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By Jack DeGange
Expansion to provide responsive health care services
that meet the needs of a growing community is a fact
of life at Alice Peck Day Memorial Hospital in
Lebanon.
But, that doesn’t necessarily mean tearing down and
building anew. Such is the case with the Robert
Mesropian Center for Community Care. To say it
“opened” in March is a misnomer because it was
business as usual (well, within reason) through the
winter as craftsmen under the direction of
Trumbull-Nelson, the construction manager, completed
work on an expansion and renovation that more than
doubles the size of a health care resource that
opened more than 20 years ago. The facility will be
dedicated in early May.
When Alice Peck Day died in 1927, she bequeathed her
home and estate “to establish a cottage hospital.”
The Peck Homestead was the site of the original
hospital and still is one of several converted homes
along Mascoma Street that have been retained for use
by various hospital services. But, over the past 60
years, APD has grown to be much more than “a cottage
hospital” and those original buildings set a tone,
on arrival, that APD is, indeed, an integral part of
the Lebanon community, just as Mrs. Day envisioned.
If it weren’t quite so big, the sparkling white
clapboards of the Mesropian Center for Community
Care would look like they had been part of the
neighborhood for a long time. In addition to its
fundamental role as a center for patient treatment,
it’s a building that, by nature of its design and
location, says “welcome” to the main hospital and
Harvest Hill, APD’s independent and assisted living
retirement community (another Trumbull-Nelson
project), that occupy much of the rolling hillside
that Alice Peck Day called home a century ago.
The original Community Care Center, a 6,500-square
foot facility, opened in the early 1980s. It has
been completely renovated to blend with the
8,000-square foot addition. The expanded center is
named to honor the memory and leadership of Robert
Mesropian, APD’s chief executive for 14 years, who
died in 2001.
At the groundbreaking ceremony in April 2004, Dr.
Peter Mason, a member of the APD staff, said, “Bob
Mesropian was the creative force behind the
Community Care Center as it exists today. Bob said,
‘Just provide the best care you can, the kind you
would wish for your own family.’”
“Bob Mesropian was the creative force behind the
Community Care Center as it exists today. Bob said,
‘Just provide the best care you can, the kind you
would wish for your own family.’”
The center is the latest project in APD’s ongoing
campus master plan that Harry Dorman, the hospital’s
current chief executive, says, “…responds to the
continually growing needs of the community for
primary care.”
“Continually growing” is obvious at APD: Over the
past eight years, the Community Care Center has
experienced a 50 percent increase in volume. Last
year (2003), more than 20,000 patient visits were
made to the primary care clinic. The hospital
anticipates that this trend in demand will continue.
“The necessity of an expanded facility cannot be
overstated,” said Dr. Douglas Williamson, medical
director of the Community Care Center in APD’s
current annual report. “The building changes will
eliminate the patient flow gridlock of the old
building and allow us to add new providers.”
Built originally as the APD/Dartmouth Family
Practice Center, the facility was designed to train
medical students and family practice residents while
providing primary care services from four providers.
Currently there are eight primary care providers
(two new physicians will be added) and a support
staff of nearly 20 who deliver a variety of primary
care services and minor outpatient procedures.
The Community Care Center has been designed for
efficiency. As Krista Merrihew, the Center’s
clinical manager, notes, “It’s engineered for
privacy.” This will be possible through the
availability of 26 examination rooms (double the
previous number) that are situated around two
nursing station pods.
To appreciate what this means: The Center’s doctors
and nurse practitioners usually have three exam
rooms in use simultaneously, sometimes four for
pediatric patients (3-4 rooms is the ideal industry
standard). While a provider is seeing a patient in
one exam room, the next patient is being prepared in
another and the preceding patient is completing
activity in a third.
Exam rooms now can be coordinated for each service
provider, a virtually non-existent availability in
the old facility when providers had 1-2 rooms that
created serious gridlock in patient flow.
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In addition to the exam rooms and
nursing stations, the Center’s new
resources include: |
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An expanded waiting room and a
three-station reception area (further
ensuring privacy); |
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Two nurse triage areas; |
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A central office for 10 providers; |
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A patient education room and a
multi-purpose conference room; |
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Two procedure rooms; |
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An expanded medical records office (APD
will also bring a state-of-the-art
electronic medical records system on
line this year); |
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Improved equipment and supply storage
areas; |
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The Center will have an upgraded air
conditioning system and the parking area
will be expanded to accommodate
additional patients. |
“APD is growing rapidly and we have a dire need for
more space,” says Jan Thibodeau, the hospital’s
director of development and community relations,
about the $2.6 million project that has been funded
entirely through donations. “The Center has been
designed to retain the flavor of the neighborhood
and is another step in APD’s response to growing
health care needs in this region.”
When it’s fully operational, the Mesropian Center
for Community Care will have the ability to provide
service for an annualized patient volume that is
expected to increase to more than 28,000 visits.
That’s a lot of patients of all ages who are
expected to visit the Center in coming years but, if
it works as Krista Merrihew and her associates
envision, the waiting room will be warm,
welcoming—and empty, reflecting the value the
Mesropian Center for Community Care brings to health
care in the Upper Valley.
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