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Baptist Health Care
History
1950’s – 1970’s
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1980’s – 1990’s
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2000
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01
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02
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03
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04
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05
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06
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07
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08
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09
1950’s
1951
Baptist Hospital opens with 140 beds and a post–operative recovery room, the first in Florida and possibly the second in the United States.
1956
First expansion adds 40 beds
1956
Baptist Hospital begins working with Pensacola Junior College to create the first Associate of Arts nursing program in the southern portion of the United States
1959
A major addition opens, bringing Baptist Hospital’s bed capacity to 325.
1960’s
1964
A year of innovation: – An expansion provides space for one of the nation’s first two outpatient surgery centers. – An intensive coronary unit opens, one of the first four ICC units in the United States.
1969
Baptist Hospital acquires the Hillhaven Home and converts it to the Rainwater Specialty Care Center.
1970’s
1972
Baptist Hospital completes the largest expansion in its history, bringing total bed capacity to 520.
1974
Construction begins on the first medical office building adjoining Baptist Hospital
1975
Baptist Hospital acquires the Mallory House apartments complex to provide housing for older people.
1975
The Baptist Health Care Foundation is established.
1977
LifeFlight helicopter ambulance service is brought to Baptist Hospital, becoming the first hospital–based emergency helicopter program in Florida, the third in the United States.
1977
Baptist Hospital joins other leading health care institutions in chartering Voluntary Hospitals of America as a national cooperative. With more than 800 hospitals, VHA is now the largest health care system in the United States.
1978
Baptist Regional Health Services is created to extend Baptist Hospital’s sophisticated care to smaller hospitals throughout Northwest Florida and South Alabama.
1979
The closing of Jay Hospital is averted when the Baptist Regional Health Services organization leases it from Santa Rosa County.
1979
Pensacola Retirement Village I opens.
1980’s
1981
Azalea Trace life care community opens.
1983
Baptist Care Incorporated is formed, encompassing both Baptist Regional Health Services and BCI Enterprises, which includes several for–profit enterprises.
1983
Jim Vickery named President of Baptist Care, Incorporated; Pat Groner becomes President Emeritus.
1983
Home Health Care of Baptist Hospital is created.
1983
Doctor’s Urgent Care Center opens on Davis Highway.
1983
Gulf Coast Health Cooperative launches a mobile CT unit to serve outlying areas.
1983
Mizell Memorial Hospital joins Baptist Care.
1984
Baptist Manor nursing home and Pensacola Retirement Village II opened.
1984
Jay Hospital opens a three–bed intensive care unit.
1984
Construction begins on expansion of Baptist Hospital and construction of Gulf Breeze Hospital.
1985
Gulf Breeze Hospital opens.
1985
SurgiCare outpatient surgical center opens in the Professional Office Building.
1985
MD Line, Pensacola’s first physician referral and appointment service, is launched.
1985–86
Mizell Memorial Hospital undergoes a $2.7 million construction and renovation project that greatly enhanced its facilities although it did not increase its bed count.
1986
Work completed on $12 million expansion to Baptist Hospital that adds 45,000 square feet and includes a new surgical suite with a 16–bed recovery room, state–of–the–art surgical intensive nursing unit, clinical lab, central sterile area, energy center, and greatly enlarged and renovated lobby area.
1986
Swings beds approved and added at Jay Hospital.
1987
Baptist Hospital files first Certificate of Need application for open heart surgery services.
1988
Swing beds approved and added at Mizell Memorial Hospital.
1989
Baptist Care Incorporated is reorganized as Baptist Health Care Corporation.
1989
Azalea Trace is expanded to 284 units.
1989
Baptist Manor expands to 170 beds.
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1990’s
1991
Children’s Stress Treatment Program opens as the first children’s inpatient psychiatric unit in the service area.
1991
Kugelman Cancer Center opens in the new Baptist Medical Tower.
1992
After the Escambia County Commission closes University Hospital, Baptist Health Care and Sacred Heart Hospital develop a joint venture to keep its primary care clinics open. The clinics begin operating as Escambia Community Clinics.
1992
Baptist Health Care acquires the psychiatric beds that were part of University Hospital.
1992 Third Baptist Medical Tower opens along with a medical mall on the ground floor connecting the towers. The medical mail area includes a pharmacy, a durable medical supplier, and a cafe along with many outpatient services.
