Bethesda Hospital, St. Paul, Minnesota, United States
Encyclopedia
Bethesda Hospital is a long-term acute care
Acute care
Acute care is a branch of secondary health care where a patient receives active but short-term treatment for a severe injury or episode of illness, an urgent medical condition, or during recovery from surgery...

 hospital
Hospital
A hospital is a health care institution providing patient treatment by specialized staff and equipment. Hospitals often, but not always, provide for inpatient care or longer-term patient stays....

 located in St. Paul, Minnesota. It is accredited by the Joint Commission and the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF). It is a member of the HealthEast Care System
HealthEast Care System
HealthEast Care System is a non-profit health care provider organization located in St. Paul, Minnesota and the surrounding suburban area. It includes four hospitals, 14 clinics, medical tranportation and a variety of other outpatient services. Founded in 1986, it was named one of the top ten...

.
Bethesda Hospital is one of only two long-term acute care hospitals (LTACHs) in Minnesota. Long-term acute care hospitals deliver specialized, extended, aggressive medical care for patients who have experienced a life-changing illness or injury like stroke, multiple organ failure following major surgery, traumatic accidents involving spinal cord damage or brain injury, etc.

History

Bethesda Hospital opened its doors in 1883 as a community hospital in St. Paul, Minnesota. It was founded by the Rev. A.P. Monten, D.D., pastor of the first Swedish Lutheran Church in St. Paul, with the sponsorship of the Tabitha Society of the Swedish Lutheran Minnesota Conference. Bethesda treated generations of neighborhood families until 1998, when it transformed from a short-term community hospital to a long-term acute care hospital (LTACH). There are approximately 400 such facilities throughout the country.

Care and services

LTACH patients usually have medically complex diagnoses or multiple medical conditions which require hospitalization in excess of 25 days. As a specialty hospital, Bethesda serves more than 2,000 individuals annually in its inpatient programs of Respiratory Care; Complex Medical Care; Brain Injury Services; and Medical Behavioral Services. Examples of the scope of these services are as follows:

Respiratory Care patients suffer from severe respiratory failure or chronic respiratory disability; they may come directly from a community hospital’s intensive care unit for ventilator weaning. They receive intensive services from respiratory therapists and undergo physical, occupational and speech therapy as indicated by the individual patient’s treatment plan. All care is supervised by pulmonologists.

Bethesda Hospital has vent weaning success rates that consistently exceed national industry benchmarks, with 65% of its patients weaned from a ventilator (after failing vent weaning in a short term acute care hospital) compared with a national score of 59.9%.

Complex Medical patients generally arrive with multiple system failure. These patients can require infusion therapy. Many of them receive specialty wound care using the latest technology to treat and heal wounds which often requires frequent and complex dressing changes that are overseen by physicians, nurse practitioners and staff nurses who specialize in wound care. Bethesda Hospital currently uses MIST therapy for some of its most challenging wound cases.

Brain Injury Services patients comprise about 20 percent of the population admitted to Bethesda Hospital. Their brain injury could either be traumatic (resulting from a fall or a blow to the head) or vascular (the result of a stroke). Bethesda utilizes the Functional Independence Measure (FIM) score to assess the quality of care in this program. FIM is a disability assessment on 18 functional items. Patients receive a score of 18 – 126. The hospital’s current FIM improvement score is 31.7 compared with a national score of 23.6.

Medical Behavioral Services patients are admitted with complex medical problems and medication management issues compounded by Alzheimer’s or dementia. The average length of stay in this program is 30 days.

Outpatient services include Alzheimer's & Memory Loss Care, Brain Injury Care, Capistrant Center for Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders, Concussion Clinic, Nutrition Services, Physical Medicine Services and Psychology Services.

Bethesda Hospital offers a wide range of therapies including a healing arts program, pet therapy and virtual therapy (also known as “Wii-hab”).

Operational Data for 2009

Staffed Beds: 142

Number of Employees: 704

Average Daily Census: 106

Patient Admissions: Respiratory (47%), Complex Medical (20%), Medical Behavioral (16%),
Brain Injury (14%)

Awards

National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Exemplary Psychiatrist: Awarded to Robert Sevenich,
MD, JD and Medical Director for brain injury services at Bethesda Hospital (2009)
Eleven Who Care: KARE-11 TV award to John Mastel, former patient, for his long-term volunteer contributions in stroke support (2009) and to Eleanor Jahnke for 75 years of employed and volunteer service (2008)
National Association of Long-Term Hospitals Goldberg Innovation Award: For integrated model of care (2007)

American Psychological Association: Best practices honor for BRAVOe, an employee engagement program (2007)
HealthCare Hero Award: Presented by Twin Cities Business magazine to John Mastel for his 25+ years as support group leader and creator of peer visitors program (2009)
Innovations in Healthcare Awards: Rahul Koranne, MD and Medical Director of Bethesda Hospital, served as physician lead on HealthEast’s Care Navigation Strategy to transform current health delivery system. Received designation from HealthPartners (2009) and Minnesota Hospital Association (2010)

Links

http://www.healtheast.org/bethesda.html
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK