
Medical Centers 50th Anniversary Celebration
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By: Contributed report
Community Writers
Photo Courtesy of:
LLUH
Photo Description:
Richard Hart, MD, DrPH, left, interviews a panel during the 50th anniversary celebration of Loma Linda University Medical Center on Sunday, August 27.
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LOMA LINDA>> A hospital building’s impact on a community and on the world was the theme of a 50th anniversary celebration of the opening of Loma Linda University Medical Center’s current cloverleaf structure. The program took place in the Loma Linda University Church, on Sunday, August 27.
“Along with the original purchase of the Loma Linda property in 1905, the decision to construct the current hospital building and consolidate medical education on this campus is one of the most significant events in this institution’s history,” said Richard Hart, MD, DrPH, president of Loma Linda University Health.
That decision came against a background of controversy within both the United States and the Loma Linda organization internally.
“The mid 1960s was a tumultuous time for this country,” said Kerry Heinrich, JD, medical center CEO. “There were racial tensions, controversy over the Vietnam War, factions that developed over how we should operate as a society. All of the controversy over the redesign of health care, through Medicare.”
Loma Linda University faced additional pressure through demands that accrediting organizations were making for the medical school to combine the two years of science education and the two years of clinical education onto one campus. At the time, Loma Linda University had taught science courses on the Loma Linda campus, while the clinical rotations took place in Los Angeles at White Memorial Medical Center and County USC Medical Center.
After a series of vacillating decisions between consolidating in Los Angeles or in Loma Linda, the board of trustees settled on combining the two programs in Loma Linda. Because of that decision, physicians who also served as faculty members for the clinical program were forced to decide to either stay in Los Angeles or leave their lucrative practices and support the Loma Linda initiative.
While many physicians wondered if they would be able to survive financially in Loma Linda, it was the controversial establishment of Medicare that played a role in the ultimate success of the consolidation.
“In a way I would say it was providential,” said Ralph Thompson, a long-time general surgeon at Loma Linda University. “Medicare gave us hope that we would have a way to finance a practice if we moved to Loma Linda.”
The cloverleaf-shaped tower has become a Loma Linda icon. But as important as the building itself has been, clinical treatment innovations developed at the medical center have gone on to change how health care is delivered internationally. Those developments include:
Proton therapy for cancer treatment; The vision of James Slater, MD, to find a way to minimize damage to healthy tissue while attacking cancer sites with radiation. Loma Linda University Health’s James M. Slater, MD, Proton Treatment Center was a leader in the search for ways to target approaches to treating cancer.
Coronary angiography; Melvin Judkins, MD, developed the tools and techniques to revolutionize the approach to cardiac medicine. Judkins invented three types of catheters that are now used by coronary care physicians internationally.
Perinatal research; Lawrence Longo, MD, brought together researchers from various medical and scientific disciplines to study hypoxia and its effect on fetal development. Over 40 years, researchers have moved from relatively simple theories to now looking at genetic modification ideas.
Fetal heart monitoring; Edward Hon, MD, began a residency at the White Memorial Hospital in 1961 after study at Yale University. His work in developing technological solutions to monitoring fetal heart rates has led to dramatic improvements in obstetrical care around the world.
Infant heart transplantation; At the same time that the medical center building opened, adult heart transplants were first being initiated internationally. It occurred to Leonard Bailey, MD, that those same techniques might be used to save babies' lives.
Along with the dozens of personal recollections shared during the program, the anniversary event also triggered a look at Loma Linda University Health’s future. Again, the organization is in the process of constructing a new medical center building, this time to meet seismic safety requirements imposed by the State of California. This project is taking place during a time of renewed social unrest and racial tension in the United States. And how health care will be financed is again being addressed by the government, through the Affordable Care Act and efforts to modify that program.
While the cost difference between the two projects is striking; $22 million for the current building; $1.5 billion for the new construction, however, the goal for Loma Linda University Medical Center remains the same: to continue the teaching and healing ministry of Jesus Christ.
Vision 2020 – The Campaign for a Whole Tomorrow is a comprehensive campaign that was launched to support a transformational vision for education and research, wholeness and clinical care including the new Adult Hospital and expanded Children’s Hospital construction project. “We are blessed by the outpouring of support for Vision 2020,” Hart added. “In just a short time we have raised over $267 million toward our $360 million goal.
“We want to create a place where people come not just for medical care, but for healing body, mind, and soul,” Heinrich said.