
Volume 10 • Issue 3 • Summer 2006
St. John's-St. Francis Hospital celebrates
50 years of service
You
might call St. John’s-St. Francis Hospital in Mountain View “the little
hospital that could.” Despite a rocky beginning, the hospital celebrates
50 years of service to the residents of Howell County this year.
Operated with a partnership between the Daughters of St. Francis of Assisi
and St. John’s Health System since 1998, St. Francis will unveil a
multi-year renovation plan at a 50th anniversary celebration in the fall.
The hospital recently tore down an obstructive wall on the outside of the
hospital, and redecorated, recarpeted and repainted several areas to
update the hospital’s interior.
Sister M. Cornelia Blasko, DSF, one of eight Slovak nuns who came to
Mountain View in August 1956 to reopen the hospital, will also celebrate
her 50th year of ministry at St. Francis this fall.
“Sister Cornelia has been everything to this hospital,” says St. Francis
President Doug Trembath, who joined the hospital in March. “If it wasn’t
for her personally, and the Daughters of St. Francis of Assisi, this
hospital wouldn’t exist. In addition to scrubbing the floors, painting the
walls, cleaning and dusting, sterilizing equipment and all the other
things the sisters did to reopen this hospital, Sister Cornelia has served
as the hospital’s CEO, architect, strategic planner, foundation director
and now, as the mission director. She has lived and breathed St. Francis
Hospital for 50 years.”
Standing just over 5 feet tall and wearing the traditional habit and veil,
Sister Cornelia is a comforting reminder of the hospital’s faith-based
tradition. She is frequently called to the ER or to patient rooms to offer
prayer and comfort to patients and their families. She spends the rest of
her time orienting new employees to St. Francis and serving as the
hospital’s historian and on its board of directors.
When asked what she enjoys doing in her free time, she gives a quizzical
look, answering clearly, but with her accent still strong after 60 years
in the U.S., “I don’t spend much time away from hospital; I don’t go home
much, except to join the other sisters in evening prayer and recreation
and to sleep. There is no end to making things better for others,
especially in health care … that is my full schedule.”
A Daughter of St. Francis of Assisi since she was 14, Sister Cornelia came
to the U.S. in 1946, just after World War II ended. She attended the
College (now University) of St. Francis in Joliet, Ill., before she and
five other Daughters of St. Francis received their assignment to reopen a
tiny hospital in Mountain View, Missouri. Arriving by bus in the heat of
August, the sisters walked to the hospital, prayed and immediately set to
work. Two more sisters arrived to help later.
“For the first few weeks, we slept on the floor in the hospital,” Sister
Cornelia recalls, “and lived on very little food and apples from the apple
tree. We arrived in Mountain View with only $50. One day, a kind lady from
the town brought us a basket of food and we appreciated it very much.”
Just weeks later, the hospital reopened on Sept. 20, 1956 and began caring
for patients.
Over the years, all but one of the six founding sisters received new
assignments to serve elsewhere. Sister Cornelia stayed behind and
dedicated her life to the hospital and the community of Mountain View. She
didn’t return home to visit her native Slovakia for nearly 20 years.
“I’m very grateful and thankful to have been part of this hospital.
Whatever God has planned for me, I am doing. St. Francis Hospital has been
His plan for me all along,” Sister Cornelia says.
Now designated as a Critical Access Hospital, St. John’s-St. Francis is
licensed for 25 beds and focuses on meeting the primary care needs of
Howell County and surrounding communities.
Critical Access Hospitals are rural hospitals certified to receive
cost-based reimbursement from Medicare, to ensure Medicare recipients have
access to health care in rural areas. The reimbursement these hospitals
receive is intended to improve their financial performance and thereby
reduce hospital closures.
Critical Access Hospitals like St. Francis are allowed more flexible
staffing options, relative to community need; simplified billing methods;
and are awarded incentives to develop local integrated health delivery
systems, including acute, primary, emergency and long-term care.
“Our renovation plans include building an outpatient center and
redesigning the existing facility to focus on providing what we do best
and the most of, which is primary care and outpatient services. We want to
make St. Francis a model for how primary care is delivered,” Trembath
says.
St. John’s-St. Francis Hospital’s services include emergency care,
imaging, such as MRI, CT, ultrasound and mammography; cardiac and
pulmonary rehab, physical therapy, comprehensive lab work and other
diagnostic and therapeutic services.
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