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THE RIGHT CARE
2009 YEAR IN REVIEW 2009
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THE RIGHTTIME
On behalf of the Stanford Hospital & Clinics Board of Directors, I am pleased to share this Year in Review with all who are
committed to assuring the future of health care in our community, in our nation and around the world. As we stand
together on the threshold of a transformative era in medicine and biotechnology that will bring advances unimaginable
today, we are creating an environment in the New Stanford Hospital that will redefine the hospital experience for
patients, families and caregivers. It will also ensure that the pioneering research Stanford is known for worldwide is
supported by a clinical facility that will accelerate translation of laboratory breakthroughs into patient care.
There is no better place to do this than at Stanford, in the heart of Silicon Valley, and no better time than now, when
the urgent need to replace a 1950s facility presents this unprecedented opportunity. If we apply the same creativity,
resourcefulness and generosity that generations have before us, we can make this bold vision a reality.
Today, Stanford Hospital is strong financially and well prepared to take the next critical steps ahead. We are tremendously
grateful to Martha Marsh for her leadership over the past eight years and are conducting a national search for a successor
who will continue the outstanding progress she has helped make possible.
The New Stanford Hospital will build on a proud legacy of innovation and discovery that has benefited patients everywhere.
In our own community, it will ensure that our families, friends, neighbors and colleagues will have the finest medical
resources available anywhere just minutes from home, matched by patient experience and service commensurate with
Stanford’s quality of care.
None of us can predict when a personal need, regional disaster or emergency will occur, but we do know that being in the
right place when it matters most will make all the difference. That is why I hope you will join me and so many others in
creating the future as we know it can be — an era of hope, healing and health that enriches life for everyone.
Mariann ByerwalterChair, Board of Directors
Stanford Hospital & Clinics
to create the hospital of the future
DRAMATIC TRANSFORMATION
With its medical innovations, exquisite aesthetics and expanded capacity, the New Stanford Hospital will
meet this community’s needs well into the future. The state-of-the-art Andreessen Emergency Department
will be significantly larger than the existing one. Intensive care capacity will also substantially increase. The
interventional suites—hybrid platforms capable of surgery, catheterization, advanced imaging, and other
diagnostics and treatments—will revolutionize the delivery of acute care. With its atrium design, garden Floor
and Patient Care Pavilions, the building will be infused with light, art, music, beauty—and the most uplifting,
restorative patient experience possible.
For more details about the New Stanford Hospital, please see page 24.
On an intersection adjacent to the existing Stanford Hospital, a transformational, new community asset is being created. The New Stanford Hospital—technologically advanced, patient-centered, and filled with beautiful, healing-supportive spaces—will significantly expand the capacity of the existing hospital and redefine what a hospital stay can be.
3
LEGGAACY
FOR OURCOMMUNITY
when it matters most
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Providing the right care, at the right time, in the right setting, by the right team, is at the heart of our commitment
to every patient at Stanford Hospital & Clinics. In this Year in Review, we are proud to highlight how that
commitment is being fulfilled and how it is making a real difference in the lives of our patients.
In these pages, you will meet people who came to Stanford Hospital when it mattered most. We are truly grateful
to them for sharing their stories.
Just over a year ago, we opened the Stanford Medicine Outpatient Center in Redwood City. This beautiful new
facility has demonstrated that the inspiring vision to create new environments and service commensurate with
Stanford’s quality of care can be realized.
Four years ago, we set an ambitious goal to lead the nation in bringing the benefits of a fully electronic medical
record system to our patients. Stanford Hospital is now among only a handful of institutions to have achieved the
highest-level designation for such systems, a milestone that sets the stage for a future of unlimited opportunities.
Stanford Hospital is the right choice today — for patients needing the latest advances in diagnosis and treatment,
for generous donors seeking to make a lasting difference, and for a community wanting to ensure that the finest
health care available anywhere will be here when they need it.
It has been a privilege to lead this organization for the past eight years, and I am very proud of what we have
accomplished. I have been honored to work with so many individuals who are truly committed to our patients.
As I look ahead to my retirement at the end of this fiscal year, on August 31, 2010, I want to express my deepest
appreciation to everyone for the dedication that has made so much possible and my great confidence that an even
brighter future lies ahead.
Martha MarshPresident & CEO
Stanford Hospital & Clinics
11
to conquer a tough challenge
Stanford Hospital’s Bariatric Surgery program has one of the best patient outcome records in the u.S.
