Success Stories
Hoover High School Visit
For the third year in a row, Kindred Hospital San Diego hosted a group of students from Hoover High School at the facility to learn how the hospital helps people recover from serious injury and illness.
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Lynnae Salois, the Patient Relations Manager who has coordinated the event with Dr. Hom since its inception, shared that many of the students had never even been in a hospital before and the experience opened their minds about the range of opportunities in the health field. “This is so vital for the future of healthcare – the goal of this program is to inspire and help direct young people towards a career providing care and helping their communities,” Lynnae said.
The students spent their day observing and learning about the different roles each department and staff member plays. “We do our best to give them a look at virtually everything that happens on a daily basis; from nursing, to respiratory, physical and occupational therapy. We visit with X-ray technicians, OR surgeons and pharmacists, and we try to give them a good idea about how a hospital runs,” Lynnae shared. “At the end of the day our hope is that students will explore careers in the medical field – and that we will see them again when they are doing their training and residency programs after they graduate from high school!”
“It’s truly a joy to be part of building a foundation for our future,” Lynnae affirmed. “I’m honored to be part of this excellent program.”
Dr. Hom and Lynnae, on behalf of everyone at Kindred, thank you for your dedication and efforts to inspire young people in your community! And to the young students who were here, we hope you will consider pursuing a career in healthcare – there are many options and opportunities available that offer job security as the need for skilled caregivers continues to grow.
John
Everyone Worked Together
John was working on his farm. He hopped off his tractor to shut a gate and his tractor kept moving.
“I tried to jump on it, like a dummy, and fell,” John said. “The tractor ran over me.”
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He was immobilized with broken bones, fractured ribs and a punctured lung.
“Somehow I was able to wiggle around and get the cell phone out of my pocket,” he said. He called his wife, and within an hour a medical helicopter was taking him to a short-term acute care hospital.
He stayed there in the Intensive Care Unit for seven weeks and was then admitted to Kindred Hospital.
“Really, by that point he was still in critical condition,” his wife said. “He was totally dependent on a ventilator to breathe. The people at the hospital had done everything they could – we just needed to go somewhere where they had expertise in caring for vent patients.”
Almost immediately, the caregivers at Kindred Hospital began rehabilitation therapy and the process of weaning John from the ventilator.
“He had been on his back for seven weeks, and gradually they kept having him do a little more at a time,” his wife said. “The walking helped him strengthen his lungs.”
“I felt like I was making progress, absolutely,” John said. “I’d heard of Kindred before, but I didn’t really know what they did.”
Six weeks later, John was released to home care to fully recover.
“By the time we left, he was walking, breathing, swallowing and eating,” his wife said. “And it was the teamwork that was great.”
“The care was excellent,” John said. “Everybody knew what they were doing and everybody worked together.”
“Just excellent.”
Vicenta
Recovery Despite Complications
Vicenta, 86, was admitted to a short-term acute care hospital on January 31 for abdominal pain. Prior to this, she was independent at home with her family. After a lap cholecystectomy, she could not be extubated. She suffered multiple complications of surgery including a small bowel obstruction, pleural effusion and atrial fibrillation, and an irregular heart rhythm. She was weaning from the ventilator for approximately two hours a day but was not progressing prior to admission to Kindred Hospital.
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She was admitted to Kindred on February 16 for ventilator weaning and management of conditions complicating her hospitalization including diabetes mellitus, hypertension, diverticulitis, deconditioning and a sacral decubitus ulcer.
On February 28, she was placed on the weaning protocol. The speech-language pathologist started her with a Passy Muir valve in-line with the ventilator on March 2.
The next day, she was started on TTAV (trans-tracheal augmented ventilation), per the weaning protocol, so she could speak during her weaning sessions. She progressed steadily and gained strength with the addition of aggressive physical and occupational therapy and speech-language pathology for the next two weeks.
On March 15, Vicenta was weaned from the ventilator. On March 18, she was decannulated and her tracheostomy tube was removed. She was discharged on March 23 to acute rehab with a plan for ultimately going home. By this time, she had made good functional gains in occupational therapy, was able to complete basic activities of daily living, was ambulating 60 feet, and was swallowing pureed foods.
We look forward to a visit from Vicenta and her family in the near future.