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St. Charles implements yearlong plan to recover from financial impacts of COVID-19

BEND, Ore. – Facing mounting financial challenges related to the COVID-19 pandemic, St. Charles Health System is taking a number of steps to move back to normal operations and regain its financial footing.

“We need to take action to improve our financial stability, but we are absolutely committed to doing that in ways that have the least impact on our caregivers,” said President and CEO Joe Sluka. “COVID-19 has changed our lives in ways we couldn’t have imagined just a few months ago, but by working together we will get through this and come out stronger on the other side.”

Starting June 1 and through the end of the year, St. Charles’ Executive Care Team is going to lead the health system’s recovery with a 10 percent pay cut.

Additionally, the health system will:

  • Give caregivers who qualify the opportunity to participate in one or more of three voluntary programs including a temporary reduction in hours, unpaid time off or a summer sabbatical
  • Require caregivers in nonpatient-facing areas to use earned time off or unpaid time off during extended closures around the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays
  • By mid-June, return to its normal way of flexing staffing based on patient volumes, which means caregivers who are “called off” will no longer be paid for missed shifts

Between March and early May, the health system lost $39 million in patient revenue as the result of cancelled elective surgeries and a steep decline in patient visits. At the same time, its spending increased by about $6.5 million to plan and prepare for COVID-19, including purchasing extra hospital beds, additional personal protective gear, screening tents and supplies, ventilators and new technology for virtual visits.

St. Charles also paid for 52,000 hours in missed shifts at a cost of more than $2.1 million and—with the help of the community—created a Hero Fund to award bonuses to frontline caregivers.

“It was important for us to support our caregivers in every way possible during this incredibly stressful time,” Sluka said. “Protecting their overall well-being was—and continues to be—one of our main goals throughout our recovery.”

Since early May, St. Charles has been able to slowly and safely expand its surgical and procedural volumes with guidance from Gov. Kate Brown and within the guidelines provided by the Oregon Health Authority.

“This is great news for our patients who have been waiting for these needed services,” said Chief Financial Officer Jenn Welander. “But while our volumes are starting to come back, we are not yet allowed to operate at our full capacity and getting back on solid financial footing will take some time.”

The health system has set a goal to “break even” for two months by the end of 2020. But even if St. Charles is able to hit that benchmark, current projections show the organization may still lose more than $50 million this year, as the financial impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic remain extremely uncertain.

“We simply are not generating enough money we need to care for patients, invest in our caregivers and support our community,” she said. “Instead, we are spending down our reserves and that isn’t sustainable. This recovery is complicated—it was complicated to prepare for a surge, it’s going to be complicated to manage COVID and it’s going to be very complicated for us to navigate this financial situation.”

About St. Charles Health System
St. Charles Health System, Inc., headquartered in Bend, Ore., owns and operates St. Charles Bend, Madras, Prineville and Redmond. It also owns family care clinics in Bend, Madras, Prineville, Redmond and Sisters. St. Charles is a private, not-for-profit Oregon corporation and is the largest employer in Central Oregon with more than 4,200 caregivers. In addition, there are more than 350 active medical staff members and nearly 200 visiting medical staff members who partner with the health system to provide a wide range of care and service to our communities.

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May 18, 2020

As our Central Oregon counties start the phased approach to reopening, I can’t help but think back to the first messages I sent you in the early days of the pandemic. The advice today is much the same as it was then – stay home if you are sick, cover your cough or sneeze and wash your hands.

It feels a little like we’ve come full circle after having been through so much.

At St. Charles, our caregivers have shared a mix of emotions with me about their thoughts on reopening. Some feel the time is right, that you have helped flatten the curve and that we can handle whatever comes next.

Still others are worried. They have noticed people not wearing masks in public places and not staying six feet away from others. For many of our frontline health care workers, this behavior is deeply concerning.

Today, I have a request: For your safety and ours, I ask that you follow the guidelines from our local health departments and the Oregon Health Authority.

