Memorial Medical Milestones Summer 2015

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memorial

Medical Milestones Summer 2015

Wheelchair to

WALKING Page 10

Critical Care Transport Page 4

Pain Pump Page 8

Physician Spotlight Page 12


To our community GROWING THE MEMORIAL MEDICAL GROUP More Doctors, More Specialties is more than just a slogan we use to promote the doctors of the Memorial Medical Group. It is a mission for us at Lake Charles Memorial to bring the physicians and specialties you need home to Southwest Louisiana. This summer marks an exciting time and big growth for the Memorial Medical Group, with the addition of several doctors and new specialties.

At the end of this

We have recently added Nephrologist Dr. William Gabbard and Family Medicine Specialist and LSUHSC Faculty Dr. Brian Gamborg. Both doctors are now seeing patients and you can learn more about them on page 18 of this publication.

round of additions, the Memorial Medical Group

Later this summer, we will welcome Internal Medicine Physician Dr. Jason Langhofer, Gastroenterologist Dr. Sarpreet Singh Basra and Ear, Nose and Throat specialist Dr. Hope Beuller.

will be composed of more than 90 physicians across 18 specialties - all

New specialties will be added with the addition of Neurologist Dr. Murali Bogavall, Trauma Surgeon Dr. Maria Escano and Rheumatologist Dr. Gurjot Kaur Basra.

of them conveniently located to bring you the

Two anesthesiologists, Dr. Lem Newton and Dr. Derrick Umphlett, will also be joining the group and will serve patients at Lake Charles Memorial Hospital for Women.

care you need.

At the end of this round of additions, the Memorial Medical Group will be composed of more than 90 physicians across 18 specialties ~ all of them conveniently located to bring you the care you need. The search for more doctors to better serve you is not over.

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memorial

Medical Milestones Page 4

Innovations 4 Critical Care Transport for Babies

A Look from Within

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A New Lung Cancer Diagnostic Procedure

Pain Pump 8 Nerve Block Use for Post Surgery Pain

Cover Story

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Rare Injury Takes Man from Wheelchair to Walking

Physician Spotlight 12

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Paul Ralidis, DO: ER Doctor & Herpetololgist

Advanced Heart Treatment

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New Drug Coated Balloon Now Available

Coming Events 16 Education Classes and Support Groups

More Doctors, More Specialties 18 Memorial Medical Group Additions

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On the Cover Kevin Delahoussaye works out in the Memorial rehab gym. Page 19 3

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Airborne速 Voyager Transport Incubator

Members of the Special Care Nursery transport team with the new Airborne速 Voyager Transport Incubator

Innovations

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~ Critical Care Transport for Babies The Voyager is the most versatile and advanced transport incubator on the market today. Lake Charles Memorial Hospital for Women recently upgraded care standards for babies in need of critical care. The hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), otherwise known as the Special Care Nursery, recently received a new Airborne® Voyager Transport Incubator. The Voyager is the most versatile and advanced transport incubator on the market today. The system provides a portable heated environment, state-of-the-art ventilatory care, and cardiac monitoring which allows the transport team to provide care to the most fragile infants during transport. The state-of-art flexible platform is user friendly for the transport team, and medical staff can load and unload the transport incubator easily, while providing the best care for even the tiniest of patients.

Lake Charles Memorial Hospital for Women

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NEW DIAGNOSTICS in the fight against lung cancer

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Endobronchial ultrasound allows a technique known as transbronchial needle aspiration to obtain tissue or fluid samples from the lungs and surrounding lymph nodes without conventional surgery.

Dr. Clifford Courville A new procedure is now available at Lake Charles Memorial that allows doctors to diagnose lung cancer, infections and other inflammatory diseases of the chest quicker and more accurately.

The traditional way to sample those lymph nodes in the chest would be minimally invasive surgery, which may require a couple of days in the hospital. EBUS is done outpatient, with moderate sedation and only takes about 30 minutes.

Endobronchial ultrasound or EBUS allows a technique known as transbronchial needle aspiration (TBNA) to obtain tissue or fluid samples from the lungs and surrounding lymph nodes without conventional surgery. The samples are then used for diagnosing and staging lung cancer, detecting infections, and identifying inflammatory diseases that affect the lungs, such as sarcoidosis, tuberculosis or other cancers like lymphoma. This diagnosis will allow for quicker and more accurate treatment.