1992
Expanded cardiac catheterization laboratory is opened near the coronary care unit at Baptist Hospital.
1993
Baptist acquires The Friary, a residential treatment center for addictive diseases in Gulf Breeze, as a subsidiary of Baptist Hospital. The Friary of Baptist Health Care also includes outpatient treatment centers in Pensacola.
1993
Scenic Highway Family Medicine Center is opened, becoming the fourth family practice clinic owned and operated by Baptist Health Care.
1993
A new Heart Center is opened on the first floor of the Baptist Medical Towers. The Heart Center consolidates outpatient cardiology services under one roof.
1993
The new centers for hyperbaric, wound and infusion services are opened at Baptist Hospital.
1993
The former Century Memorial Clinic, which was operated by University Hospital, becomes a department of Jay Hospital and is renamed Century Family Health Center.
1994
Baptist Health Care expands its primary care network, opening four new practices (West Side Family Medicine Center/Gulf Breeze Internal Medicine Center/ Pensacola Beach Family Medicine Center/Orange Beach Family Medicine Center) An additional existing family medicine practice is acquired.
1994
Baptist Health Care purchases Holbert Physical Therapy, which provides physical and occupational rehabilitation in Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties. Name changed to Professional Rehab Affiliates.
1994
Baptist Health Care acquires the Avalon Center community mental health center in Santa Rosa County.
1995
Baptist Health Care and Sacred Heart Hospital jointly fund a community health needs assessment for Escambia and Santa Rosa counties. The two organizations become the founding members of Partnership for a Healthy Community, a coalition that seeks to improve the service area’s health status. Has evolved to be a 501 (a)(3) corporation.
1995
Baptist Health Care’s primary care network is expanded to 14 centers.
1995
Two hospitals – D. W. McMillan Memorial Hospital in Brewton, Alabama and Atmore Community Hospital in Atmore, Alabama – affiliate with Baptist Health Care as Escambia County Alabama Community Hospitals. The two hospitals were part of the Gulf Coast Cooperative.
1995
Baptist Hospital’s skilled nursing unit moves to the fourth floor of the Hospital, becoming part of a 57–bed subacute unit that includes four ventilator beds.
1996
Baptist Health Care opens two new primary care centers. With the addition of several existing practices, this brings the total number of primary care centers to 21.
1996
Lakeview Center Inc. affiliates with Baptist Health Care and assumes management of The Friary. The Avalon Center and Behavioral Medicine Center.
1996
Baptist Hospital and Gulf Breeze Hospital earn accreditation with commendation from the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations.
1997
Baptist Hospital was granted a Certificate of Need to begin providing open heart surgery services.
1997
Baptist Health Care initiates a program to involve employees in finding ways to reduce non–salary expenses, saving more than $2.3 million in the first fiscal year.
1997
Baptist Health Care begins system–wide "BRIDGES" leadership development and management training program.
1997
Announced plans for Baptist Medical Park at Pensacola’s Nine Mile Road and University Parkway, with two phases totaling $55.8 million.
1997
Launched Baptist HealthSource, a round–the–clock call–in service that allows people to describe health problems to registered nurses and receive advice on what treatments to seek.
1997
Initiated SportsCare of Baptist Health Care, a specialized health care marketing program that connects athletes and the physically active with our services.
1997
Azalea Trace received its 16th superior rating from the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration for the Azalea Trace Health Care Center.
1997
Azalea Trace broke ground for a 28–bed assisted living center and raised more than $976,000 for its construction.
1997
Baptist Hospital and Gulf Breeze Hospital shared the 1997 Voluntary Hospitals of America Leadership Award for organizational management in recognition of the hospitals’ patient satisfaction initiative.
1997
Baptist Hospital broke ground on $2.5 million emergency room expansion.
1997
Baptist Hospital receives the 1997 Marriott Service Excellence Award sponsored by Marriott Health Services and Modern Healthcare Magazine
1997
Baptist Manor received its ninth consecutive superior rating from the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration.
1997
Consolidated primary care centers under the name FirstPhysicians. Added 16 physicians to the group including the area’s first hospital–based physicians. Opened five new medical offices.
1997
Gulf Breeze Hospital was ranked number one in patient satisfaction among more than 600 hospitals nationwide consecutively for 24 months.
1997
Jay Hospital begins a renovation project that involves refurbishing all patient rooms and nurses stations.
