Archive for the ‘Employees’ Category

Cardiovascular scholarship recipients announced

Posted on June 25th, 2010 | No Comments »

We are proud to announce the recipients of the 2010 Ken Stanley Endowment Scholarship for Cardiovascular Care.

This endowment funds scholarships valued at more than $6,000 and awarded to four Community Health Network employees who are seeking health care degrees with the intent to excel in the field of cardiovascular care. It was established in 2005 from contributions from generous donors who gave in memory of Ken Stanley, M.D., in honor of his medical career and dedication to cardiovascular care. 

Applications were reviewed by a committee of Dr. Stanley’s colleagues, leaders within Community Heart and Vascular and Human Resources personnel.

This year’s scholarship recipients are:

  • Amy Ambs, ES, an exercise specialist in Cardiac Rehab at The Indiana Heart Hospital who will begin course studies in the accelerated BSN program at Indiana Wesleyan University
  • Angela Foley, RN, BSN, an ICU practice facilitator in the Surgical Intensive Care Unit at The Indiana Heart Hospital who is preparing for her MSN at Indiana University
  • Launa Goodman, RN, the director of case management and cardiovascular data at The Indiana Heart Hospital who is studying for her BSN at Indiana University Kokomo
  • Rachel Newkirk, a patient support partner at The Indiana Heart Hospital who is earning a BSN degree at St. Mary’s College 

Employee Campaign exceeds goal, raises $417,000!

Posted on June 8th, 2010 | No Comments »

I’m thrilled to share with you some exciting news! With the support of 780 generous employees, we exceeded our Employee Campaign goal and raised more than $417,000 that will be used to fund important efforts to put patients first and to invest in our employees. Thank you.

You gave because you care and your gifts are investments made to fulfill our network mission. These gifts will support various patient care programs and will fund medical scholarships and education for our employees. And, they will provide support to employees in their most difficult time of need.

While we celebrate the generosity of our employee donors, I know the work is not yet done. Now, more than ever, our patients and employees need the support only our donors can provide.

Here are some ways you can help:
• Celebrate a co-worker’s success with a tribute gift.
• Make a memorial donation in honor of a loved one.
Contact us to learn more about how you can include Community Health Network Foundation in your will and for complimentary planned giving consultation.
• Encourage your family, friends and colleagues to learn more about the impacts our donors are making by sending them to eCommunity.org.

If you were not able to contribute during the Employee Campaign, I invite you to consider Community Health Network Foundation as a future charitable option. You can make a donation anytime, and for any reason, by visiting eCommunity.org or calling us at 355-GIVE. Your support will make an impact and will be greatly appreciated.

I started my new role with the foundation just 60 days ago and I am so inspired by the generosity of our employee donors. I am sincerely grateful for every gift and for every donor who joined our growing network of employee support. I look forward to working with all of you and hope you contact me with any questions or opportunities you may have.

Best wishes,

Michele Thomas Dole, M.S., CFP®
President and CEO, Community Health Network Foundation

Touched by an angel

Posted on June 3rd, 2010 | No Comments »

Anyone who knows Anita Harden knows what it is like to be touched by an angel.

For 35 years, she’s served Community Health Network patients with respect, compassion and a loving heart. As a behavioral health nurse and business leader, she helped build Community’s behavioral care program and become an advocate for mentally-ill patients in central Indiana.

Anita is a true friend to our foundation and has been a generous donor and philanthropic leader for many years, including her recent committment to serve as our interim President and CEO that ended in April. But, with news she shared today, we were again touched by an angel.

During a ribbon-cutting ceremony this morning to celebrate the completed renovation of the new Behavioral Health Pavilion, located on the Community North Campus, Anita announced she has made a $60,000 gift to Community Health Network Foundation to establish an endowment to benefit mentally-ill patients in central Indiana.

Her generous gift will establish the Anita J. Harden Endowment to Benefit the Seriously and Persistently Mentally Ill and will be used to provide education, training and necessities needed to improve the quality of life for central Indiana patients diagnosed with serious and persistent mental illness. These programs and services, not normally covered by insurance or publicly-funded sources, will attempt to prevent hospitalization and support the patients’ on-going daily living needs.

“My donation is an investment in creating a way for these patients to live with respect and be treated with compassion as we help them mange their lives,” she said. “This is my opportunity to ensure the patients I love, so many times called the ‘lost population,’ will be cared for in perpetuity.”