“Staging the cancer accurately and quickly will allow us to possibly rule out lymph node involvement, which means the patient can have the cancer removed surgically,” Dr. Courville says. “It’s very important to know whether the lung cancer can be cut out. If no lymph nodes are involved and it is staged lower, patients can have surgery and that is the best way to cure lung cancer. On the other hand, if the cancer is staged higher and is more advanced, it can’t be cured by a surgery and patients are spared going through an operation and can instead start chemotherapy.”

“With the advent of our lung cancer screening programs, we are finding cancers earlier,” says Dr. Clifford Courville, a pulmonologist with Memorial Medical Group’s Pulmonary Associates. “When we do find them earlier, we want to stage them through the least invasive means possible.”

Dr. Courville is the first in Lake Charles to use this technique. He trained in EBUS for three years at UAB Medical Center and began using it in Lake Charles in March. Previously, patients had to travel to Lafayette or Houston for this procedure. Now they can stay at home at Lake Charles Memorial.

A scope is inserted through the mouth and the real-time image-guided technology allows Dr. Courville to have pinpoint accuracy in obtaining a biopsy from the targeted area. The technique allows access to areas of the chest where it is traditionally difficult to biopsy.

For more information contact, Memorial Medical Group’s Pulmonary Associates at 337.494.2750.

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Managing PostSurgical Pain with Regional Nerve-Block

Thomas Axelrad, MD, PhD

ON-Q Pain Relief System uses a local anesthetic to manage pain for up to five days after surgery. 8

Brett Cascio, MD


Nathan Cohen, MD

Robert Duarte, MD

Paul Fenn, MD

Lawrence Weber, MD, PhD

When coming to Lake Charles Memorial for orthopaedic surgery, most patients are focused on what will take place in the operating room and give less thought to what happens immediately afterward.

While the patient is in the recovery room, the anesthesiologist inserts a specially designed catheter near the surgical site or in close proximity to the nerve in connection with the surgical procedure.

The healing that begins in the hours and days following surgery is an important step on the road to recovery. The ability to carefully and effectively manage pain after an operation can reduce a patient’s hospital stay and get them back to normal activities more quickly.

The catheter is connected to a small, balloon-like pump that delivers a slow, steady flow of a local anesthetic and blocks the pain at the source. The lightweight pump is worn in a small pouch over the patient’s shoulder. The pump is disposable. Typically, narcotics are prescribed to help manage pain after surgery, but they can sometimes make patients feel dizzy, constipated or nauseated. There is also the risk of dependence and addiction.

Awaking after surgery, patients may experience pain around the surgical site. If post-operative pain is ineffectively managed it could potentially lead, in the long term, to poor wound healing, insomnia, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism or other conditions.

The pain relief pump is clinically proven to manage postoperative pain better than narcotics alone, with fewer side effects.

In addition, post-op pain may be a risk factor for the development of chronic pain. Preventing and/or relieving post-op pain may help avoid these complications and improve a patient’s quality of life.

Patients with ON-Q also recover faster after surgery than when treated with narcotics alone. On average, our patients treated with the pain relief pump go home from the hospital a full day sooner than when treated with narcotics alone.

While post-surgical pain is not uncommon – 70 percent of the people who undergo surgical procedures each year may experience pain after surgery – it is treatable.

By offering innovative treatment solutions, such as the ON-Q pain relief pump, Memorial aims to make the recovery process easier and less painful for our surgical patients, and help them return to regular activities more quickly.

One of the new options available at Memorial through the team of orthopaedic surgeons Drs. Thomas Axelrad, Brett Cascio, Nathan Cohen, Robert Duarte, Paul Fenn and Lawrence Weber, is to treat post-surgical pain with a nonnarcotic portable pain relief pump, called the ON-Q Pain Relief System. ON-Q uses a local anesthetic to manage pain for up to five days after surgery.

For more information contact, Memorial Medical Group’s Orthopaedic Specialists at 337.494.4900.