You have the power to ensure our reopening does not result in a spike of COVID-19 cases. You can choose to take care of yourself and others by making a few small sacrifices:

  • Wear a mask or cloth face covering when in public
  • Stay home if you are sick and report your symptoms to your primary care provider
  • Wash your hands frequently with soap and water for 20 seconds
  • Practice physical distancing of at least six feet from people
  • Be a model of this kind of behavior and encourage others to do the same

Thank you for continuing to support all of our essential workers – and the safe reopening of our local businesses – through your actions.

While we continue to see a number of positive COVID-19 test results in Deschutes and Jefferson Counties, as of this writing we have only one COVID-19 patient in our Bend hospital, which is great news.

As we work to bring our own operations back toward normal levels, it feels like the time is right to scale back these communications as well. We want the information shared to be meaningful and useful, so I will plan to send updates less frequently unless the situation changes.

I’d like to thank you all for reading, for responding with your questions and for your notes of gratitude and support throughout this journey. Your messages have helped me make it through the most difficult days. You have shown me time and again that we are all in this together.

Thank you,  

Joe

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St. Charles recognizes four caregivers with The DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nurses ®

BEND, Ore. – St. Charles Health System nurses Sue Baker, Emily Lundborg, Marie Dominguez and Maggie Thurman have been honored with The DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nurses ®, recognizing the extraordinary, compassionate nursing care they provide patients and families every day. 

Nominated by patients, families and colleagues, the award recipients were chosen by a committee at St. Charles.

The nurses—who represent all four St. Charles hospitals in Bend, Redmond, Madras and Prineville—were recognized with a ceremony on their units and presented with a certificate, a pin and a "healer's touch" sculpture by their hospital’s chief nursing officer. The DAISY honorees will also receive ongoing benefits, such as special rates for tuition and ANCC certification. 

"Our nurses are exceptional and deserve to be formally recognized for their dedication, spirit and the quality of care they provide in the community," said St. Charles Health System’s Chief Nursing Officer Pam Steinke. "We are excited to celebrate all the stories of compassionate care we hear every day."

The DAISY Foundation is a not-for-profit organization that was established in memory of J. Patrick Barnes by members of his family. Patrick died at the age of 33 in late 1999 from complications of Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP), a little known but not uncommon auto-immune disease. (DAISY is an acronym for Diseases Attacking the Immune System.)  The care Patrick and his family received from nurses while he was ill inspired this unique means of thanking nurses for making a profound difference in the lives of their patients and patient families.

"When Patrick was critically ill, our family experienced first-hand the remarkable skill and care nurses provide patients every day and night,” said Bonnie Barnes, FAAN, president and co-founder of The DAISY Foundation. “Yet these unsung heroes are seldom recognized for the super-human, extraordinary, compassionate work they do. The kind of work the nurses at St. Charles are called on to do every day epitomizes the purpose of The DAISY Award.”

This is one initiative of The DAISY Foundation to express gratitude to the nursing profession.  Additionally, DAISY offers J. Patrick Barnes Grants for Nursing Research and Evidence-Based Practice Projects, The DAISY Faculty Award to honor inspiring faculty members in schools and colleges of nursing and The DAISY in Training Award for nursing students. More information is available at http://DAISYfoundation.org.

About St. Charles Health System

St. Charles Health System, Inc., headquartered in Bend, Ore., owns and operates St. Charles Bend, Madras, Prineville and Redmond. It also owns family care clinics in Bend, Madras, Prineville, Redmond and Sisters. St. Charles is a private, not-for-profit Oregon corporation and is the largest employer in Central Oregon with more than 4,200 caregivers. In addition, there are more than 350 active medical staff members and nearly 200 visiting medical staff members who partner with the health system to provide a wide range of care and service to our communities.

 

 

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Grand Rounds - May 15, 2020
"Engaging patients who inject drugs"

Speaker: Jessica LeBlanc, MD, MPH, Mosaic Medical and Bend Treatment Center

 

Objectives:

  1. Discuss the role of stigma in building rapport with patients who inject drugs

  2. Describe how a harm-reduction approach applies to patients who inject drugs

  3. Illustrate a harm-reduction-informed model of motivational interviewing with patients who inject drugs

Accreditation: St. Charles Health System is accredited by the Oregon Medical Association to provide continuing medical education for physicians. St. Charles Health System designates this live activity for a maximum of 1.0 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM.

Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

Target Audience: Physicians, Nurses, Pharmacists, Allied Health Professionals

Accessibility/Program Questions: St. Charles Health System encourages persons with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. If you anticipate needing any type of accommodation or have questions about the physical access provided, please contact Continuing Medical Education at 541-706-4680, [email protected]. For CME or Clerkship questions, contact Sheila Jordan, MMGT, CHCP, Manager of Continuing Medical Education at 541-706-6780, [email protected].

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Last fall, longtime local construction and development firm Taylor NW was purchased by a Wisconsin-based company called ALM Holdings. One of the many ways the two companies complement each other is their shared, strong belief in supporting the local community.

Proof of that belief came to life recently when the Taylor family, which founded Taylor NW, started talking about how to support local caregivers during the COVID-19 pandemic. Before those plans even came to fruition, ALM called the family and expressed a desire to contribute to relief efforts in Central Oregon.

As a result, the Taylor family recently donated $15,000 and Taylor NW donated $5,000 to the St. Charles Foundation. The decision to contribute was an easy one, the family said.

“As a company and a family, we’re proud to stand by St. Charles’ side to help ensure the healthy future of our community,” they said. “If we could send a message to the caregivers, it would be that we vow to always do our best to support them, just like they have always supported all of us.”

From all of us here at St. Charles: Thank you Taylors, Taylor NW and ALM Holdings! For all of us at St. Charles: Your support means the world to us.

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As I soaked up the wonderful weather over the weekend, I couldn’t help but think how this springtime perhaps more than any other represents regrowth. At the same time the physical world around us is bursting back to life, we are tepidly transitioning to a new season of this pandemic, one in which we may slowly start to resume some of those familiar aspects of our lives.

But just as the handoff between winter and spring can be a variable mix of sun and sleet, what comes next in the COVID-19 story may feel similarly jarring.

While the number of people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Central Oregon is now low, we don’t know if it will stay that way. We don’t yet understand if this virus will behave like the flu, allowing us to anticipate its resurgence, or if the social distancing measures we keep in place moving forward will be enough to prevent localized outbreaks. We can’t reliably predict when a vaccine will be available and—absent one—how long this virus will have to circulate before we have sufficient herd immunity.

With so many questions still unanswered, it’s critically important that we responsibly manage the phased reopening of our communities. St. Charles is committed to helping do that. Gov. Kate Brown has announced the limited reopening of some state parks, outdoor recreation facilities and natural areas throughout the state. And starting Friday, she said, counties whose reopening plans are approved by the Oregon Health Authority can unshutter some of their local businesses, including restaurants, personal service businesses and stand-alone retail.

As part of this process, St. Charles experts have actively worked with officials in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties to provide important data as they develop their reopening plans. A county’s eligibility to reopen is in part contingent upon the local health system’s capacity to handle another surge in patients. Thanks to your efforts to “flatten the curve,” which bought us time to expand our acute bed capacity, stockpile more personal protective gear and provide more testing, we can confidently say we’re prepared to take care of our community.

At the same time our counties are planning their recovery, so are we. Some of our services are beginning to resume, albeit not at the same levels as before. Starting today, we will be performing more elective surgeries at our hospitals, taking care of more patients whose care has been delayed. Our Home Health team is working in tandem to care for more patients as a result of the higher volume of surgeries.

Still other services keep evolving. St. Charles Medical Group clinics are encouraging patients to continue preventive care through video, phone and email visits—and the results are encouraging. In February, only 106 patients “saw” their provider via a phone visit (and none by video). By April, more than 6,200 patients had visited with their provider over the phone and another 3,500 via video.

As we ease back into public life, St. Charles and our local health departments will be working closely to monitor the prevalence of the virus, as well as those other benchmarks that indicate our ability to handle an outbreak. If the situation changes, so will our response.