1997
Professional Rehab Affiliates changed its name to FirstRehab. It acquired Gilg Prosthetics Inc. and the sports clinic in Baptist Medical Tower, consolidating all Baptist Hospital outpatient occupational and physical therapy services to that location.
1997
Kugelman Cancer Center becomes first facility in region to offer radioactive seed implants for prostate cancer.
1997
Baptist Health Care completes and begins implementation of new brand identification program.
1998
Open heart surgery services are initiated at Baptist Hospital
1998
Gulf Breeze Hospital continues to rank first in the nation in Press, Ganey patient satisfaction survey. Baptist Hospital in 99th percentile.
1998
Lakeview Center is recognized as the nation’s outstanding community mental health center , receiving the Award of Excellence from the National Council for Community Behavioral Health Care.
1998
Baptist Health Care receives the highest credit rating in it’s history for a tax–exempt financing.
1998
D. W. McMillan Memorial Hospital completes a building project that included the addition of an outpatient clinic area and renovation of the business office, medical records, respiratory therapy, and administration areas. Construction of a nine–suite physician office building is also completed.
1998
Baptist Health Care completes an agreement with HealthFirst physician group to enter into joint managed care contracting arrangements.
1998
Construction begins on Baptist Medical Park.
1999
Baptist Health Care introduces updated Mission/Values/Vision for the future.
1999
Baptist Hospital initiates the region’s first autologous bone marrow transplant program.
1999
Al Stubblefield succeeds Jim Vickery and becomes the third President and CEO in Baptist Health Care’s 48–year history.
1999
Senior Vice President Jerry Maygarden (R–District 2) becomes majority leader of the Florida House of Representatives.
1999
Baptist University leadership development program is initiated for over 500 leaders. The Baptist Health Care Leadership Institute is also created to extend leadership development training to other health care providers across the nation.
1999
Baptist Health Care reduce employee turnover rates below area, state and national averages.
1999
Baptist Health Care and Mizell Memorial Hospital mutually agree to conclude 17–year affiliation.
1999
Gulf Breeze Hospital continues to lead the nation in the Press, Ganey Associates survey of patient satisfaction through 48 consecutive months. Baptist Hospital, Atmore Community Hospital, D. W. McMillan Hospital rank in top five nationally.
1999
Baptist Health Care Foundation "Tradition of Excellence" capital campaign begun with goal of raising $7,500,000.
1999
Modern Healthcare and MMI award Baptist Health Care the 1999 Risk Management Award for demonstrating that greater patient satisfaction results in lower risk management costs.
1999
Baptist acquires and proceeds with plans to operate former Arcon outpatient facility at Navarre. Considering operation of Arcon sites in Destin and DeFuniak Springs.
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2000
2000
Over 1,300 leaders from 265 health care organization across the country have traveled to Baptist Health Care to benchmark patient satisfaction processes and leadership development programs.
2000
Baptist Medical Park–Pensacola opens as 112,000 ft. ambulatory care complex at University Parkway and 9–Mile Road in Pensacola.
2000
Baptist Medical Park–Navarre, and ambulatory clinic in south Santa Rosa County, opens at 8888 Navarre Parkway.
2000
Baptist Health Care is named a recipient of RIT/USA Today 2000 Quality Cup Award.
2000
In response to requests from across the country, the Baptist Health Care Leadership Institute is created to share the principles and practices behind the organization’s success.
2000
Jay Hospital receives $2.5 million in state funding for renovations and expansion of its business office and emergency room waiting area.
2000
Diane Wilbanks succeeds Gail Boylan as Baptist Health Care’s vice president for patient care services.
2000
Baptist Hospital Inc., which includes Baptist Hospital, Gulf Breeze Hospital and Baptist Medical Park, is one of eight American businesses, and the only healthcare organization, to undergo a site visit from the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Program.
2001
2001
Baptist Health Care launches Get Healthy Pensacola! to encourage fitness, weight control and smoking cessation.
2001
Baptist Health Care mourns the loss of Dixie Beggs, one of the organization’s last surviving founding fathers. Beggs served as Baptist’s vice president for 23 years and as president for four.
2001
Baptist Hospital’s doctors reattach the severed arm of an 8–year–old shark attack victim after the limb is recovered from the shark’s gullet. The episode triggers world–wide interest, attracting an estimated 3,000 media calls within the first 10 days after the attack. Local reporters say no story in recent memory has brought such a response.