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Cover Story

Wheelchair to

WALKING

It was last summer when Kevin Delahoussaye got off of work a little early and was at home getting cleaned up before heading to the bowling alley for a couple of hours with his favorite pastime. That is when his life changed – rapidly. “Right before leaving the house I felt a pain in my back. It felt like my back muscles were on fire almost. It was real hot. The problem was, it wouldn’t go away,” Kevin recalls. “I tried to lie down, couldn’t get comfortable. I called my parents to take me to an urgent care, but halfway there I ended up losing feeling in my legs.” Kevin was suffering from an aneurism in one of the arteries that feeds the spinal cord, basically a stroke in his back instead of his brain. He would lose all mobility and feeling from the waist down. At the young age of 39-years-old, Kevin was one of only a handful of people in the country who would suffer from this condition. “This does happen as you get older into your 80s and so on and it can happen in relation with other diseases,” says Nick Cronan, DPT (doctor of physical therapy) at Lake Charles Memorial. “The rarity in his case was that he was young, there were no pre-disposing factors and no injuries. Nothing could have predicted this.” After a barrage of tests, Kevin would have surgery and close to 36 hours later, he began to regain feeling in his legs, yet the road to recovery was far from over. In June of 2014, he wheeled himself into Memorial’s outpatient physical therapy with no real expectations of how long it would take or if he would ever walk again. However, Kevin was determined to get better. Nick started him on traditional strength training of his legs and trunk muscles. As he got stronger, he moved on to balance and learning how to walk again, then to more dynamic exercises to gain stability and coordination. Over the course of almost a year, he would progress from a wheelchair to a walker to walking with a cane. By February of this year, he was able to drive himself to therapy.

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NEW LOCATION: Outpatient Rehab 3212 2nd Avenue Lake Charles LA 70601 Phone: (337) 494-2556 Fax: (337) 494-2698


Dr. Nick Cronan and Kevin Delahoussaye

“I looked forward to coming to therapy,” Kevin says. “There may be some people who see therapy almost like a punishment. I was able to find things I could do in a wheelchair, I was then able to do different exercises with the walker and now with just a cane. If you stay active and you don’t get down on yourself and don’t look for a reason to not get better, you find a reason to get better.” Whatever physical state he was in, Kevin was determined to be independent, working to gain back what he had once lost, making no excuses for what could not be done. “His attitude was a major reason why he got so much better, Cronan says. “He went into his therapy working hard, but also doing it positively. When he was in a wheelchair, he worked to be independent even though he was in a wheelchair. When he got out of the chair, he worked to be independent outside of it. He didn’t want to depend on anyone else. He never let his injury slow him down in his normal everyday activities. He got better because he believed he could and worked hard at it.” For more information on outpatient physical therapy services, call (337) 494-2556.

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Physician Spotlight Phillip Ralidis, DO ER Doctor and Herpetologist

BLACK HEADED PYTHON

“I started out at the ripe old age of seven.....I found my first salamander and that was it.”

WATER MONITOR

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SINALOAN MILK SNAKE

Out back at a friend’s house is a custom building completely devoted to their work with various species of reptiles. It is here where they research and breed some of the more rare, specialty snakes and lizards, including Gila monsters and eastern indigo snakes. The care in this reptile house is state-of-the-art and far exceeds a typical backyard hobby. Each animal has its own habitat, complete with an electronically controlled climate where the animal has a warm spot on one end and a cooler spot on the other. All of the animals were purchased from captive born animals that come with the appropriate paper work. He does not capture animals from the wild or work with venomous snakes.

Dr. Philip Ralidis has a job few would like to maintain, but one he embraces by running the night shift at the Lake Charles Memorial Emergency Department.

Dr. Ralidis is not a commercial breeder. His projects were never intended to be work, but something he greatly enjoys.

It is a timeslot he prefers and has been steadily working for the past nine years.

Herpetology is also an interest that has taken him into the academic circle. He is self-educated in the field of study, but is also a published researcher on some species, on snake bites and has presented his findings at various conferences.

His hobby is also one that most people would shy away from or even prefer to completely avoid. Herpetology – the study of amphibians and reptiles.

“I want to help people to enjoy nature, appreciate it and not be fearful or at odds with it, which is one of the big problems we face in the world today,” Dr. Ralidis says. “Our society and culture is often times at odds with the natural world. Living with nature is, I think, a skill set and mind set that our society is gradually, slowly losing.”

