
Volume 10 • Issue 3 • Summer 2006
St. John's Mercy Villa to undergo $2
million renovation
St. John’s Mercy Villa, a long-term care facility at 1100 E. Montclair in
Springfield, is undergoing a major remodeling project. St. John’s
Foundation for Community Health, through its Mercy Villa Care Fund, will
provide $500,000 to the nearly $2 million project, which is estimated to
take up to three years to complete.
The improvements include new windows, new floor and wall coverings and new
lighting for resident rooms, offices, dining room, activity room, therapy
room and entryway.
“With this renewal project we will be able to use state-of-the-art
technology to provide our residents with the highest level and quality of
care,” says Don Swafford, Mercy Villa administrator. “The resident rooms
are going to be more family-oriented, and improving the accessibility of
the lobby is going to make it easier for our residents and their
families.”
St. John’s Mercy Villa is a 150-bed long-term care facility with a 95
percent occupancy rate. It houses three nursing units, two dining areas, a
beauty shop, a landscaped courtyard and a chapel.
“Doctors and nurses work together to provide the best care for our
patients,” says W. Timothy Wilson, D.O., Mercy Villa medical director.
“As
part of St. John’s Health System, Mercy Villa residents have access to the
latest treatments, procedures, as well as a skilled, on-site nursing
staff.”
Osteoporosis drug raloxifene effective in preventing invasive breast
cancer
Initial results of the Study of Tamoxifen
and Raloxifene, or STAR, show that the drug raloxifene, currently used to
prevent and treat osteoporosis in postmenopausal women, works as well as
tamoxifen in reducing breast cancer risk for postmenopausal women at
increased risk of the disease. Cancer Research of the Ozarks, a joint
venture between St. John’s and Cox health systems, participated in the
clinical trial, which is of the largest breast cancer prevention trials
ever conducted.
Both drugs reduced the risk of developing invasive breast cancer by about
50 percent. In addition, within the study, women who were prospectively
and randomly assigned to take raloxifene daily, and who were followed for
an average of about four years, had 36 percent fewer uterine cancers and
29 percent fewer blood clots than the women who were assigned to take
tamoxifen.
Uterine cancers, especially endometrial cancers, are a rare but serious
side effect of tamoxifen. Both tamoxifen and raloxifene are known to
increase a woman's risk of clots.
“Although no drugs are without side effects, tamoxifen and raloxifene are
vital options for women who are at increased risk of breast cancer and
want to take action,” said Leslie Ford, M.D., associate director for
clinical research in the National Cancer Institute’s division of cancer
prevention. “For many women, raloxifene's benefits will outweigh its risks
in a way that tamoxifen's benefits do not.”
New sleep services offered in Rolla,
Springfield
St. John’s Clinic-Rolla now offers
pulmonology services from a board-certified pulmonologist/sleep disorders
specialist. Nikhat Salamat, M.D., treats asthma, emphysema, wheezing,
sleep apnea, insomnia, restless sleep, shortness of breath and frequent
lung infections such as pneumonia or bronchitis.
Dr. Salamat is a member of the American Thoracic Society, American Board
of Internal Medicine, the American Medical Association and the American
College of Chest Physicians.
St. John’s nationally accredited Sleep Disorders Center moved from the
first floor to a new space on the third floor of the emergency
trauma/outpatient imaging center on St. John’s hospital’s north side in
October 2005.
The new sleep facility has 10 rooms dedicated to sleep studies with
private bathrooms, showers and updated digital equipment, which allows
staff to do more from the observation rooms instead of having to enter the
patients’ rooms frequently.
Board-certified sleep disorders specialist and pulmonologist John Brabson,
M.D., is the medical director of the center. A second sleep disorders
specialist, Timothy Young, M.D., starts this summer.
“The best part of this new facility is it’s much quieter for the patients
and we can provide a more enhanced environment for sleep studies. The new
space has also doubled the size of our sleep clinic,” says Kristie Dover,
Sleep Disorders Center coordinator.
St. John's Life Line Receives
Accreditation
St. John's Life Line air medical service
has been fully accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Medical
Transport Systems (CAMTS). The service received full accreditation on the
first attempt, which only 35 percent of programs applying achieve. There
are approximately 110 programs internationally, out of 400, that are
accredited. St. John's Life Line Air Medical Service provides highly
skilled flight nurse/paramedic teams to care for adult, pediatric and
neonatal patients.
St. John's Clinic - Audiology offers new
hearing aid with sleek design, advanced technology
St. John’s Clinic - Audiology aims to change
the perception of hearing aids among the 50-plus age group.
With the help of a new, state-of-the-art digital hearing aid with a
groundbreaking new design, adults beginning to experience hearing loss
don’t have to give up on looking as young as they feel.
The new groundbreaking hearing device with sleek lines, hot colors and
brushed metallic surfaces appears to have more in common with modern
high-tech communication devices or fashion accessories than traditional
hearing aids. Called Oticon Delta, this hearing device combines
eye-catching contemporary design with the most advanced hearing aid
technology available today.
“This is not your grandfather's hearing aid,” says Shari Norval, AuD, CCC-A,
St. John’s Clinic audiologist. “For the first time, I can offer patients a
hearing device that meets the important image and style demands of people
in the 50s and 60s and provides the needed boost in listening clarity for
mild to moderate hearing loss.”
A fear that hearing aids will make them look older and out of step with
their active, busy lifestyle prevents many adults from taking advantage of
the extra edge provided by hearing amplification.
“Every second, a person over the age of 50 experiences loss of speech
clarity in noisy listening situations such as work, social gatherings and
crowded restaurants,” Norval says. “They may still hear well enough to get
by in less demanding situations but more and more, they will find that
they are understanding less of what is being said.”
Less invasive procedure reduces stroke risk in
carotid artery disease patients
St. John's Clinic cardiologist Robert Merritt, M.D., and colleagues Clyde
Redmond, M.D., and Matthew Burry, M.D. at St.
John's Hospital can now perform a less-invasive procedure to prevent the
risk of stroke in patients with carotid artery disease.
The therapy, called carotid artery stenting, has been studied extensively
and was approved for limited use by the FDA and insurers in March of 2005.
The procedure is considered an equally effective treatment for patients
compared to carotid artery surgery, while lowering the risk for adverse
outcomes in patients considered high-risk for the surgical approach.
This method allows a stent to be placed in the artery by using an X-ray
machine and a catheter device. The patient is usually in the hospital less
than 24 hours and has no surgical wound.
“It is safer than traditional surgery for high-risk patients,” says Dr.
Merritt.
Recently, Medicare and insurers have allowed expanded use of the stent
device to include patients without symptoms of stroke who have severe
blockage.
St. John's is able to offer the procedure by participating in a clinical
trial that tracks patients for one year following the procedure.
People with at least an 80 percent blockage and are considered high-risk
for the traditional surgery are candidates for this procedure.
“This is a new option for patients, especially those that may be
considered too high-risk for the open surgery and therefore would be
excluded from the stroke prevention benefits of carotid artery treatment,”
Dr. Merritt says. |