Anita is working with us to raise more funds for this endowment and if you are interested in making a gift to support her commitment to these patients, please click here.

Thank you, Anita, for being an angel to so many.

Read the entire press release>>

I give because…

Posted on May 24th, 2010 | No Comments »

As we approach the June 2nd close to our annual Employee Campaign, we continue to be touched by the tremendous support our employees are offering to raise money to put patients first and support employees. Many donors are sharing why it is important for them to contribute and we want to pass along some of their inspirational comments.

Here are some reasons donors are giving because they care:

“During the last few months of my husband’s life, we were offered a trip funded by the foundation’s Dale Fleming Fund. Although (my husband) passed away before we were able to take this trip, I am forever grateful for the generosity.”

“I’m doing my part to make our community better.”

“I want to ensure the staff and patients have what they need to give exceptional care and have an exceptional experience.”

“Community is my family.”

“I believe in the mission of the foundation and have employees who have received loans and gifts to further education, pay bills, stop eviction and get a vehicle repaired.”

“I have received tuition reimbursement and assistance from the HELP fund through the foundation. I hope I can help others in need.”

“It’s important to give back, to support the programs the foundation supports.”

“I’m paying it forward!”

“Because it is the right thing to do.”

“Because I want to help those who need it.”

“Because the network has been good to me and my family.”

“I believe in this hospital and the care we provide to our patients and community. I love the place I work and feel good about what we do!”

“I have been helped before and wish to do my part in helping when I can.”

“Community was there for me in a time of need and this is my way of giving back.”

“It’s always good to help those in need and it makes me feel good.”

Why do give? Please share why you give, and why you care.

Donations can be made at eCommunity.org.

Meet Michele, our new president and CEO

Posted on April 23rd, 2010 | 1 Comment »

MichelleTDoleseries2_2_4545850E

Michele Thomas Dole is the new president and CEO of the Community Health Network Foundation. She brings several years of philanthropic experience to this role, most recently serving as a vice president with JP Morgan since 2004. Originally from Columbus, Indiana, Michele currently resides in Fishers with her husband of three years, Robert Dole. Of her local heritage, she says, “My family has been in Indiana for generations, and I’m really proud to be a Hoosier. This is home to me.” Read on to learn more about her deep commitment to philanthropy, as well as her vision for the Community Health Network Foundation.

How do you like to spend your free time? Do you have any hobbies or belong to any organizations?
Volunteering is something I’m really passionate about. I spend my time with the Girl Scouts of the USA, as well as my church, the First Baptist Church of Indianapolis, quite a bit. I help with stewardship mostly, fund raising and working on the finance committee. I have also spent the past three years on the Indiana Pacers Foundation grant committee.

As for hobbies, I play tennis every week, I am a gardener, and my husband and I love to travel. The most recent trip we took was to Aruba. We try to visit a tropical place every year, but we really enjoy our local travels as well. Last year, we went to Nashville, Tennessee for our anniversary.

We also really enjoy spending time with family and friends. We don’t come from big families, but Robert and I have a lot of lifelong friends, and that is something we really cherish.

With your new role at the foundation, what can people in the network expect from your leadership style?
I believe in very open communication. I really expect people to give us feedback for areas of improvement and if we can improve something. Everyone is a stakeholder in that, and they need to make sure that we know those things, so we can help elevate the network.

I also try to help people use the talents they already have and grow upon the things that they want to improve on. I try to get people to get where they want to be. Overall, and probably most importantly, I have a real passion for philanthropy and have spent most of my career in one way or the other involved in philanthropy. That tends to pervade everything that I do.

What is your personal vision for the foundation?
We need to elevate the culture of philanthropy and focus on our fundraising capacity. We have a very deserving mission. One of the things that has become very clear to me is that we serve people in their health care from birth through hospice, and we do it very well and we do it every day. I really want us to focus on using those resources that we already have and elevate that in such a way that it also helps us bring more resources to the foundation, so that we can continue to provide access, provide convenience and make sure more people receive good care in central Indiana.