“I started out at the ripe old age of seven. I was living in a very rural part of Long Island, New York and I found my first salamander and that was it,” Dr. Ralidis recalls. “I was collecting reptiles and amphibians all along the east coast and west coast and all over the place.” Dr. Ralidis grew up in Long Island, went to medical school in California and completed his residency at Charity Hospital in New Orleans. After an extended stay in neighboring Texas, his family moved to Louisiana, where his wife was born and raised. Along the way he has interacted, observed, cataloged and enjoyed more than 100 species of amphibians and reptiles. It is his release from the stressful work that comes with serving as an emergency physician. “I have gone all throughout the country and parts of Mexico to (herping) look for reptiles and amphibians. It’s like being a birder. When you spot them, you check it off the list. I’ve got most of the country’s snakes and amphibians under my belt, but not all of them.”

CARPET PYTHON

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BREAKTHROUGH TREATMENT FOR PERIPHERAL ARTERY DISEASE

IN.PACT Admiral drug-coated balloon from Medtronic

PAD is a debilitating disease that occurs when leg arteries become narrowed or blocked by plaque build-up, restricting blood flow.

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Lake Charles Memorial now offers a new minimally-invasive treatment for patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) in the upper leg, a debilitating condition associated with a dramatic increase in risk for heart attack and stroke. Pioneering the new device is Memorial Medical Group Cardiologist, Dr. Peter Angelopoulos, who successfully performed the first procedure at Memorial using the IN.PACT Admiral drug-coated balloon from Medtronic. Recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), drugcoated balloons are a breakthrough medical device for the treatment of PAD in the upper leg, which can occur when arteries in the thigh and behind the knee become narrowed or blocked from a build-up of plaque inside the artery walls. “The device is designed to restore blood flow by reopening the blocked arteries and delivering a medication to the artery wall that clinical studies have shown helps keep the artery open longer than other available treatments,” Dr. Angelopoulos says. PAD commonly affects arteries in the upper legs and can cause recurrent and painful muscle cramping in the thigh and/or upper calf. The pain can be described as dull, causing a heaviness or tightness in the muscles, but often will stop when the person is at rest. Experiencing pain, even while at rest or while sleeping, is a sign of a more severe disease. If not properly treated, PAD can lead to life-threatening complications, and is associated with a four to five times higher risk for heart attack or stroke. “What many people don’t realize is that PAD in the legs is often connected to health conditions in other parts of the body, especially in the heart,” Dr. Angelopoulos says. “With drug-coated balloons, we now have a way to more effectively treat PAD. We are excited that Memorial is now able to offer this new PAD therapy.” Dr. Angelopolous expects the device will change the way PAD is treated as clinical trials have shown treatment with the IN.PACT Admiral drug-coated balloon greatly reduces the need to have a repeat procedure within the next year, which is more common with other types of interventional procedures for PAD.

Dr. Peter Angelopoulos

“With drug-coated balloons, we now have a way to more effectively treat PAD. We are excited that hospitals in the U.S. are now able to offer this new PAD therapy”

For more information, contact Memorial Medical Group’s Heart & Vascular Center at 337.494.3278.

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Support Groups LIFE, HOPE, COURAGE

LOOK GOOD, FEEL BETTER

Cancer Support Group For those cancer patients who are newly

Looking good can often be an important step toward feeling good - especially for women who

diagnosed, undergoing treatment, or who have

are fighting the cancer battle. With that in mind,

completed treatment. For more information call

Memorial and the American Cancer Society

Ashley Rene, LMSW, (337) 494-4644. Second Wednesday of each month

are offering women struggling with cancer - the diagnosis, treatment and concerns about their

Café Bon Vie – Memorial Hospital Cafeteria

appearance - a chance to Look Good...Feel Better.

11:45 am - 1pm

For more information, call (337) 433-5817. Fourth Monday of every other month

DESIGNER GENES

Shearman Conference Room

A support group by and for the parents of

Noon - 2:00pm

children with genetic disorders. Located at Memorial Hospital for Women, 1900 W. Gauthier Road. For more information, call the group’s

SARCOIDOSIS SUPPORT GROUP A group for people in our area dealing with this

founders, Ashleigh Hornsby (337) 853-7657 or Jessi James (337) 563-1178.

incurable disease, to come together to share their stories, health tips and support. For more

Second Saturday of each month Memorial for Women • Noon

information, call Sabrina Sonnier at (337) 8425939.

DIABETES SUPPORT GROUP

Third Tuesday of each month Shearman Conference Room

Don’t underestimate the importance of education and peer support when living with diabetes. Located at Memorial’s Diabetes Education Office,

6pm - 7pm

2804 2nd Avenue. For more information, call Memorial’s Diabetes Education at (337) 494-6425.

