HJAR Nov/Dec 2019
62 NOV / DEC 2019 I HEALTHCARE JOURNAL OF ARKANSAS Hospital Rounds Masini most recently served as a physician spe- cialist at Kings County Hospital Center in Brooklyn, New York, caring for adult and elderly patients. She was also a faculty teacher and lecturer at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn. Masini attended medical school at St. George’s University School of Medicine in Grenada, West Indies, where she also obtained a master’s of pub- lic health. She completed a residency training in internal medicine and fellowship training in geri- atric medicine at SUNY Downstate Medical Cen- ter. Masini has board certifications in geriatrics and internal medicine. Arkansas Children’s and Jefferson Regional Announce Expansion of Services to Improve Child Health Arkansas Children’s and Jefferson Regional will establish a new pediatric clinic on the campus of Jefferson Regional in Pine Bluff. The pediat- ric clinic will provide care close to home for fam- ilies in Southeast Arkansas, including preventa- tive care, developmental screenings, community resources, and health education. Early planning estimates that the Arkansas Chil- dren’s Hospital Pine Bluff Clinic will be an approxi- mately 9,700 square-foot facility with 15 outpatient exam rooms staffed by pediatric providers. The physicians will also provide frontline care to new- borns delivered at Jefferson Regional. The new clinic requires a $17.5 million dollar investment to cover the construction and operation over its first five years. “In association with Jefferson Regional and the Pine Bluff medical community, Arkansas Chil- dren’s is excited to establish a new clinic and expand care for families in the Southeast Arkansas Region,” said Marcy Doderer, FACHE, president and CEO of Arkansas Children’s. “Our collabora- tion with Jefferson Regional through the Arkansas Children’s Hospital Nursery Alliance, along with this new pediatric clinic, helps us deliver on our promise to provide unprecedented child health for children in our state. Arkansas Children’s Hos- pital Pine Bluff Clinic will provide families with the ability to manage wellness checkups, reduce emergency care costs, and receive care close to home.” “Jefferson Regional provides vital health- care to the southeast region of Arkansas,” said Brian Thomas, president and CEO of Jefferson Regional. “This collaboration with Arkansas Chil- dren’s will assist us with ensuring long-term sta- bility with pediatricians to continue providing the children of this region with excellent care.” Arkansas Children’s announced the public phase of the Campaign for a Healthier Tomor- row, a $250 million campaign designed to support these efforts. The expansion of services through the Arkansas Children’s Hospital Pine Bluff Clinic is the first announcement in a series to publicly launch the Campaign for a Healthier Tomorrow. Arkansas Children’s will continue to announce plans to expand statewide clinics and launch inno- vative health solutions to advance child health in Arkansas. Thanks to the support of the Pine Bluff com- munity and donors across the region, more than $6 million in philanthropic investment has been secured for the Arkansas Children’s Hospital Pine Bluff Clinic. Since 2015, the Campaign for a Healthier Tomor- row has secured more than $200 million in gifts toward a $250 million goal: In 2015, Arkansas Children’s invested in two new S-76D Sikorsky Angel One Helicopters with the ability to reach a child anywhere in the state in 55 minutes. Since 1978, the Angel One Trans- port team has transported the most critically ill and injured patients to Arkansas Children’s and established a statewide network of care for chil- dren in Arkansas. Arkansas Children’s Dental Outreach programs are providing care to children across the state. Four, full-service mobile dental vans serve children in need of root canals, cavity fillings, extractions and crowns. School-based programs provide oral health education, dental sealants and screenings to more than 8,000 students annually. To date, the mobile dental vans and the dental sealant pro- gram have provided $13 million in preventive oral health services for children since 2009. Arkansas Children’s Hospital has the state’s only level IV NICU. In 2016, ACH announced the cre- ation of the ACH Nursery Alliance to collaborate with hospitals around the state to provide infants the care they need close to home. Since the pro- gram’s inception, the ACH Nursery Alliance has established partnerships with Conway Regional in Conway, CHI St. Vincent in Hot Springs, Jeffer- son Regional Medical Center in Pine Bluff, Medical Center of South Arkansas in El Dorado and Ashley County Medical Center in Crossett. In 2016, Arkansas Children’s established the David M. Clark Center for Safe and Healthy Chil- dren, a place dedicated to the care and treatment of neglected and abused children and their fam- ilies. The Center is a single, safe place for chil- dren to receive medical, psychological and social health services and provides support by provid- ing outpatient medical evaluations for children at the Rice Medical Clinic, Family Treatment Program and Team for Children at Risk. In 2017, the Arkansas Children’s Hospital South- west Little Rock Clinic opened. Staffed with bilin- gual physicians and nurses, the clinic provides general pediatric and preventative care to fam- ilies in the region. Arkansas Children’s Hospital clinics in Jonesboro and West Little Rock also pro- vide pediatric care to children in the state. In 2018, Arkansas Children’s Northwest (ACNW) became one of the nation’s newest children’s hos- pitals. Located in Springdale, ACNW provides care for more than 20 subspecialty areas, has a general pediatric clinic, and is the region’s only pediatric emergency department. More than 14,000 philanthropic gifts totaling $81 million were made to support the building of ACNW. UAMS First in State with Advanced Brain Surgery Planning System The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) is home to the first neurosurgery program in the state with BrightMatterTM, a surgical plan- ning software for brain surgery. Meaghan Masini, MD
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