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Alaska Native Medical Center celebrates 10-year anniversary: building design promotes healing in holistic ways.


[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

As the Alaska Native Medical Center celebrates 10 years in its new facility, work is under way to expand the structure for the next 10 years and into the future.

"It's a 10-year anniversary for the building, and right now we are busting at the seams," said Hospital Administrator Daniel Jessop.

The Anchorage hospital opened in 1997, replacing an aging downtown structure operated by the Indian Health Service The Indian Health Service (IHS) is an Operating Division (OPDIV) within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services responsible for providing federal health services to American Indians and Alaska Natives. , which opened in 1953. Today, the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium The Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium (ANTHC) is a non-profit health organization based in Anchorage, Alaska which provides health services to about 130,000 Alaska Natives and American Indians in Alaska.  and the Southcentral Foundation, a nonprofit health organization of Cook Inlet Cook Inlet

Inlet, Gulf of Alaska in the northern Pacific Ocean. Bounded by the Kenai Peninsula on the east, it extends northeast for 220 mi (350 km), narrowing from 80 to 9 mi (129 to 14 km). Anchorage is situated near its head.
 Region Inc., jointly own and operate the facility. This arrangement made Alaska the first state to have all of its Native health services health services Managed care The benefits covered under a health contract  managed by Native organizations.

130,000 STRONG

With about 350,000 square feet and 150 beds, the ANMC ANMC Alaska Native Medical Center
ANMC American National Metric Council
ANMC Alliance Nationale des Mutualités Chrétiennes
ANMC Asian Network of Major Cities
ANMC Anglers' Net Members Club
ANMC Anniston Munitions Center (US Army) 
 serves more than 130,000 Alaska Native and American Indian American Indian
 or Native American or Amerindian or indigenous American

Any member of the various aboriginal peoples of the Western Hemisphere, with the exception of the Eskimos (Inuit) and the Aleuts.
 beneficiaries. In fiscal year 2006, the 193 physicians and 495 registered nurses on staff saw more than 386,000 clinic visits, conducted more than 11,380 surgical procedures Surgical procedures have long and possibly daunting names. The meaning of many surgical procedure names can often be understood if the name is broken into parts. For example in splenectomy, "ectomy" is a suffix meaning the removal of a part of the body. "Splene-" means spleen.  and delivered 1,405 babies.

Jessop said the building has worked extremely well, but the space needs to expand to meet existing needs and to keep up with the projected 40 percent increase over the next five years in Anchorage's Alaska Native population.

"We are challenged capacity-wise," he said. "Right now, we are planning for what the next five to six years are going to look like. We are going to expand." Jessop came to the ANMC in February from Queen's Medical Center in Honolulu.

NEW DIGS

Expansion will begin within the next several months. The oncology unit will increase from six to nine treatment chairs, thanks to the conversion of a conference room to doctors' offices. The change will allow for a 50 percent increase in oncology patient visits, from 5,200 each year to 8,500, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Susan Childers, chief operating officer Chief Operating Officer (COO)

The officer of a firm responsible for day-to-day management, usually the president or an executive vice-president.
 at the hospital.

"That is sort of a temporary expansion because while we are doing that we'll be looking at constructing a building attached to our hospital that will be for chronic diseases, which will be mainly oncology," Jessop said. The new facility will be a separate wing of approximately 7,800 square feet, and is expected to take anywhere from three to five years to build.

The ANMC will also gain space in two years when the Anchorage Native Primary Care Center, located across the street from the ANMC and operated by the Southcentral Foundation, moves into new buildings currently under construction. When that construction is finished, the ANMC will move some of its clinics into 25,000 square feet of one of the existing care center buildings. The move will allow ANMC to expand its surgery and ancillary services.

Looking further into the future, Jessop said the ANMC is working with architects to plan for a multi-level parking garage on the north side of the campus and a $123 million expansion of the existing hospital. Financing for these projects is yet to be determined, but he expects construction to begin within five to seven years.