At the same time, we are also committed to supporting our local economy. Just like Central Oregon was here for St. Charles when we needed the support most, we will be here for you as you begin to navigate the choppy waters of reopening. We’re still having conversations with our business leaders to understand what that may look like and how we can best help, but I assure you we are going to play a role in helping our local businesses safely reopen—and stay open.

We owe it to you.

Sincerely,
Joe

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Grand Rounds - May 8, 2020
"Further Updates on COVID-19: What We Know and What We Don’t"

Speaker: Shira Shafir, PhD, MPH - UCLA

 

 

Objectives:

  1. Understand what is currently known and unknown from the rapidly evolving literature on SARS-CoV-19
  2. Explain updated understanding on the pathophysiology of the virus and how it affects multiple body systems
  3. Describe updates on drug and vaccine testing
  4. Understand the current controversy on ventilatory support
  5. Explain different testing modalities and how they might be used

Accreditation: St. Charles Health System is accredited by the Oregon Medical Association to provide continuing medical education for physicians. St. Charles Health System designates this live activity for a maximum of 1.0 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM.

Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

Target Audience: Physicians, Nurses, Pharmacists, Allied Health Professionals

Accessibility/Program Questions: St. Charles Health System encourages persons with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. If you anticipate needing any type of accommodation or have questions about the physical access provided, please contact Continuing Medical Education at 541-706-4680, [email protected]. For CME or Clerkship questions, contact Sheila Jordan, MMGT, CHCP, Manager of Continuing Medical Education at 541-706-6780, [email protected].

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There are a couple of new elements in the outdoor healing garden that sits at the center of St. Charles Madras. To the untrained eye, they may appear to simply be new decor, added to the space to give it more character.

But there’s more to the story.

Mounted on a stone at the south end of the garden is an artistic rendering of a face based on “She Who Watches,” a famous piece of Native American Indian (NAI) rock art located in the Columbia River Gorge. And on the garden’s north end, an existing water feature has been adorned with a sculpture of three salmon, which symbolizes abundance, fertility, prosperity and renewal in NAI culture.

The two pieces are the most visible evidence of a major effort underway at St. Charles Madras to make sure the hospital is providing care that is culturally appropriate for the diverse community it serves. That effort reaches not only the artwork throughout the hospital, but also into its training programs, care practices and policies, patient interactions and beyond.

The ultimate goal is for hospital staff and providers to mirror the demographics of Madras and Jefferson County, where the population is approximately a third NAI, a third Latino and a third white.

A hospital that looks like its community can take better care of its community, said Candy Canga-Picar chief nursing officer (CNO) in Madras, who has led the effort.

“Research has shown that in order for an organization to be culturally competent -- to minimize the gap in health care available to different ethnicities -- you want your workforce to be a reflection of the communities you serve,” she said. “If you walk around right now and look at our nursing workforce in Madras, I have one registered nurse who is Latino and one who is Native American Indian. The rest are all white. And the community is diverse. So there’s a huge disparity here.”

Canga-Picar has been the CNO at St. Charles Madras for about 5 years. She became interested in culturally competent care after hearing from caregivers who were concerned about running afoul of patients’ cultural preferences, as well as patients who felt their culture was being overlooked or disrespected -- not maliciously, necessarily, but because of ignorance and implicit bias.

“I’m Filipino, so there are things that I do and believe that may be difficult to understand no matter how much I try to explain it to you,” she said. “In health care, that translates into, ‘Your way of doing things that you think are right for the patient may be wrong for my culture.’ For example, the fast-paced environment of the hospital and how we usually interact with patients is uncomfortable and counter to the Native American Indian culture, which is much slower paced.’”

Canga-Picar started studying culturally competent care as part of her pursuit of a doctorate in nursing, and there are three major components to her work: how to grow cultural competency among current caregivers, how to empower and involve members of the community from diverse cultural backgrounds, and how to create an organization that, as a whole, understands cultural differences and how they affect care.

As you might guess, some of the more ambitious goals of Canga-Picar’s project will take a long time to come to fruition.

“We’re doing it slowly,” she said, “because you can’t boil the ocean.”