It is the only one in Northern California recognized by the American College of Surgeons as a Level 1A
Center for Excellence. With sensitivity and compassion, the program carefully counsels its patients,
working with them to create a plan that will address all the issues involved in weight loss aided by
surgery. The program engages its patients in support groups right from the start to provide them a place
where they can feel safe to express their feelings and to have a sense of community. The program’s team
includes a multidisciplinary group of nurses, nutritionists, psychologists and other clinicians who monitor
their patients’ progress for an extended period of time. The research emerging from this program is also
providing more clarity to the complex interaction between weight and health, knowledge that will refine
treatment for an even greater degree of success.
BARIATRIC SURGERY
A LIFE RENEWED
By the time Nat Ezray was in the fifth grade, he was already a Weight Watchers member. By 42, he had become
a rabbi and also developed diabetes — and had his first heart attack. He tried to keep fit, tried to diet, but lost and
gained weight over and over again. He knew he needed more help. When he talked to Stanford Bariatric Surgery
Program Director John Morton, MD, MPH, he discovered a physician who understood that success would depend
on a whole package of changes, in addition to gastric bypass surgery. Ezray was also reassured because the surgeon
had completed more than 1,000 such surgeries with no serious complications. The program requires that patients
be carefully screened with full psychological evaluations, participate in support groups and receive frequent
check-ups. Today, Rabbi Ezray is no longer obese, has eliminated nearly all of his medications and routinely hits
the hiking trails.
“I feel wonderful on many levels—the degree of vitality, the
degree of energy, the degree of enthusiasm just to greet the day.
I feel like I have the pieces in place for longevity.”
—Rabbi Nat Ezray
3
“The medical care for me was obviously great, but Stanford also kept my family and my husband in the loop, helping them deal with what had happened and to care for me. The outreach was so important.” —Katharine Decker Johnson
TRAUMA CENTER
BEATING THE ODDS
Officially, Katharine Decker Johnson’s heart stopped twice before she arrived at Stanford Hospital’s
Emergency Department. Out for a bicycle ride one spring morning, she ended up hurtling through the
air off the front of a garbage truck. Nearly every bone in her body was broken; her lungs collapsed,
her skull fractured. Stanford’s team of specialists in trauma medicine went to work. Decker Johnson
doesn’t remember the first days of her hospital stay. “The voices are what I remember, the soothing
voices,” she says. And the small gestures. “I rang the buzzer for a nurse once when I was in ICU and
really out of it. ‘I’m lonely,’ I said, and she held my hand.” Two years after her accident, Decker
Johnson has returned to riding—only this time, it’s on her trusty chestnut-colored horse, Matrix.
no matter where or when
When injured patients with the most extreme medical needs arrive at Stanford Hospital’s Emergency
Department, whether by local ambulance or by Life Flight aircraft from hundreds of miles away, their
chances of survival immediately surpass the national average. Stanford’s Level 1 Trauma Center
provides the highest level of care achievable, a distinction of multidisciplinary expertise that saves
lives often thought lost. As part of the only hospital to offer Level 1 Trauma services between
San Francisco and San Jose, Stanford’s multidisciplinary team of physicians and nurses pushes
beyond the status quo, developing innovative programs to reduce infection, speed diagnostic results
and strengthen post-discharge care.
4
to treat the whole person
CARDIOVASCULAR SERVICES
MORE THAN THE HEART
At 49, former firefighter Cindi Lubeck had always been fit and active. But when she began tiring on the treadmill,
and feeling nauseous and anxious, she knew something wasn’t right. She called 911 and ultimately was diagnosed
with a heart attack. At Stanford, Lubeck found Jennifer Tremmel, MD, an interventional cardiologist who
not only understood the physical aspects of her heart disease, but also asked, “How are you, apart from your
heart?” Lubeck benefited from Stanford’s Heart-Mind Connection, a multidisciplinary approach that teaches
women how to cope with the stress of their condition. She learned mindfulness techniques and joined a hospital
support group where she discovered other women who understood just how she was feeling. She’s back to a full
life now, one that includes keeping up with her young grandchildren—and hitting the slopes on her snowboard.
Stanford Hospital’s cardiovascular surgeons and cardiologists made history when they performed one
of the first successful human heart transplants in 1968, which was soon followed by a pioneering
heart-lung transplant operation. This legacy lives on, with Stanford physicians making great strides
against the challenges of heart disease with research, clinical trials and patient care. More than 5,000
cardiac patients each year find the help they need at Stanford, whose program is ranked among the
best in the nation for its clinical outcomes and continuing development of breakthrough diagnostic tools
and treatments. Stanford also offers specialty clinics and programs. Its Marfan Syndrome Center
is the largest in the u.S. Its Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Clinic is the only center in the West to treat
this silent but deadly condition. And the Women’s Heart Health program is one of the nation’s most
comprehensive, offering a broad spectrum of care for a long-neglected health issue.
