Archive for May 2019

ICYMI: Phoebe generates $1.27 billion for SOWEGA economy


File Photo: Front entrance to Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital
(Courtesy of Walter L. Johnson II) 
Press Release courtesy of Phoebe Putney Health System

Albany, Ga. – In addition to enhancing the health and well-being of the communities it serves, Phoebe Putney Health System (PPHS) continues to have a positive economic impact. In 2017, PPHS generated more than $1.27 billion in revenue for the local and state economy according to a recently-released report by the Georgia Hospital Association (GHA), the state’s largest hospital trade association. During the same period, the health system supported 8,132 full-time jobs in addition to the more than 4,300 people employed by Phoebe.

“Our top priority every day at Phoebe is to offer outstanding care and service to every patient we have the privilege of serving.  We are proud that we offer the region’s most comprehensive, quality healthcare services.  We are also proud that we are the region’s largest employer.  Phoebe is southwest Georgia’s most vital economic engine and will continue to be so,” said Scott Steiner, President & Chief Executive Officer, Phoebe Putney Health System.

Phoebe also had direct expenditures of more than $546 million in 2017. When combined with the economic multiplier developed by the United States Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis, the total economic impact of those expenditures was more than $1.27 billion.

This output multiplier considers the “ripple” effect of direct hospital expenditures on other sectors of the economy, such as medical supplies, durable medical equipment and pharmaceuticals. Economic multipliers are used to model the resulting impact of a change in one industry on the “circular flow” of spending within an economy as a whole.

Phoebe is a major contributor to the area’s economic strength and keeping families healthy by providing needed healthcare services. However, like the rest of the Georgia hospital community, Phoebe is concerned about economic challenges that affect the hospital’s ability to deliver timely and efficient care. A fast-growing uninsured population and inadequate payments from government insurance programs like Medicare and Medicaid have made it increasingly difficult to meet the community’s health care needs. In 2017, 44 percent of all hospitals in Georgia operated with negative total margins.

“For 108 years, Phoebe has served all those in need of healthcare, regardless of their ability to pay.  Despite growing challenges that continue to put pressure on community hospitals like Phoebe, we will continue that proud tradition.  Phoebe will also maintain our commitment to expanding access to quality primary and specialty care through well-planned, responsible growth that benefits the people of southwest Georgia,” Steiner said.  

The PPHS hospitals included in the report are Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital, Phoebe Sumter Medical Center and Phoebe Worth Medical Center. Below is the economic impact each of the hospitals generated in 2017 according to GHA:

·         Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital, located in Albany, generated a total economic impact of more than $1.1 billion on $483 million in direct expenditures. The hospital supported 6,947 full-time jobs in the Dougherty County area and across the state.

·         Phoebe Sumter Medical Center in Americus generated a total economic impact of more than $129 million on $55 million in direct expenditures. The hospital supported 902 full-time jobs in Sumter County and across the state.

·         Phoebe Worth Medical Center in Sylvester generated a total economic impact of $17.8 million on $7 million in direct expenditures. The hospital supported 284 full-time jobs in Worth County area and across the state.

Statewide, GHA said Georgia hospitals in 2017 generated over $54 billion for the state’s economy and created more than 150,000 full time jobs.

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ICYMI: Albany Chamber names Small Business & Non-Profit of the Year

Photo 1: Katie Gatewood (Left) and Callie Walker (Right) of Hughey & Neuman Real Estate, named the 2019 Small Business of the Year by the Albany Area Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday, May 7, 2019.
Photo 2: The staff of Liberty House, named 2019 Non-Profit of the Year by the Albany Area Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday, May 7, 2019.

Click here for complete details, courtesy of the Albany Area Chamber of Commerce, via Albany CEO.

Both photos courtesy of the Albany Area Chamber of Commerce.
Follow the Southwest Georgia Network on Twitter @swganetwork.

ICYMI: Phoebe Worth gets stroke treatment certification

Press Release courtesy of Phoebe Putney Health System

Photo 1: Phoebe Worth Medical Center nurses Dawn Chapman (left) and Faryn Hackett (right) listening in during a recent teleconference.


Photo 2: Phoebe Worth Medical Center nurses treat a stroke patient.

(Courtesy of Phoebe Putney Health System) 


Albany, Ga. – Phoebe Worth received certification as a Remote Treatment Stroke Center (RTSC) as part of Phoebe’s effort to improve stroke care across its system, benefiting patients throughout southwest Georgia.  “This certification shows our commitment to providing top quality care to our patients,” said Kim Gilman, Phoebe Worth CEO.  “To earn it, we had to complete a long checklist from the Georgia Department of Public Health that includes having immediate tele-health access to neurology specialists, developing our own stroke treatment protocols with our physicians and our local EMS and aligning those protocols with Phoebe’s main campus in Albany,” Gilman added.

The designation will result in quicker care for patients suspected of having a stroke.  “It gives the people we serve immediate access to stroke care.  EMS no longer has to take them 25 or 30 miles to Albany.  Because we have this certification, stroke patients will be brought to the Phoebe Worth emergency room where we treat them right away and stabilize them,” said Dawn Chapman, RN, Phoebe Worth Emergency Department Manager & Stroke Coordinator.

Phoebe’s main hospital in Albany is certified as a Primary Stroke Center (PSC), and Phoebe Sumter in Americus is currently undergoing the process to earn certification as a RTSC.  “Earning certification at all our hospitals shows Phoebe is dedicated to training our staff on the immediate response required to minimize damage from a stroke.  Our teams are trained on administering TPA (tissue plasminogen activator) clot-busting drugs and on the close monitoring patients require after receiving that medication.  Patients given TPA at Phoebe Worth or Phoebe Sumter can then be transferred to our main hospital for closer neurologic monitoring and followup,” said Faryn Hackett, RN, Phoebe Stroke Coordinator.

The Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) recently highlighted Phoebe’s stroke care efforts during a site visit from the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC).  Georgia is one of nine states that receives funding and support from the CDC through the Paul Coverdell National Acute Stroke Program.  During a teleconference with DPH and CDC officials, Phoebe was singled out for its commitment to sharing data through the Coverdell program and to improving treatment for stroke patients.

May is National Stroke Awareness Month, a time to focus on educating the public about stroke prevention and signs of stroke.  “We’re very proud to have this certification,” Chapman said.  “Not only does it benefit the people in our community, it benefits our hospital.  Our nurses get a higher level of education that isn’t available for most rural hospitals, and it also helps us educate our community about stroke.” 

Phoebe is the only health system in southwest Georgia providing this level of care to stroke patients.  Phoebe Worth earned its RTSC certification from the Georgia Office of EMS and Trauma.  Phoebe’s main campus earned its PSC certification from DNV GL, an international accredited registrar and classification society which is the global leader in certifying management systems across all types of industries, including healthcare.

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