But you can start with things like installing NAI art in the healing garden, and replacing art elsewhere in the hospital that’s well-intentioned, but does not reflect the people of the three tribes in Jefferson County. And last year, Canga-Picar organized St. Charles’ first Transcultural Care Conference, featuring keynote speaker Dr. Josepha Campinha-Bacote.

The hospital followed up the conference with cultural competency training for its caregivers, as well as self-assessments before and after the training, Canga-Picar said. St. Charles’ nurse leadership team worked with human resources to rewrite nursing job descriptions to include required participation in cultural competency activities. And, in concert with Oregon Health & Science University, a clinical protocol has been established to flag Native American children who have a potentially deadly genetic condition known as CPT1.

“We put them in (our electronic medical record) and it creates an alert so that when this kid shows up, the physician knows exactly what to do,” Canga-Picar said.

Additionally, the hospital now has a Patient Family Advisory Council (PFAC) focused on NAI issues. Since August of 2018, the group has been working to identify gaps in care for tribal members, and changes are already happening: St. Charles has switched from a mailed patient satisfaction survey to a telephone survey at the PFAC’s suggestion.

“Participation has jumped from a small handful of people per month to upwards of 25 respondents per quarter,” Canga-Picar said.

“They’re an oral tradition people, so if it requires writing, they won’t fill it out. We were spending lots of money sending mailers and they were just getting thrown away,” she said. “And all we had to do was ask. They’re saying: ‘Involve us. We’re your patients.’”

That message is resonating with people at St. Charles Madras besides Canga-Picar. David Golda, St. Charles’ vice president and hospital administrator in Madras, said he’s “all in” on improving the organization’s cultural competency. He said it’s important that St. Charles work to create “better balance” among its caregivers, and that that journey begins with recognizing the cultural differences that exist within the hospital.

“That’s really one of the most important things about the work (Candy is) doing -- that purposeful effort to get all caregivers on the same page,” Golda said, “but also to involve the community in identifying and understanding what those differences look like.”

The people who work at the Madras hospital care deeply about their patients and have been happy to participate in cultural training, he said. “They want to do the best job they can for the people who come here,” Golda said. “So I think simply having access to this kind of information has been seen as a positive.”

There is still work to do, of course. Canga-Picar would like to require all caregivers visit the Warm Springs museum and the Indian Health Services clinic, and she wants cultural competency to be part of St. Charles’ standard onboarding program. Plans are being made to renovate the Madras Family Birthing Center with colors and artwork that reflect both Latino and NAI culture. And a Latino PFAC is set to launch in November.

Madras resident Mayra Benitez has expressed interest in serving on the Latino PFAC. She called Canga-Picar’s work “awesome” but said she still accompanies her mother to appointments because too much information gets lost in translation between caregivers and patients.

“Spanish-speaking patients still walk out of there feeling like they weren’t understood, or that their needs weren’t met. As a child of a migrant family that didn’t speak any English, I’ve seen that,” Benitez said. “Because of our culture, a Latino patient will go deep into the background of how they ended up at the hospital or the doctor’s office, and a lot of that still gets dismissed.”

She said she knows it’s going to take time for St. Charles Madras to reflect the community it serves, and that while staffers work on important improvements behind the scenes, she’s hopeful that members of the Latino community will soon be able to see themselves represented in more public-facing ways.

“You walk in and you don’t see a Hispanic face at the front, so there’s still a barrier there,” Benitez said. “There are a lot of good things happening that patients aren’t seeing. But we also need representation right when you walk in the door so people know that, ‘Yes, it’s going to take time, but we’re trying. We’re making these changes because we want you to feel welcome here.’”

People are taking notice of St. Charles Madras’ efforts outside Central Oregon, too. Recently, Canga-Picar received a call from Nicole Krishnaswami, executive director of the Oregon Medical Board, who invited her to present her work to the statewide regulatory agency sometime next year.

“The Oregon Medical Board is committed to promoting culturally competent care among the physicians, physician assistants and acupuncturists it licenses. I was intrigued to read about Ms. Canga-Picar’s work at St. Charles Madras in a recent news article,” Krishnaswami said. “Her dedication to the community is inspiring, and I am thrilled that she will present her important work to the Oregon Medical Board members and staff at an upcoming board meeting.”