INSIGGHT
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“It’s our hope that we can help women do a better job of protecting their
heart health and of recovering from heart disease. We know that effective treatment is not as simple as opening
a blocked artery or improving diet and exercise.”
—Jennifer Tremmel, MD
7
to restore a full and active life
ORTHOPAEDICS & SPORTS MEDICINE
“The quality of care at Stanford is just extraordinary—the doctors, the nurses and, of course, the results.” —Kevan Del Grande
RESTOORE
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OVERCOMING WEAR AND TEAR
Like many athletes, amateur and professional, Kevan Del Grande played hard despite injuries.
After more than six decades of tournament-level handball, Del Grande had pushed his body
to the limit. Handball stresses every part of the body. “You don’t actually jump up the side of the
walls,” says Del Grande, “but the wall is not very forgiving.” His rotator cuff, the shoulder joint’s
protective sleeve of muscles and tendons, was shredded. Del Grande knew where he wanted to
go—to see the physicians at Stanford’s Sports Medicine Clinic, part of the Hospital’s Orthopaedic
Surgery Department. Instead of opening up Del Grande’s shoulder with a six-inch incision,
surgeons made three small cuts to do the repair arthroscopically. Del Grande healed quickly and
can depend on the repair to last. At 77, he’s back to winning national handball titles.
Stanford’s extensive team of specialists, expert in every aspect of bone health and
function, treat every sort of bone injury, musculoskeletal tumor and chronic spinal
condition. Its Spine Center physicians are internationally recognized as leaders in
research translated to patient care. Ranked as one of the nation’s best, the Orthopaedics
Department is moving beyond traditional treatments to techniques that offer longer-
lasting bone and joint repairs and replacement that incorporate the latest knowledge on
how to speed healing and durability. In Sports Medicine, the orthopaedic clinicians treat
a variety of patients, whether high school students, seniors or professional athletes,
including the San Francisco 49ers. Another group of orthopaedic specialists focus on
reconstructive surgery to save limbs and restore function. Stanford orthopaedists take
a collaborative approach to care, working closely with specialists in pain management,
for instance, to address an element of care that deeply affects recovery.
8 9
EMBRACING A FUTURE
Tara MacInnes had already had multiple mini-strokes in her brain when she was finally diagnosed by Stanford’s
chief of neurosurgery and one of the world’s most experienced Moyamoya surgeons. The disease, which tangles
the brain’s arteries and blocks blood flow with devastating effects, strikes just one in a million. For almost 20
years, Gary Steinberg, MD, PhD, has led ground-breaking research and offered life-saving surgery to hundreds
of Moyamoya patients. Steinberg performed a complex and painstaking revascularization procedure, connecting
arteries in MacInnes’ scalp to those in her brain, with sutures finer than a hair and needles no larger than an
eyelash. MacInnes, now a college sophomore majoring in social service, is an independent young woman who
relishes long, open-water swims. “I don’t really worry about it now,” she says. “I plan to live as long as anyone.”
NEUROSCIENCE
to create new pathways
“I knew I was in the best hands possible. Dr. Steinberg was very calm about the way he described things. I don’t really
worry about it now.”—Tara MacInnes
It gives humans the power to think, act, speak and dream. As the master control center of the body, the
brain issues commands in ways still mysterious to medicine. Stanford neurologists and neurosurgeons
are making significant advances in better understanding how the brain works—and how to fix it when
something goes wrong. New, minimally invasive surgical approaches in the hands of skilled Stanford
neurosurgeons now give patients a chance at survival in the worst of circumstances. The Hospital’s
Stroke Center takes advantage of unique imaging software to see problem arteries in the brain, measuring
details that reveal crucial information for surgery infrequently performed elsewhere. The Hospital’s
Moyamoya team is the world’s most experienced and knowledgeable about a rare condition that can
cause stroke after stroke. Physician researchers have also developed new ways to map the brain’s
activity, and plant electrodes deep inside to make life more functional for patients facing challenging
illnesses such as epilepsy and Parkinson’s disease.