Among the goals of our strategic plan, one key initiative will be optimizing the foundation’s ability to generate capital. What can we expect to see in how you anticipate this playing out in the future?
I think it’s having the discipline to really focus on core fund raising activity and likewise making sure, on the stewardship side, that we are stewarding our donors well. It is vital that we are, in fact, our mission in action; that we do deliver on our promises. It’s coming in every day with a focus and with a discipline around our activity. It’s my belief that with the network’s strategic plan and the foundation embarking on its own, together, that will bring more clarity to us and those who work with the foundation.

Considering Community’s stance on health care reform, specifically in supplying affordable access to all, what do you see as the foundation’s role in accomplishing this?
We can leverage things that we’ve already done and done well, like the Jane Pauley Community Health Center. If we are able to look to the center as an example of something to evaluate and transfer to other parts of central Indiana, that’s incredible. Not to mention that the Pauley center was such a nice example of integration and partnership, not just Community doing the work alone, but it was us partnering with other outside resources, like the Warren Township schools. Those are things that I think people expect of us. People expect us to be resourceful, they expect us to partner, to not duplicate efforts, and that’s part of our stewardship responsibility and accountability to donors as well.

How can the foundation partner with the network to achieve these strategic goals, and how can employees help?
We, at the foundation, need to be told the great “mission moments” that happen every day throughout the network. How someone’s family was personally affected, how we saved someone’s life, how we changed someone’s life. Since we aren’t in the halls of our hospitals every day, we don’t get to see these things firsthand, but those are the stories and experiences that we transfer and transition in such a way that it helps us be better fund raisers. Many times, those moments are celebrated at the nurses’ station or in a meeting of the physicians, but they’re not always told to us in such a way to really help amplify the story, and those are the things that we really look to. Those grateful patient experiences, to me, are key.

Naturally, we also look to and hope that our employees will participate with their own personal gifts and encourage others out in the community to do likewise.

On the network level, what we at the foundation aim to do, and this is a very clear conviction that I have, is to walk step-in-step with the network. We are not an island. We are here to support the network, to be an integral part of it and to be playing from the same playbook. That, in my mind, as we make decisions at the foundation, will be one of the key gold standards: Does this support the network? Does this run in parallel to what the network, strategically, is trying to accomplish?

Employees give donations and dance for Haiti relief funds

Posted on February 25th, 2010 | No Comments »

Community Health Network employees continue to raise funds for the earthquake relief efforts in Haiti, donating money through the Community Health Network Foundation.  The latest effort came in the form of robust dancing, dubbed “Zumba 4 Haiti,” as employees performed the Zumba at BodyZone Fitness Center, a northeast side fitness center for network employees and families on February 20.  The minimum donation to participate in the two-hour Zumba class was $10.00.

“Many of our employees have expressed interest in helping the people of Haiti who have been displaced, injured, and left homeless by the earthquake in Haiti,” said Todd Williams, director of network fitness for Community Health Network.  “The Zumba dance class was an opportunity for employees and their families to let loose, burn calories and help out with a great cause.”

All funds raised from the class will go to the American Red Cross.  Community Health Network employees and physicians have generously contributed to the Haiti relief efforts through the Community Health Network Foundation.  Since the earthquake on January 12, nearly $8,000 in cash and pledged donations have been raised.  So far, the foundation has sent the American Red Cross checks for $3,240, and more checks will be sent as pledges are paid.  Donations continue to come in and can be made at eCommunity.org.

You can help provide relief in Haiti

Posted on January 15th, 2010 | 6 Comments »

The incredible devastation that has occurred in Haiti this week has moved many individuals and nations.  Those of us who have done mission work in Haiti over the years know first hand the impact that the earthquake is having. Sanitation, basic medical care, food, water, shelter, clothing and spiritual needs are vast and immediate.  So, how can Community Health Network help?

I, and other network presidents, have received inquiries asking how Community can help.  We have a culture of compassion that is always apparent, but especially so during crises like this one.

The American Red Cross is a local agency that is very effective coordinating funds and mobilizing a national effort. Community Health Network Foundation is offering to facilitate donations made from employees and physicians to the American Red Cross.

If you want to help, you may send your donations to the Community Health Network Foundation designated for “Haiti Relief.” You can take advantage of the many ways to contribute that the we offer.  We want to help make it easy and convenient. You can donate in the forms of cash, check, credit card, debit card, payroll deduction, PTO, or use our website:  www.ecommunity.org.   If you use the website, indicate “Haiti Relief” in the comments section. Checks can be mailed to:

Community Health Network Foundation
Attn: Haiti Relief
1500 N. Ritter Ave.
Indianapolis, IN 46219

We will send donations on your behalf to the American Red Cross on a weekly basis.  In addition, the Foundation will also make a donation.

