Lost Hospital — Robert F. Kennedy Medical Center, Hawthorne, California4

Robert F. Kennedy Medical Center in Hawthorne, California was founded in 1926 as a maternity hospital. Dedicated to serving the community around it, the hospital proudly honored its mission statement:

(1) to deliver high quality, affordable health services with compassion the surrounding communities; (2) to provide direct care for the poor and disenfranchised; and (3) to partner with others in the community to improve the overall quality of life. … Read more →

Lost Hospital — The Massachusetts Hospital for Dipsomaniacs and Inebriates, Foxborough, Massachusetts0

The Massachusetts Hospital for Dipsomaniacs and Inebriates, located in Foxborough, Massachusetts, was founded in 1893. In its time, Foxborough Hospital was a pre-eminent institution for treating alcoholism, which by the end of the 1800s was perceived to be a growing problem in the United States.

Society’s method for dealing with alcoholism at the time was either jail or mental hospitals, but both were ineffective in keeping habitual alcoholics sober. Specialized “inebriate asylums” were designed to restrain the patient and eliminate any cravings for alcohol. … Read more →

Lost Hospital — Hissom Memorial Center, Sand Springs, Oklahoma0

As far back as 1909, Oklahoma first established services for individuals with mental disabilities (Oklahoma became a state in 1907).

Fifty years later, the Oklahoma legislature recognized the need to expand its mental health services, especially since the two existing facilities charged with the task were old and overcrowded.

In 1959, using land donated by Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Hissom, the construction of a new facility began near Sand Springs, Oklahoma. Built on 85 acres over a period of five years, and at an expense of $7 million, the Hissom Memorial Center opened on March 7, 1964. … Read more →

New York City Tests Home Organ Recovery Program0

New York City is testing a pilot program in an attempt to increase the number of organs available for human transplant. A special until in the City will now monitor 911 calls for people who may be dying (such as heart attack victims).

If the patients cannot be saved before transport to a hospital, this new city team will take over and try to save the kidneys. Most patients who die outside of a hospital environment are not candidates for organ recovery.

Organ recovery refers to the removal, preservation and use of human organs and tissue from the bodies of the recently deceased to be used in surgical transplants on the living. … Read more →

The Right to Health Care in Prisons0

The fate of 40,000 prison inmates in California now rests in the hands of the United States Supreme Court.

Criticizing California’s 20-year failure to provide inmates with adequate health care, the Justices weighed whether the release of these inmates would compromise public safety.

Without the ability to provide adequate medical care to its overpopulated prisons, critics have accused the State of violating the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition of “cruel and unusual punishments.” … Read more →

Lost Hospital — Santa Fe Hospital, Albuquerque, New Mexico0

Originally built to treat employees of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway, the Santa Fe Hospital opened in 1926 in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Expanding over a city block (2.3 acres), including three separate buildings totaling 47,000 square feet, the hospital changed its name in the 1940’s. It continued to provide acute care services in the community until 1982. In the 1980’s, a group of psychiatrists converted the facility into a mental health institution and changed the name to Memorial Hospital. … Read more →

When Looking Both Ways Is Not Enough0

A new study by researchers at Royal Holloway, University of London has determined that young children are not able to accurately judge the speed of approaching vehicles.

By measuring the perceptual acuity of over 100 young children, the researchers were able to determine that for speeds in excess of 20 mph (for a car just 5 seconds away), a child’s perception is simply not reliable. Adults, on the other hand, can make an accurate assessment for vehicles travelling as fast as 50 mph. … Read more →

Lost Hospital — Desert Palms Community Hospital, Palmdale, California0

In March 1996, owners of the 119-bed Desert Palms Community Hospital in Palmdale, California closed. About 235 employees lost their jobs, and the few remaining patients were transferred to Lancaster Community Hospital, 13 miles to the north.

When Desert Palms closed, the town of 110,000 people was left without a hospital or emergency department.

Before its closure, 90 percent of Desert Palms’ admissions came from the emergency department. … Read more →

Lost Hospital — Muhlenberg Regional Medical Center, Plainfield, New Jersey0

After 130 years of service to the community of Plainfield, New Jersey, Muhlenberg Regional Medical Center closed in 2008. When the hospital originally opened, the United States Army was battling Indian chiefs Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull in far-away Montana. Closer to home, Thomas Edison invented the phonograph.

At the time, Muhlenberg was the eighteenth hospital to close in New Jersey since 2000. … Read more →

PBS’s ‘This Emotional Life’: Excising the Fear From Surgery

“He who is not everyday conquering some fear has not learned the secret of life.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson

The words “fear” and “surgery” are inextricably connected. Not only that, but hospital stays in general are full of unfamiliar experiences that can easily jeopardize even the strongest sense of emotional well-being. To be a patient in the modern age means to give up control and place yourself in the hands of another, whose job it is to lead you through the maze of treatment options and back to recovery.