10
A TRANSpLANT CHAIN
Yvette Aziz was desperate to help her husband of 26 years, Fred. Three times a week, the former engineer spent
hours hooked up to a dialysis machine that did the work for his failing kidneys. He was going downhill. “He was
tired all the time. He wouldn’t eat. He couldn’t sleep,” Yvette recalls. Her kidneys weren’t a match for his, and
certain components in her husband’s blood barred him from a transplant from roughly half the U.S. population.
Then Stanford Hospital’s Kidney Transplant Program accepted him for a special kind of donation. His wife
would donate one of her kidneys to a person she matched, and her husband would receive one of the other
donated kidneys in a transplant chain that connected 16 patients and eight kidney transplants at five hospitals
over two days. After two years on a waiting list, Fred Aziz had his life back.
TRANSpLANTATION
to provide second chances
Stanford’s transplant programs have always been ahead of the curve, with high standards that support
patient success and continuous quality improvement. A collaborative, multidisciplinary team carefully
evaluates prospective patients, working to include their families in these life-changing procedures. After
a transplant, the team maintains close contact with patients to guide and encourage them. To offer more
people the chance at a new life, Stanford transplant teams are pioneering new treatment options, such
as kidney chain donations that connect donors and recipients across the country. using protocols
built on solid scientific evidence, Stanford Hospital’s transplant programs are known internationally
for a tradition of innovation. The kidney program is among the nation’s leaders in patient outcomes.
The liver, lung and heart-lung transplant teams are nationally recognized for excellence.
“The whole team did a great job, from the lowest level to the highest. god
bless every person at Stanford.” —Fred Aziz
12
EXCELLEENCE
TRICKING IMMUNE CELLS
For eight years, Albert Yu, 66, had kept his lymphoma at bay with advanced chemotherapy and clinical trial
treatments offered by his Stanford Hospital physicians. Despite everything, the cancer kept coming back.
Yu’s options were dwindling. But he had read about a special bone marrow transplant protocol, developed
at Stanford, which would increase the chances that his body would accept donor cells transfused into it to build
a new immune system. Yu decided to take the risk. At Stanford’s Blood and Marrow Transplantation Program,
he would be cared for by a team of specialist physicians and nurses with years of experience. They became like
family to him. “It was very emotional for me,” he says. “I felt somebody gave me life.” Two years later, Yu’s cancer
is in remission, and he is gratefully back to perfecting his tennis swing and enjoying life with his wife, Mary.
for personalized treatment
Stanford’s Cancer Center is one of just 65 in the u.S. to earn a National Cancer Institute (NCI) Cancer
Center designation. granted through a rigorous peer-review process, the NCI designation recognizes
Stanford’s scientific excellence, the advanced care offered to patients, and its investigation of new
approaches to cancer prevention, diagnosis and treatment. The clinical Cancer Center is a state-of-the-
art facility infused with light, warmth and music. In addition to clinical trials, treatment options include
an important set of tools that few facilities have: the CyberKnife, developed by a Stanford physician; the
da vinci robotic surgery system; and the Trilogy linear accelerator. Together, they make it possible
to treat once-untouchable cancers in the brain, lungs and liver. Stanford research created new types of
blood and marrow transplants, which offer another level of hope for patients. Specially trained Cancer
Center volunteers support patients through what can be an overwhelming experience, directing them
to special Stanford services that promote ongoing healing.
CANCER
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“When it comes to translating the latest research into practice, Stanford is
unparalleled. This bench-to-bedside leadership literally saved my life.”
—Albert Yu
1515
Nothing matters more at Stanford Hospital than the quality of care we provide to our patients, whether they come from
our neighboring communities or from around the world. We hold ourselves to the highest standards and are proud of the
recognition we have received over the past year.
• In the U.S. News & World Report rankings of America’s best hospitals, Stanford Hospital & Clinics was 15th this year
and for the ninth consecutive year achieved Honor Roll status, a distinction earned by only 21 hospitals out of 5,000.
• In the Leapfrog Hospital Survey, we were one of only 45 hospitals nationwide to receive recognition among more
than 1,200 reviewed. Leapfrog is an organization formed by a group of large employers to initiate breakthrough
improvements in the safety, quality and affordability of health care for Americans. The annual survey rates hospitals
on a range of quality and safety practices that all hospitals should follow.
• Stanford Hospital & Clinics is a Magnet-designated hospital by the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC),
recognizing quality patient care, nursing excellence and innovations in professional nursing practice. Only 6 percent
of all healthcare organizations in the United States have achieved ANCC Magnet Recognition® status.