Thank you for your support,

Anita J. Harden, RN, MSN, MBA
President Emeritus, Community Hospital East
Interim President and CEO, Community Health Network Foundation

$1 million donated to build healthy communities, honor wife

Posted on December 28th, 2009 | No Comments »

As we celebrate this wonderful season of giving, it is our pleasure to share with you an exciting, and historical, donor announcement.

Jack Heiney (sitting) announced his donation in a meeting with (l-r) Anita Harden, Community Health Network Foundation Interim President and CEO, Bryan Mills, Community Health Network President and CEO, and Yvonne Shaheen, George Geiger and Katie Betley, all Community Health Network board members.

Jack Heiney (sitting) announced his donation in a meeting with (l-r) Anita Harden, Community Health Network Foundation Interim President and CEO, Bryan Mills, Community Health Network President and CEO, and Yvonne Shaheen, George Geiger and Katie Betley, all Community Health Network board members.

Community Health Network Foundation has received a $1 million cash donation from John W. “Jack” Heiney, who has made the largest financial donation in our history.

Jack made the unrestricted gift to fund our mission to support Community Health Network’s commitment to improve the health of the central Indiana communities Community serves. Jack told us he also made this donation to celebrate his wife, Betty, who passed away in July 2009 after they enjoyed 68 years of marriage. He claims she was always supportive of his volunteer commitments to Community, and was instrumental in founding the Jack and Betty Heiney Society, our planned giving society.

 The unrestricted donation will support Community’s future greatest needs and will provide funding to improve community health through outreach, wellness and prevention programs, to invest in Community’s network of health care facilities and employees who deliver the best coordinated and convenient care possible, and to lead patient-centered health care reform.

To forever celebrate this gift, Betty’s memory and the decades of board service Jack has provided us, we are naming a portion of Community Hospital North the John W. “Jack” and Betty Heiney Patient Care Tower. The board room at Indianapolis-based Visionary Enterprises, Inc., a Community Health Network partner, also commemorates Jack with a display of his numerous career and civic accomplishments.  

Patients, families, physicians and employees will forever be grateful for the extreme generosity Jack and Betty Heiney have provided to Community. This gift will undoubtedly change the lives of countless people over many years. We celebrate Jack and Betty and thank them for investing in our work to serve the community, the true reason our network exists.

Jack Heiney (sitting) with the following Foundation staff members (l to r): Ryan Chelli, Anita Harden, Barbara Coury, Kyle Henne, Marcy Zunk, Melodie Kent, Jack Beatty, Marsha Wager and Debbie Ahaus.

Jack Heiney (sitting) with the following Foundation staff members (l to r): Ryan Chelli, Anita Harden, Barbara Coury, Kyle Henne, Marcy Zunk, Melodie Kent, Jack Beatty, Marsha Wager and Debbie Ahaus.

A message from some thankful employees

Posted on August 26th, 2009 | No Comments »

Recently, we funded an employee-led program that distributed school supplies to the children of Community Health Network employees who are in situations of economic hardship. The program was a success and we are grateful to support caring teams of workers who are passionate about giving to their colleagues.

Here is the very kind thank you letter we received today from the Spirit of South Community Hospital South Employee Council:

Dear Anita, Barb, Marcy and all of the Foundation staff:

We wanted to take a moment to thank you for your support during our recent school supply give away at Community Hospital South last week. The endeavor was a very successful first-time event, one we hope to be able to repeat annually.

Employees were surprised and tremendously appreciative of the opportunity to receive a bag of school supplies. It was even more humbling to watch employees support their unit as they would give their quota of supplies to help their colleagues, or to hear the stories of how they were giving their supplies to grandchildren or nieces and nephews. Even our own employees who were going back to school were surprised they could get them for themselves.

It was an amazing day and we want to thank you for making it happen in such an efficient and timely manner. We look forward to growing this program and look forward to working with you again in the future.

Sincerely,

Katy Stallings and Kate Edwards,

Co-Presidents of the Spirit of South