2001
Press, Ganey Associates presents Baptist Health Care with its inaugural Preceptor Award for improving healthcare leadership across America. Fla. Gov. Jeb Bush is among those attending the ceremony.
2001
In the wake of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, Baptist Health Care cancels its annual Awards Night celebration so that the money that would have been used for the celebration could instead be donated to recovery efforts.
2001
Baptist Hospital celebrates its 50th anniversary by conducting 50 community service projects throughout October.
2001
Baptist Hospital Inc. receives its second consecutive site visit from the Baldrige National Quality Program.
2001
Lakeview Center is awarded the state contract to provide foster care and related services to children in Florida’s District 1, which includes Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa and Walton counties.
2002
2002
Baptist LifeFlight celebrates its 25th anniversary.
2002
Baptist Health Care ranks 10th on Fortune magazine’s list, "America’s 100 Best Companies to Work For." Fla. Gov. Jeb Bush is among the first to send congratulations.
2002
Fitness guru Richard Simmons helps Baptist Health Care launch its 90–day Get Healthy Pensacola! fitness challenge to encourage people to lose weight, exercise and quit smoking. More than 700 people attended the event.
2002
Baptist Hospital Inc. receives its third consecutive site visit from the Baldrige National Quality Program.
2002
Lakeview Center opens its $2 million therapeutic activities center.
2002
Baptist Health Care is awarded the Employer of Choice designation by the nationally recognized authorities on employee retention and workplace trends, Roger Herman and Joyce Gioia.
2003
2003
LifeFlight’s medical director, Dr. James Leker, is honored as the Medical Director of the Year at the National Air Medical Transport Conference held in Reno, Nevada. He was selected from more than 400 directors nationwide.
2003
Baptist Health Care once again is included on Fortune magazine’s list, "America’s 100 Best Companies to Work For."
2003
Baptist Health Care launches Women’s HeartAdvantage with the national health cooperative, VHA.
2003
Baptist Health Care is included in Training magazine’s list of "Training’s Top 100" companies for providing employees with the training they need to advance in their careers.
2003
Gary Bembry, a certified public accountant with 15 years of service to behavioral health organizations, is named president and CEO of Lakeview Center as Dr. Morris Eaddy retires after 37 years of leadership.
2003
Baptist Health Care CEO Al Stubblefield and Lakeview Center’s recently retired chief executive, Dr. Morris Eaddy, are named winners of the PACE Award given by the Pensacola Area Chamber of Commerce for contributions to northwest Florida. Stubblefield received the "Business Leader of the Year" honor, and Eaddy received the "Spirit of Pensacola" honor.
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2004
2004
President George W. Bush presents the 2003 Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award to Baptist Hospital Inc., which includes Baptist Hospital, Gulf Breeze Hospital and Baptist Medical Park. Accepting the honor, the highest given to American businesses, are Baptist Health Care CEO Al Stubblefield and Baptist Hospital Inc. President John Heer.
2004
Gulf Breeze Hospital opens an oncology center, outpatient physical therapy center and a second medical office building as part of a multi–phase, $25.5 million expansion.
2004
Bob Murphy, who joined Baptist Health Care in 1989 as a nurse–paramedic aboard LifeFlight, is appointed administrator of Baptist Hospital. After becoming LifeFlight’s program director in 1993, Murphy earned a Master of Public Administration degree from Troy State University and a Juris Doctorate degree from Stetson University College of Law.
2004
Jay Hospital completes a $2.5 million expansion of its emergency and radiology departments and its surgery center, which includes an operating room, special procedures room and private recovery areas.
2004
Portofino Medical Spa, which specializes in enhancing appearance, improving health and promoting longevity, opens in Gulf Breeze.
2004
Hurricane Ivan batters northwest Florida and south Alabama, causing catastrophic damage throughout the area. All of Baptist Health Care’s five hospitals remained in operation throughout the storm and as the area recovers. Although hundreds of employees either lost their homes or sustained heavy damage to them, the organization remained focused on providing the best possible services to its patients.
2005
2005
Baptist Health Care’s exceptional employee morale is recognized with the VHA Leadership Award for Operational Excellence. VHA is the nation’s largest healthcare alliance.
2005
Baptist Hospital launches its Critical Assessment Team to bring intensive–care expertise to the bedside of any patient whose condition shows early signs of deteriorating. Also known as a rapid response team, the CAT team evaluates and stabilizes the patient before communicating its findings to the patient’s physician for further instruction.