Quality depends on much more than rankings, which cannot fully convey how patients benefit by choosing Stanford. Our
physicians, nurses and other health professionals work together as integrated, interdisciplinary teams to provide the highest-
quality, personalized care. From surgical procedures not available elsewhere, to innovative cancer therapies, complex organ
transplants and more than 65 specialty clinics, Stanford Hospital & Clinics provides a depth and breadth of expertise that
today generates outcomes that are among the best in the nation.
The pace of advances in patient care will accelerate even more rapidly with development of the New Stanford Hospital.
We are designing much more than a building —we are literally creating new delivery systems that will benefit patients
here and everywhere, ensuring that breakthroughs developed by Stanford physicians will improve life and health for all.
Kevin Tabb, MDChief Medical Officer
THE RIGHTQUALITY
for the best outcomes
THE MOST ADVANCED ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORDS SYSTEM
Stanford Hospital is among the very few institutions nationwide to have achieved the highest-level designation for
an electronic medical record system from the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS)
Analytics Database, the industry organization focused on the use of information technology in health care.
In early 2010, Stanford Hospital & Clinics became the fourth healthcare organization and one of only six
nationwide among more than 5,000 to achieve this top-level designation, known as “Stage 7.”
For patients, this means that health information can be securely shared with their primary care physicians and other
providers to improve coordination of care. It will also mean that patients can easily access their personal records
online at home and engage in dialogue with their Stanford doctors.
For community physicians, it will mean easier, faster and more convenient access to Stanford Hospital resources.
As a leading research institution, Stanford Hospital & Clinics will use its vast database of clinical information
to drive improvements in delivery of care and outcomes, increase patient safety and enhance efficiency—
ensuring that the investment Stanford has made in this advanced technology will benefit hospitals and
patients worldwide.
SERVICE COMMENSURATE WITH QUALITY OF CARE AT OUTpATIENT CENTER
“How can we help you?” That’s the first question that patients and visitors
are likely to hear upon entering the Stanford Medicine Outpatient Center
in Redwood City. The Center, which opened in February 2009, aims to
deliver health care in an innovative way. With service at its core, the Center
features cozy couches, fresh flowers, ambient lighting and beautiful
artwork. Employees are specially trained to ensure that the patient experience
is a positive one. Digital whiteboards in waiting rooms display up-to-the-
minute information on appointment times, while a monitor provides privately
coded status updates on patients in surgery. The facility includes extensive
diagnostic imaging services, rehabilitation services and six operating
rooms. Clinical specialties are Dermatology, Digestive Health, Imaging,
Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Pain Management, and Sleep Medicine.
16 17
ExECuTIvE CHEF BENI vELAZQuEZ, CEO MARTHA MARSH, AND CHEF JESSE COOL
EXCITING NEW MENU FOR INpATIENTS
In collaboration with nationally recognized organic chef and restaurateur Jesse Cool, Stanford Hospital this
year introduced a brand new menu option of healthy meals made from organic, locally grown and sustainable
ingredients featuring seasonal fruits and vegetables. Stanford Hospital & Clinics’ Farm Fresh debuted with
made-from-scratch soups—bright, appealing and tasty—an evolution from traditional hospital fare. Stanford
offers its patients the kinds of meals that are high in nutritional value and an asset to healing. The Hospital’s
decision to embrace a new style of cooking puts it at the forefront of a movement endorsed by the American
Medical Association and the American Nurses Association. Patients can select from a special menu each
day, with delicious choices such as carrot-ginger soup with curry, organic herb-crusted chicken or
grass-fed beef meatloaf. The rolls are whole grain, and organic seasonal fruit with raisin stuffing completes
a quality meal.
For special soup recipes created especially for Stanford Hospital by Jesse Cool, please visit:
stanfordhospital.org/farmfresh/souprecipes
for a healthier life
“If Stanford Hospital can play a leadership role and be an advocate for organic, local and sustainable foods for patients, we’re
proud to take that responsibility.”—Martha Marsh
INCREASING FITNESS AND REDUCING FALLS IN OLDER ADULTS
Prevention is good medicine. That is why Stanford Hospital sponsors numerous community programs
to help people stay healthy. Strong for Life is an easy-to-follow, group exercise program that helps older
adults increase strength, balance and mobility, and reduce isolation. Another initiative, Farewell to Falls,
aims to reduce falls in older adults by offering a free home-based prevention program. Occupational
therapists provide home visits, perform risk assessments, make follow-up calls to monitor compliance
and perform yearly evaluations. Says one participant, “Farewell to Falls has improved my balance,
my self confidence... my life.”