A breastfeeding group, La Leche League offers a series of meetings consisting of four classes that

First Tuesday of each month Diabetes Education Office • 10am – 11am

are helpful for pregnant moms and moms who are already nursing. Meetings are free and open to mothers and babies. First Thursday of each month Memorial for Women Education Room 2 10am – 11:30am

LA LECHE LEAGUE

SISTERS SURVIVING A breast cancer support group for AfricanAmerican women, but open to any woman regardless of race. For more information, call (337) 433-5817. Third Tuesday of each month MOB II Conference Room • 6pm

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Prenatal and Family Education Classes Registration is required for all classes. For more information or to register, call 480-7243. All classes are held in the education rooms at Memorial for Women, 1900 W. Gauthier Road. Tours are available after all prenatal classes and at 1:30pm on the first Thursday of each month. PREPARED CHILDBIRTH CLASS 4-WEEK SERIES

SIBLING CLASS

This class is highly recommended for its hands-on, and often fun, approach to dealing with labor, delivery and recovery.

This class is recommended during the last three months of pregnancy. Preparing siblings for the arrival of a new baby

Birth preparation is discussed regarding natural delivery,

can be as confusing as it is joyous. This class focuses on

birth with an epidural and cesarean birth. Bring your pillows,

the unity of the family. Older siblings ages 2-10 are asked

your questions and don’t forget to breathe. Recommended during the last three months of pregnancy. July 1, 8, 15, 22, 2015

to attend with one or both parents. The children will have hands-on practice with dolls to learn how to interact with a new baby. Parents will receive informative guidelines and

September 2, 9, 16, 23, 2015 6pm – 8pm • $40/Couple

everyone will tour the mother/baby unit. August 6, 2015 November 2, 2015 September 21, 2015 December 2, 2015

ONE DAY PREPARED CHILDBIRTH CLASS

6pm – 7pm • $10/Family

Learn comfort, relaxation, positioning, breathing, and massage techniques for increasing the comfort level and enhancing the birth experience during this condensed

BABY CARE CLASS The Baby Care Class reviews newborn characteristics, general baby care, early parenting issues and community

version of the Prepared Childbirth Series. Recommended for the last 3 months of pregnancy.

resources. Recommended during the last 3 months of

August 22, 2015 October 17, 2015

pregnancy. August 3, 2015 September 14, 2015

November 14, 2015 9am – 4pm • $40/Couple

October 26, 2015 November 30, 2015

6pm – 8pm • $10/Couple

BREASTFEEDING CLASS Learn positioning, latch-on, early feedings and the importance of assessing baby’s intake during the Breastfeeding Class. Recommended during the last 3 months of pregnancy. July 9, 2015 October 15, 2015 August 20, 2015 November 12, 2015 September 10, 2015 December 10, 2015

INFANT AND CHILD CPR CLASS FOR FAMILY AND FRIENDS Learn and practice rescue for choking and CPR for infants. This is NOT a certifying or credentialing course, but is recommended for expectant parents, new parents and support persons. August 4, 2015 October 19, 2015 November 16, 2015 6pm – 8:15pm • $10/Person

6pm – 8:30pm • $10/Couple

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More Doctors, More Specialties M EMOR IAL M EDICAL G ROU P WI LLIAM GAB BAR D, M D • N EPH ROLOG IST William Gabbard, MD is a fellowship-trained nephrologist with the Memorial Medical Group. Dr. Gabbard graduated from the University of Tennessee College of Medicine in Memphis. He went on to complete his internal medicine internship and residency at the University of Tennessee Medical Center in Knoxville before obtaining a nephrology fellowship from Ochsner Clinic Foundation/LSU College of Medicine in New Orleans, where he also served as an associate professor in the Department of Nephrology. In 2010, Dr. Gabbard received interventional nephrology training from Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. He has been ranked in the top 15th percentile for national patient satisfaction by Press Ganey. Dr. Gabbard is a member of the American Board of Internal Medicine, through which he is also board certified in nephrology. He treats patients for a variety of conditions affecting the kidneys, including chronic kidney disease, renal failure and dialysis, kidney stones, and vascular and tubular disorders of the kidney. His office is located at 2770 3rd Avenue, Suite 345 in Lake Charles. For more information, call 337-494-6747.