2005
Internationally renowned orthopaedic surgeon James Andrews, M.D., joins Baptist Health Care in planning a world–class center for sports medicine. The $30.3 million Andrews Institute for Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine will include a clinical facility, an athletic performance enhancement center, and a research and education center.
2005
Less than a year after Hurricane Ivan, Hurricane Dennis lashes the Pensacola area. Once again, Baptist Health Care’s hospitals and nursing homes weather the storm.
2005
Baptist Health Care affiliates with the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, the state’s leading cancer institute. The alliance promises to enhance services to oncology patients throughout Northwest Florida and South Alabama.
2005
Baptist Hospital is selected as one of the nation’s 100 Top Cardiovascular Hospitals by a study featured in Modern Healthcare magazine. More than 860 U.S. hospitals were evaluated, using information from Medicare cost reports and data on nearly 12 million hospitalized Medicare patients.
2005
Baptist Hospital becomes the first in Northwest Florida to offer a test that can reveal whether a person carries genes for certain familial cancers of the breasts, ovaries and colon.
2006
2006
Baptist Health Care celebrates its fifth consecutive year as one of FORTUNE magazine’s "100 Best Places to Work For," placing 18th on the annual list.
2006
The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations awards its Primary Stroke Center designation to Baptist and Gulf Breeze hospitals. The designation, which comes with the Joint Commission’s Gold Seal of Approval, certifies that the hospitals meet stringent national standards in their provision of stroke care.
2006
Baptist LifeFlight expands again, providing coverage to south central Alabama and northern Escambia County, Fla. LifeFlight 3 is based in Evergreen, Ala., and serves a 60–mile radius including Century, Fla., and the south central Alabama region below Selma and Montgomery.
2006
Baptist Health Care receives Ochsner Health System’s equivalent of the Oscar, the "Ochsner," for assistance in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. More properly known as the Spirit of Leadership Award, the bronze statue of Dr. Alton Ochsner is presented to Baptist during the New Orleans–based health system’s annual awards banquet.
2006
VHA, the nation’s largest healthcare alliance, honors Baptist Hospital for clinical excellence. A coalition of more than 2,400 not–for–profit organizations, VHA presents its 2006 Leadership Award to hospital officials in recognition of its highly successful Critical Assessment Team.
2006
A Baptist Hospital patient becomes the first in northwest Florida to undergo a new less–invasive surgical procedure that corrects atrial fibrillation by using high–intensity ultrasound energy to ablate selected heart tissue.
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2007
2007
For the sixth consecutive year, Baptist Health Care is listed as one of FORTUNE Magazine’s “100 Best Companies to Work For.”
2007
The Andrews Institute for Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine opens. A team effort between Baptist Health Care and world–renown orthopaedic surgeon James Andrews, M.D., the Andrews Institute includes a state–of–the–art ambulatory surgery center, an athletic performance center, and a research and education center.
2007
The region’s first three Tesla – or 3T – MRI, the most powerful magnetic resonance scanner available, is located at the Andrews Institute for Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine. Twice as powerful as conventional MRIs, the 3T scanner means faster, more precise diagnoses and treatments.
2007
Baptist Hospital is the first in northwest Florida to acquire a robotic
da Vinci
® S HD Surgical System that allows doctors to perform extremely complex operations through button–size incisions.
Da Vinci
robotics offers reduced pain, blood loss and scarring while providing surgeons with more precise control.
2007
Baptist Hospital, Gulf Breeze Hospital, Jay Hospital, Atmore Community Hospital and Baptist Medical Park – Nine Mile receive the Press Ganey Summit Award for excellence in patient satisfaction. Baptist Health Care facilities have consistently ranked in the 99
th
percentile since 1996 for patient satisfaction.
2007
Lakeview Center launches Project Search, a one–year program that provides students with disabilities a chance to gain real world experience as they begin the transition from high school to competitive employment.
2007
The Baptist Cancer Institute launches the oncology patient navigator program. The program is designed to help patients from diagnosis to recovery. Patient navigators focus on providing patients one–on–one guidance through the health care system; advocating on the patient’s behalf with health care professionals and staff; working with patients and families to identify additional resources and support; ensuring that the patient’s treatment plan and follow–up care are in place; and educating patients on the disease process and treatment plans.
2008
2008
Jay Hospital goes smoke–free, making the facility the first hospital in the Baptist Health Care system to prohibit smoking on its campus.