1918 19
NO REQUEST TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL
A massage for a patient in pain. An interpreter to make sense of a doctor’s diagnosis. Soothing sounds of a
piano. Stanford Hospital’s guest Services department recognizes that thoughtful gestures, big or small, can
go a long way for the well-being of patients and their families. The Hospital offers a comprehensive array of
programs and services designed to ensure that a hospital visit is as comfortable as possible.
for you and your family
• Aging Adult Services
• Art Program
• Cancer Concierge Services
• Stanford Hospital gift Shop and the HelenSalzman Boutique
• Health Insurance Counseling and Advocacy Program
• Hospital Auxiliary
• Hospital Tours
• Interpreter Services
• Lifeline
• Massage Therapy
• Music Program
• Partners in Caring
• Patient Representation
• Pet-Assisted Wellness atStanford (PAWS)
• Smoking Cessation Program
• Spiritual Care
• Stanford Health Library
• vials of Life
HEALTH LIBRARY CELEBRATES 20TH ANNIVERSARY
As one of the first hospital-based health libraries in the u.S., the Stanford Hospital Health Library grew
quickly and now supplies 8,000 catalogued volumes, 700 health-related videos, a database of 400
medical journals, thousands of articles from 2,200 general-interest publications and a large Chinese-
language health collection. The Health Library’s five branches now include locations at the Hospital, the
Stanford Shopping Center, the Stanford Cancer Center, the Oshman Family Jewish Community Center
and the Ravenswood Health Clinic. It sponsors regular classes and lectures on a broad range of health
topics by Stanford physicians, available as online videos. The Health Library’s medical librarians offer
individualized help, free of charge, to people around the world.
CREATIVE HEALING THROUGH ART
Six days a week, specially trained volunteers wheel a cart full of pastels, watercolors, gouache and
other art-making materials into patient rooms, in search of those who might want to try their hand
at self-expression. For patients coping with illness, this break from the routine—and the release of stress
it can provide—is an important part of feeling positive about their future. Every six months, the patients’
work is displayed in a nursing unit hallway. The images include those made by a woman whose pregnancy
was at risk, a man fighting cancer, and a patient in isolation while a bone marrow transplant took hold.
With disease or injury can come anxiety, fear and distress. Art for Health is a healthy distraction that also
brings hope.
LOVE ON A LEASH
When people are away from home and not feeling well, sometimes the best
medicine is a reminder of home, with a wet nose and warm fur. Pet-Assisted
Wellness at Stanford (PAWS) brings a well-trained, well-groomed, specially
certified group of dogs, cats and, occasionally, rabbits of various breeds
to spend a few minutes with patients each week. The magic they work
has nothing to do with words, but often the affectionate interaction between
animal and human releases smiles and emotions long held inside. For more
than a decade, the Hospital has supported the program’s therapeutic visits
of these furry friends. Although patients can’t bring their own pets to keep
them company, the PAWS group does its best to fill the gap.
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WHY pHILANTHROpY MATTERS
To meet its mission—the delivery of outstanding medical care—Stanford Hospital & Clinics looks to another group of
visionaries: the people of this community who have made Stanford Hospital & Clinics a philanthropic priority. As a
private, nonprofit hospital, Stanford Hospital & Clinics relies on their generosity.
Donors have a variety of options for making the impact they seek. Annual gifts to the Stanford Hospital Partners sustain
the excellence and innovation of patient care. Commitments to the New Stanford Hospital will help create a state-of-the-
art facility that will define the region’s medical care for the future. Planned gifts, through bequests, charitable trusts
or annuities, help donors achieve a philanthropic impact well beyond their lifetime.
To find out where you can make a difference in the life and health of this community, please contact us.
Office of Hospital Development • 3330 Hillview Avenue, Palo Alto, CA 94304
Tel: 650.723.7643 • E-mail: [email protected] • stanfordhospital.org/giving
NEW STANFORD EYE INSTITUTE
The Stanford Eye Institute (SEI) is a comprehensive, interdisciplinary center
for all patient care, clinical research and training in ophthalmic medicine.
Drawing on Stanford’s exceptional research strengths, the Eye Institute
will deliver an integrated collection of vision services for diseases such
as glaucoma, cataracts and macular degeneration in one modern facility.