B R IAN GAM BORG, M D • FAM I LY M EDIC I N E & LS U HSC FAC U LTY Brian Gamborg, MD is a family medicine physician with the Memorial Medical Group and part of the Memorial/LSUHSC Family Medicine Clinic. He is a diplomat and board certified by the American Board of Family Medicine and is a fellow of the American Academy of Family Medicine. In addition to treating patients of all ages, Dr. Gamborg serves on the full-time faculty of the Memorial/LSUHSC Family Medicine Residency Program with fellow faculty Dr. Bryan Barootes, Dr. Caroline Courville, Dr. Alan LeBato, Dr. Bradley Loewer, Dr. Danette Null, Dr. Tuananh Pham and Dr. E.J. Soileau. A former Olympian, Dr. Gamborg received his medical degree from the University of Saskatchewan and completed his family medicine residency at Regina General Hospital. Prior to joining Memorial Medical Group, he had a private family medicine practice in Sulphur, LA. He has over 25 years experience in caring for patients in both clinical and hospital settings. Dr. Gamborg welcomes new patients at his office Monday through Friday, located at 1525 Oak Park Boulevard. Most insurances are accepted and appointments can be made by calling 337.494.6767.

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Letters To the e n

tire staff

at Lake

Charles Memoria Thank y l Hospita ou, than l for Wo k you, th birth of m men: ank you y baby g for the e irl. xcellent care you From the gave to m me durin o m e n who gre t I g the a rr ived at th eted me e hospit in the we a l, about de e hours I felt welc that morn livery da omed an y. ing were d that th ju e nurses s t as excite d as me Nurse C and my arrie ma husband my favo de sure rite morn I was co mfortable ing show , 7News and eve Sunrise! n had th Patience e TV in th w a e room s s s h Katie, C o w n et to b y all of the heryl, Le ah, Tricia n u rs e s w every ne , Brittany ho worke w mom q , Leah, P d with u uestion I aige, an s – Carrie d h , Amberl a C d ri s a tina. Th nd giving y, ank you The nurs me unlim fo e r ited pop anestheti a n s w e free as I ring sicles. sts did e desired! verythin Thank y g in th ou, Jerem eir powe r to mak y and Ho Nurses A e the de b e n . m Y livery as o b u e r rl ro y precious les were and Kati paine were b very imp Lila Rose y o . rt my side They en a n t! stressful as Dr. Da courage process. d me an vid Darb Dr. Darb d onne de e m p o onne rejo wered m livered o e throug iced righ ur The first h t w a lo h a n n t g ig can be a with us w ht in the Lila into scary, hen we h hospital my room was mad eard tha from the t e fi s rs o with a b t cry. special b nursery ow on Lil after the y Nurse a to kee Leah, wh rush of th know sh p her wa o brough e day. S e could rm and w t he put th sense th hen she e c u e flood o me what te h s a t n k d n e it d her to f emotio cap a sweet me, my h ns I was baby I h feeling a eart melt ad . nd she s ed! I The lacta at there with me, tion con feed Lila sultant, M telling and eve arta Ben n gave m glis, help When th e her cell p ed me fr at day c om day hone nu ame, she one with m b e r took the if n o I t h learning o a n d ly any prob time to a guided m to lems onc sk how L e throug il e a was do h the pro I got hom ing and cess on e. When th the phon how we e time ca w e e , re b support u a t m djusting also e to leav from all to our ne e the ho of the sta w lives. spital, I fe wishes, a ff at the lt an ove nd wave nurses sta rwhelmin d goodb tion. Th g amoun y e e y cooed as we pa t of over Lila rted way Every M , gave us s. emorial well nurse an employe esthetists e who ca m , fo e od servic into my conversa room, fro e workers tion, a sm m the nu , a n d il e c , le and kind rses, to th aning cre life. words on e doctors w, took th what be , e ti m e to sha came th re a e most s p Thank y ecial da ou for go ys in my tremend ing the e family’s ous life e x tr a m ile to see vent, not us as a fa just pati ents in a mily exp eriencing h o s pital. All the b a est, Britney G laser

Britney & Lila Rose

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1701 Oak Park Blvd. Lake Charles, LA 70601

Memorial Medical Milestones Kathy DeRouen Senior Vice President of Marketing Matt Felder Communications Manager This is a publication from Lake Charles Memorial Hospital. The information in this newsletter is intended to inform patients and potential patients about subjects pertinent to their care not as medical education. © 2015 Printed in U.S.A.

ve! r u

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