2008
Al Stubblefield, president and CEO of Baptist Health Care, is presented with the 2008 Award of Honor by the American Hospital Association (AHA). The AHA Award of Honor recognizes outstanding contributions and initiatives that improve the health status of individuals, communities and the nation.
2008
Baptist Health Care’s first Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Pat Neff Groner, is inducted into the national American College of Healthcare Executives’ Health Care Hall of Fame for his lifelong leadership and extraordinary contributions to the health care field.
2008
Gov. Charlie Crist presents Baptist Hospital with a Florida Exceptional Employer Award for its support of Project Search of Lakeview Center, a workplace training program for high school students with developmental disabilities. Selected by the Agency for Persons with Disabilities, Baptist Hospital is recognized for providing job opportunities to Project Search students. Lakeview Center launched Project Search at Baptist Hospital in October 2007.
2008
Baptist Hospital, Gulf Breeze Hospital, Baptist Medical Park – Nine Mile Surgery Center, Jay Hospital and Atmore Community Hospital were honored with Summit Awards. Hospitals that sustain the highest level of patient satisfaction scores for three or more consecutive years are honored with Summit Awards. Baptist Health Care has consistently ranked in the 99th percentile since 1996 for patient satisfaction.
2008
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services presents Baptist Hospital with a Medal of Honor for organ donation. This award recognizes select hospitals for achieving and sustaining a donation rate of 75 percent or more of eligible donors. Baptist Hospital is the only hospital in northwest Florida, from Pensacola to Panama City, to receive the Medal of Honor.
2008
The Baptist Health Care Leadership Institute (BLI) is named one of the Top 100 Leadership Development Programs in America by Executive Excellence, a global leadership development firm, in the October issue of its monthly magazine, Leadership Excellence.
2008
Bariatric Surgeon Jeffrey E. Friedman, M.D., joins David Nye, M.D., and the Baptist Bariatric Center of Excellence. As a result, the Bariatric program increases surgical case volume by 33 percent this year.
2008
Gulf Breeze Hospital and Andrews Institute for Orthopedics & Sports Medicine welcome orthopeadic surgeons Barry Callahan, M.D. and Lonnie Paulos, M.D., as well as orthopeadic specialist Erik Nilseen, M.D.
2008
Andrews Institute for Orthopeadics & Sports Medicine and Space Florida partner to offer Project Odyssey, a first–of–its–kind personal spaceflight medical program for commercial space tourists.
2008
Four Andrews Institute for Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine physicians join the faculty of The University of West Florida (UWF) as research associates. The partnership provides world–class training to students studying athletic training and other health care disciplines.
2008
To complement the Baptist Cancer Institute’s comprehensive breast care program, Baptist begins offering breast magnetic resonance–imaging (MRI) for early detection and diagnosis of breast cancer. MRI scans are more sensitive and can detect tissue abnormalities earlier. As a result, the American Cancer Society issued new guidelines for high–risk women to add an MRI scan to their annual mammogram.
2008
The Baptist Cancer Institute offers Stereotactic radiosurgery, a new option for some hard–to–treat cancers and neurological dysfunctions. Stereotactic radiosurgery delivers a highly concentrated, tightly focused dose of cancer–killing radiation. This treatment strategy can be more effective at killing or controlling certain types of cancer, making them more manageable and giving patients a higher quality of life.
2008
Baptist Hospital’s
da Vinci
® S HD surgical system begins offering minimally invasive heart valve repair procedures. Since the robotic system’s first case in Oct. 2007, more than 260 prostatectomy and hysterectomy procedures have been performed.
2008
Baptist Heart and Vascular Care implements comprehensive vascular initiative to complement robust cardiac services.
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2009
2009
Baptist Health Care (BHC) launches LifeFlight 4 in Hattiesburg, Miss. LifeFlight 4, based out of the Bobby Chain Airport, complements the LifeFlight fleet: LifeFlight 1, Pensacola; LifeFlight 2, Mobile; and LifeFlight, 3 Evergreen. Freddie Parker is the base manager for the LifeFlight 4 operation.
2009
Andrews Institute for Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine achieved the Florida Press Association award for first place in Special Section – Best Historical Program or Anniversary for newspapers with a circulation less than 100,000. Pensacola News Journal nominated the institute for the section “Andrews Institute – A Year of Community Excellence.”