Funded through a $30 million capital campaign chaired by Brook Byers,
the SEI will open in fall 2010.
for your generosity
“Stanford Hospital is a world-class hospital and research facility, but it’s not something we can take for granted. We need to support the Hospital to ensure
that it will be there when we need it.” — An & Clement Chen, Stanford Hospital & Clinics
donors & volunteers
GIVING THIS COMMUNITY THE HOSpITAL IT DESERVES
When it comes to Stanford ties, An and Clement Chen’s are about as deep as they come. Their
parents were undergraduates at Stanford together. Clement’s father contributed to the design
of the original Stanford Hospital. Clement (Stanford ’77) has supported Stanford Hospital
and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital as the owner of the Sheraton Palo Alto since the 1970s.
Then An, the executive director at a healthcare think tank, began consulting for the University of
Pennsylvania, where she met an impressive hospital administrator by the name of Martha Marsh.
Marsh arrived at Stanford (as president and CEO) the same week the Chens’ daughter was born
there. “Our lives are entwined,” An laughs.
Today, the Chens live with son Calvin and daughter Patti in Hillsborough. They are advocates,
volunteers and donors for the New Stanford Hospital. “I want people my age to understand that
when it comes to your family’s health care, you cannot compromise,” says An. “We need to build
this new hospital as a legacy for our children.”
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2322 23
THE NEW STANFORD HOSpITAL offers this community a once-in-a-generation opportunity—the chance to redefine our
medical care for the next 50 years. With the help of private gifts of all sizes from individuals, foundations and corporations,
Stanford will build a hospital of the future, featuring the most powerful diagnostic and treatment facilities, in a setting
of privacy, comfort, personal attention and uplifting aesthetics.
pRIVACY: Spacious, single-patient rooms
FAMILY COMFORT: Overnight accommodations in
patient rooms
pATIENT CARE pAVILIONS: Natural light and views of the
gardens, campus, Santa Cruz foothills and San Francisco Bay
ANDREESSEN EMERGENCY DEpARTMENT: Significantly
larger than the existing Emergency Department; the area’s
only Level 1 Trauma Center
INTERVENTIONAL SUITES: One location for surgery,
catheterization and imaging
CApACITY: 600 beds, sufficient to meet the region’s
future needs
SUSTAINABILITY: Designed to be the equivalent of Silver
LEED (Leadership in Environmental and Energy Design)
ENTRANCE FLOOR: Lobby and atrium, Emergency
Department, Advanced Imaging Center, pedestrian
promenade and gardens
SECOND FLOOR (TECHNOLOGY): Interventional suites
(surgical/catheterization/imaging/monitoring), intensive
care unit, waiting room
THIRD FLOOR (GARDEN): gardens, café, conference
center, meditation room
FOURTH FLOOR: Intensive care
FIFTH THROUGH SEVENTH FLOORS: Patient Care
Pavilions, clustered by medical specialty
Design by Rafael viñoly Architects
for our community’s hospital of the future
“It’s time to reimagine the Stanford Hospital.”
—William Younger, Board member and donor to the New Stanford Hospital
2524 25
COMMUNITY
for the health of our community
HOSpITAL pARTNERS
Our Hospital Partners Program provides the annual support that keeps our patient care at the leading edge
of clinical medicine. Discretionary funds that can be used wherever the need is greatest, Partners’ gifts
have in the past year supported the new Farm Fresh inpatient meals (see page 18); purchased new breast
biopsy equipment for better detection of cancer, and enhanced the telecommunications capacities of the
Life Flight Helicopter.
We thank our Hospital Partners, and all our donors, with a series of informational and appreciation events.
A GRATEFUL pATIENT GETS A pROpER DIAGNOSIS
Six years ago, when Lois Meredith was struck with a mysterious illness
that left her weak, anemic and in need of repeated blood transfusions, a
gastroenterologist told her, “You will have to learn to live with it.”
Not likely. “I didn’t know what was wrong with me, but I knew I wasn’t
going to take that advice,” says Lois, a painter, writer and swimmer who
lives with her husband, Bob, in Tiburon.
Lois decided to be treated at Stanford and three months later, she was
walking through France on a painting trip. “Stanford Hospital has it
right,” she says. “Our gifts are our way of helping it continue to make
a difference.”
“I have found my hospital. Stanford has state-of-the-art technology, efficient systems, and people who are warm,
reassuring and professional. We want to support that.”