Back in Madras, Canga-Picar recently thumbed through a well-worn three-ringed binder that contains page after page of findings on culturally sensitive care, as well as goals for the Madras hospital and St. Charles as a whole. Completed tasks are highlighted in green, “in progress” tasks are yellow, and items still to be tackled are white. There are plenty of each, but Canga-Picar knows not to get bogged down in day-to-day accomplishments.

“I told the managers, ‘Look guys, we have to give ourselves time to get from knowledge to translation to behaviors,’” she said. “Just because we have a cultural summit and a PFAC doesn’t mean we change overnight. This is an ongoing thing. Cultural competency is not a destination. It’s an ongoing journey.”

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May 4, 2020

Since the beginning of the COVID-19 outbreak, St. Charles has maintained its focus on our top priority of keeping our patients, caregivers and communities safe. Part of that included strong messaging about staying home.

But in recent weeks we have noticed a concerning trend that has also been reflected in many other areas of the country. During the month of April, emergency room visits across all St. Charles hospitals were down about 42% compared with our normal April volumes. What’s more, our cardiology team has indicated it is seeing about half the normal number of heart attack patients.

While we would be heartened if the decrease in the need for emergency and cardiology services was the result of an uptick in the health of our community, we are concerned that people may not be seeking the care they need out of fear of COVID-19. I want to reassure you that St. Charles hospitals and clinics are safe places to receive care. As Dr. Jeff Absalon, our chief physician executive, explains in this video, we’ve taken a number of steps to minimize your risk of exposure and help you feel comfortable during your visit.

A FEW THOUGHTS ABOUT REOPENING 

St. Charles leaders have been involved in conversations at the state and local levels about reopening plans in recent weeks. We understand the many concerns about high unemployment rates in Central Oregon and the devastating impacts COVID-19 is having on our local economy.

As a health care organization, our first priority must be to protect the health of our patients, caregivers and community. We are providing data to our local and state elected officials so they can make informed decisions about how and when to reopen businesses in a safe way. This includes regularly reporting our levels of personal protective equipment (PPE), monitoring new cases of COVID-19 and sharing our bed capacity and any concerns related to staffing. In addition, when the timing is right, we would like to work with our public health partners to provide local businesses with support, training information and resources to help them feel confident that they can open slowly and safely.

At the same time, we continue to work with our providers and caregivers to slowly expand our own capacity to provide more health services in alignment with Governor Brown’s orders. And we are actively reviewing our visitation policy to determine when and if we can begin to relax it.

UNIVERSAL MASKING

COVID-19 has changed our lives in innumerable ways and it is important to remember the reasons we are making these sacrifices:

  • COVID-19 is a deadly virus that continues to circulate in our communities and for which a vaccination or effective treatment may not be available in the near future
  • Fourteen cases have been identified in Jefferson County while Deschutes County has had 79 positive cases and Crook County has had 1 positive case
  • Health care workers continue to take risks to care for others and we have a responsibility to protect them along with the most vulnerable among us

For these reasons and more, St. Charles has instituted a universal masking protocol. All caregivers are required to wear a mask while at work at a clinical location regardless of their position. All patients and visitors are also required to wear masks when entering our facilities. If you have a cloth mask at home, we encourage you to bring it with you to your St. Charles visit.

We are able to enact this policy, in part, because of the generous donations of cloth masks from our community. We have received more than 15,000 donated cloth masks and have been able to ensure every member of our St. Charles team has two cloth masks to wear in and out of our buildings. We are continuing to collect cloth mask donations and – thanks to you – are now able to donate the surplus to our community partners who are in need.

Sincerely,
Joe

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Last summer, after 14 years as a stay-at-home mom, Amy Stewart started looking for a job that would provide a second income for her family. Her preferred field? Health care.

“It’s something I’ve always wanted to do,” Stewart said. “Caring for people is close to my heart, so I looked at (St. Charles), just hoping to get a foot in the door.”

Less than a year later, Stewart is one of eight St. Charles caregivers who recently completed a new internal training program to become a level-one Certified Nursing Assistant, also known as a CNA 1. In a matter of months, her foot in the door has turned into a full-time job working with patients.