The hospital also is looking at procedural changes, such as electronic medical records, to improve productivity and efficiency, Jessop said.

All of the plans for expansion should help support the hospital financially.

"It means turning around the operation," Jessop said. "We are absorbing a loss this year, but next year we plan to have at least a 1 percent bottom line, which is about $2 million, and then we are planning how to get to a 3 percent to 5 percent margin."

Approximately 40 percent of the ANMC's funding comes from the Indian Health Service. Third-party collections make up the remainder. Medicaid and Medicare each contribute about 20 percent of the operating budget Noun 1. operating budget - a budget for current expenses as distinct from financial transactions or permanent improvements
budget items, operating cost, operating expense, overhead - the expense of maintaining property (e.g.
 and private insurers make up the remaining 20 percent. ANMC's annual operating budget for fiscal year 2006 was $236.4 million.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

APPLAUSE DESERVED

The ANMC has received awards for the quality of its care. In 2003 it became a Magnet-designated hospital--the only one in Alaska and the only one in the Indian Health Service. The American Nurses Credentialing Center The American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) provides individuals and organizations throughout the nursing profession with the tools they need on their journey to excellence.  developed the Magnet Recognition Program to recognize health care organizations that provide nursing excellence. About 4.45 percent of U.S. health care organizations have earned the honor.

The ANMC is also the only Level II trauma center In the United States a Level II trauma center provides emergency medicine to trauma patients. A Level II trauma center works in collaboration with a Level I trauma center. It provides comprehensive trauma care and supplements the clinical expertise of a Level I institution.  in Alaska.

"Being a Level II trauma center basically obligates you to take anybody who comes through your door, whether Native or non-Native, for your emergency department," Jessop said. As a Level II Trauma Center, the ANMC must have all of its services available to the emergency room around the clock. "So that means you have to have physicians on staff 24/7, and support staff for all of those services that you offer."

To accommodate patients in remote villages, the ANMC developed a telepharmacy program that allows rural health care providers to dispense medications while maintaining complete patient records and oversight with pharmacists This is a list of notable pharmacists.
  • Dora Akunyili, Director General of National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control of Nigeria
  • Charles Alderton (1857 - 1941), American inventor the soft drink Dr Pepper
  • George F.
 in Anchorage. When a patient brings a prescription to a village medical clinic, the local health provider faxes it to the ANMC. Approval by a pharmacist pharmacist /phar·ma·cist/ (fahr´mah-sist) one who is licensed to prepare and sell or dispense drugs and compounds, and to make up prescriptions.

phar·ma·cist
n.
 at the ANMC allows the local health care provider to dispense the medication from an automated machine in the village. The patient is then offered a two-way videoconference vid·e·o·con·fer·ence  
n.
A teleconference using video technology, such as closed-circuit television.



vid
 with the Anchorage pharmacist.

As a Native health care provider, the hospital was built to reflect the cultures of its patients. Alaska Native elders throughout the state were consulted during the design process to create a building that promotes spiritual, as well as mental and physical healing.

"It is a very beautiful building," Jessop said. "When you walk in, there is a big circle that you walk into. People come in and they visit with each other. These are people who come from other villages; they haven't seen each other in a long time. It is a gathering place. It is a place where they can also sing and dance."

Artwork by Alaska Natives Alaska Natives are indigenous peoples of the Americas native to the state of Alaska within the United States. They include Inupiat, Yupik, Aleut, and several Native American peoples, including Tlingit, Haida, Tsimshian, Eyak, and a number of Northern Athabaskan peoples.  is displayed throughout the halls, with more pieces for sale in the gift shop. In fact, the ANMC has the unusual distinction for a hospital of being listed by Fodor's online travel guide as a top place to purchase Alaska Native art in Anchorage.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Alaska Business Publishing Company, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Comment:Alaska Native Medical Center celebrates 10-year anniversary: building design promotes healing in holistic ways.
Author:Maynard, Barbara
Publication:Alaska Business Monthly
Date:Oct 1, 2007
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