Still, nothing so typifies this fear and uncertainty as when the doctor utters that one word: surgery. At the same time, however, the Harvard School of Public Health reported in July 2010 that more than two billion people worldwide do not have access to adequate surgical treatment. Perhaps through a better understanding of surgery in the modern age, this, often misunderstood part of a hospital stay, can look and feel more somatic and less traumatic.

Should you or someone you love face the option of surgery, it is important to remind yourself of the many technical advances made by modern medicine in recent decades. For example, 50 years ago doctors faced huge obstacles when operating on a beating heart, since stopping the heart for more than a few minutes often results in brain damage. Today, technology not only makes heart and other formerly unthinkable types of surgery possible, many of yesterday’s riskiest procedures are now considered standard. Our skill level has risen considerably.

To reduce the fright that goes along with going under the knife, it often helps to see a procedure in black and white, especially in terms of success rates. Each year cardiothoracic (cardio=heart, thorax=chest) surgeons perform more than 500,000 coronary artery bypass grafting procedures (CABG), making this the most common type of heart surgery. Indeed, many political figures and celebrities have entrusted doctors and hospitals to heal their heart, including photographer Ansel Adams, author Isaac Asimov, basketball coach Red Auerbach, former first lady Barbara Bush, talk show host Johnny Carson, former president Bill Clinton, businessman Ben Cohen (of Ben & Jerry’s), actor Patty Duke, former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, singer Peggy Lee, talk show host Dave Letterman, journalist Bill Moyers, talk show host Regis Philbin, Dame Elizabeth Taylor, actor Burt Reynolds and actor/comedian Robin Williams.

Just a few doors down from the heart, classic (open) appendectomies have been performed by the thousands over the last two centuries — and the number gets higher when you add the laparoscopic procedures done since 1987. One Texas hospital even reports that it has performed 500 craniotomies (skull/brain surgeries) per year over the last three years.

Don’t Forget Anesthesia

If you’re still not convinced that surgery can be simple, don’t forget about the advances in anesthesia. Derived from a Greek word meaning “without feeling,” anesthesia refers to the state of being temporarily without sensation or awareness. Anesthesia enables you to undergo these surgical procedures without experiencing pain or distress. Anesthesia, however, does have risks depending on what a particular surgical procedure may necessitate.

Whether a surgical team uses general anesthesia (medication that renders you unconscious and prevents you from feeling pain during your procedure), conscious sedation (medication that also prevents you from feeling pain, but it enables you to stay drowsy and awake), regional anesthesia (medication that blocks pain in a specific area), or even local anesthesia (medication that causes you to lose sensation in a small area for a minor procedure), fear of the anesthesiologist probably pales in comparison to the fear of a surgical procedure without one.

Surgery Really Can Be Simple

When most people think of surgery, they envision something Frankensteinian, or even a wacky doctor’s game. Today, however, surgeons can perform extensive procedures with almost no cutting by using measures that are less invasive than ever before. This is why a prospective surgical patient should understand what is referred to as the “invasiveness” of any procedure. For the most part, surgeries break down into three categories: non-invasive, minimally invasive, and invasive (or open).

Non-invasive procedures do not break the skin, penetrate a body cavity or remove biological tissue. In other words, there are no incisions. Most of the tests done during an annual physical fall into this category: taking your pulse, monitoring blood pressure and listening to the heart and lungs. Non-invasive procedures usually don’t scare patients.

Minimally invasive procedures usually involve tiny incisions and minimal body intrusion. The procedure could be relatively simple (getting a shot, for instance) or more involved (like endoscopy — used to take images or small amounts of tissue, aka a biopsy, by inserting a small scope into the body via an existing anatomical opening). These surgeries can take longer to perform but often involve shorter hospital stays, and many can even be done on an outpatient basis.

Invasive (or open) procedures involve making an incision (usually a significant one — in other words, bigger than a tiny cut) in the patient’s body. This is what people often think of when they imagine surgery. It’s also what we most often see on TV, and what has been done throughout history, until the late 1980s.

Though the prospect of undergoing any type of operation can certainly be frightening, and each does come with its own set of risks, surgery today is not what it once was. Many of the most complex modern surgical procedures can be done using minimally invasive or tried and true classic open techniques. By taking the time to inform yourself as to the type of surgery and procedure involved, you will be better able to envision each element of the process, thereby removing the sense of dread that comes with the word and reducing the experience to a series of simple steps.

This Emotional Life is a two-year campaign to foster awareness, connections and solutions around emotional wellness. Join our community at www.pbs.org/thisemotionallife.

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