— Lois Meredith, Hospital Partners donor
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2726 27
Stanford Hospital & Clinics is a nonprofit healthcare provider known worldwide for advanced treatment
of complex disorders in areas such as cardiovascular care, cancer treatment, neurosciences, surgery and organ
transplants. The Hospital is internationally recognized for translating medical breakthroughs into the care
of patients. It is part of the Stanford University Medical Center, along with the Stanford University School
of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford.
In fiscal year 2009, Stanford expanded its ambulatory care capacity by opening the Stanford Medicine
Outpatient Center in Redwood City, California, and also increased inpatient volume.
NET OPERATINg ExPENSES
Salaries and Benefits $787 43.1%
Supplies $265 14.5%
Purchased Services $434 23.7%
Depreciation $74 4.0%
Interest Expense $38 2.1%
Transfers and Other $135 7.4%
Reinvestment, Net $95 5.2%
Total Net Operating Revenue and Expense: $1.828 billion
Inpatient Care $961 52.6%
Outpatient Care $804 44.0%
Other $63 3.4%
NET OPERATINg REvENuE (Dollars in millions)
(Dollars in millions)
COMMUNITY BENEFITS SUMMARY
In addition to delivering outstanding patient care, Stanford Hospital & Clinics provides an extensive range
of community benefit programs. All free of charge or largely subsidized, these include health and education
programs such as the Stanford Health Library, the Stanford Cancer Supportive Care Program, Strong for Life
senior adult exercise program and Lifeline services. The Hospital also provides financial contributions and
services to several community-based clinics, and programs that offer culturally appropriate cancer education
and outreach.
Over the past year, key initiatives have focused on improving the health and well-being of older adults, as well
as improving access to care and reducing cancer-related health disparities.
The table below summarizes Stanford Hospital’s significant investment in community benefit programs.
Benefits for vulnerable Populations $94.8
Medicare (uncompensated Expense) $65.8
Benefits for the Larger Community $3.6
Health Research, Education and Training $26.0
Total Excluding Medicare $124.4
Total Including Medicare $190.2
HOSPITAL STATISTICS
Licensed Beds 613(465 operating)
Licensed ICu Beds 67(66 operating)
Operating Rooms 37
Staff
Medical 1,833
Interns and Residents 900
RNs 1,848
LvNs 16
Nursing Assistants 158
Nonmedical Employees 2,261
Total Staff 7,016
volunteers 868
volunteer Hours of Service 75,092
Admissions Per Year
Inpatient 23,744
Outpatient visits 531,807
ER visits 48,744
Stanford Health Library visits 13,500 walk-in/year; 30,000 online/month
COMMuNITY BENEFITS(Dollars in millions)
28 29
Stanford Hospital & Clinics 2009 Year in Review is a publication of the Office of Communications and Public Affairs at Stanford Hospital & Clinics.
Shelley Hébert Executive Director for Public Affairs
Gary Migdol Director of Communications
Susan Kinkead Managing Editor
Contributing Writers: Elizabeth Sloan, Sara Wykes
Photography: Mark Tuschman, Norbert von der Groeben
Design: 1185 Design, Palo Alto, CA
The brochure cover was printed with virtually VOC-free ultra-violet curable inks on Cougar Opaque Super Smooth Cover. Cougar contains 10% post consumer recycled fiber. Cougar is FSC-Certified, SFI Fiber Sourcing Certified and endorsed by the Rainforest Alliance.
The text pages were printed with vegetable-based inks on NewPage Centura. Centura contains 10% post-consumer recycled fiber.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
mariann byerwalter chair
john scully vice chair
marc andreessen
bryan bohman, md
sue bostrom
bruce cozadd
christopher dawes
john freidenrich
stephen hearst
joel hyatt
ron johnson
john levin
john lillie
martha marsh
albert martin, md
john morgridge
woodrow myers, md
denise o’leary
philip pizzo, md
christopher redlich
kathryn renschler, md
norman rizk, md
peter stamos
steve young
william younger
EXECUTIVE TEAM
martha marsh president & ceo
daniel ginsburg chief operating officer
carolyn byerly chief information officer
nancy lee vice president, patient care and chief nursing officer
jerrold maki vice president, clinical services
daniel morissette chief financial officer
l. timothy portwood vice president, development
barbara ralston vice president, international and guest services
sridhar seshadri vice president, cancer center and process excellence
kevin tabb, md chief medical officer
jenni vargas vice president, business development
helen wilmot vice president, ambulatory care
30
STANFORD HOSPITAL & CLINICS, 300 PASTEUR DRIVE, STANFORD, CA 94305
stanfordmedicine.org