“I’m still pinching myself because I just can’t believe this opportunity came along,” Stewart said. “I can’t wait to go to work because it doesn’t feel like work to me.”

For a variety of reasons, recruiting and retaining CNA 1s has historically been a major challenge for St. Charles. So earlier this year, the health system offered, in simple terms, to pay caregivers to become a CNA. That means current employees were taken out of their roles – in registration and admitting, environmental services and other non-medical units – and placed in a four-week training program paid for by St. Charles. The caregivers were also paid an hourly wage while going through the training, which featured both classroom and hands-on instruction at St. Charles Bend and strictly followed Oregon State Board of Nursing guidelines and processes.

 “An in-house CNA training program is something we’ve wanted for a long time because there really is no downside to it,” said Janice Pendroy, the Clinical Practice and Professional Development specialist overseeing the program. “It’s an incredible opportunity for growth and development for our caregivers. It teaches them new skills and gives them a path to advance their careers without having to leave the organization. It’s an investment in our people, and it strengthens our team by keeping proven and experienced employees here.”

Stewart was happy with her initial job at St. Charles on the Central Processing team, which works closely with the Operating Room to prepare and process surgical instruments and carts ahead of surgeries. She absorbed a ton of information as part of that job’s onboarding process and felt proud of her important role in the hospital’s surgical service.

“It’s the most indirect (form of) direct patient care you can have, because the success of the surgeries depends on, yes, the surgeons, but it also requires that the instruments are sterilized and working properly,” she said. “I would’ve stayed there but I just really, really, really wanted to be on the other side of patient care, and then a co-worker (showed me the CNA program) and I thought, ‘Oh no way. This is too good to be true.’”

Sierra Pfingsten felt the same way. She’d worked in Patient Access Admitting at the St. Charles Madras Emergency Department for more than a year when she learned of the CNA program and saw an opportunity to make progress on a long-held goal.

“I’d wanted to get my CNA certification but have been struggling to find extra time to complete the program,” Pfingsten said. “So getting the opportunity to do that while still working was absolutely amazing.”

Pfingsten said she was overwhelmed by the support and encouragement she received from fellow caregivers across the health system. “I’d recommend it to anyone seeking a different career path within St. Charles,” she said.

All eight members of the first CNA trainee cohort were passionate about patient care, dedicated to learning and enthusiastic about the opportunity, Pendroy said. Tara Estes, formerly a Patient Service Representative at the Bend South Immediate Care Clinic, said she “immediately applied” for the program because she had long wanted to be more involved in patient care but had never been able to schedule more schooling. Skye Buck, who was registering patients at the Bend Emergency Department, said she was “so excited” to be a part of the health system’s first CNA program. And Jordan Johnson, a former member of the Environmental Services (EVS) team at St. Charles Madras, commuted more than an hour each way from her home in Warm Springs to Bend every day of the program, in part because she believes it is her gateway to a nursing career.

“I’ve been interested in health care since I was young and I took my EVS job hoping it would lead to something like this,” she said. “I’m going to try to get into the CNA 2 course and then the goal is to go for the nursing program at Central Oregon Community College.”

St. Charles is planning to offer a similar program for level-two CNAs, or CNA 2s, later this year, Pendroy said.

Stewart is interested in future programs, but even if she never pursues them, going through the CNA 1 program has already changed her life in ways she could never have expected, she said.

“Being a stay-at-home mom, your life revolves around your kids – which is such a hard and important job, don’t get me wrong. But this has changed the way they view me. All of a sudden, Mom’s not just a mom. She can help people. She has all this new knowledge. They ask me questions about my work now,” she said. “It’s given me so much more confidence than I had before. It’s like, ‘Yes, I am a productive member of society.’ I’m helping people. I’m making sure people feel cared for. It’s awesome.”

St. Charles Health System’s first CNA training cohort:

Timothy Arguijo
Skye Buck
Gavin Campbell
Tara Estes
Jordan Johnson
Sierra Pfingsten
Tanner Schild
Amy Stewart

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