patients, just a short walk

from hospital parking, and it will allow oncology patients with compro-mised immune systems to avoid other patient populations. Therapy rooms will have windows that provide a rest-ful, scenic view of the nature area on the St. Olaf College campus.

The new space for Infusion Ser-vices/Chemotherapy will serve as a complement to Mayo Clinic’s new radiation oncology center, which is scheduled to open in July.

Sleep medicine is another ser-vice that is expected to grow. Henke said creating customized space for diagnostic sleep studies will position the hospital to be accredited by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.

Expansion: Auxiliary pledge helps with costFrom page 1