An Atlantic Health System hospital finished work on a new facility that brings together its pediatric emergency and inpatient services in one space.
Overlook Medical Center in Summit marked the completion of the Hersh Children’s Center with hospital and local elected officials, donors and other supporters who celebrated the milestone during a Thursday ceremony.
“This state-of-the-art facility gives us a home for the future of pediatric care at Overlook – one that truly compliments the experienced care team and advanced technology that serve our patients at Overlook,” said hospital President Stephanie Schwartz, who was named to the position on Dec. 2.
A rendering of the Hersh Children’s Center, adjacent to the new entrance of the redesigned emergency department entrance at Overlook. – ATLANTIC HEALTH SYSTEM
At nearly 12,000 square feet, the Hersh center brings together the Meri and Sol Barer Inpatient Pediatric Center – which previously occupied the sixth floor at Overlook – and the Michael Gordon Reeves Pediatric Emergency Department. It will treat patients from 0 – 21 years of age.
Overlook’s chair of pediatrics and medical director of children’s health for Atlantic Health, Dr. Walter Rosenfeld, called attention to the unique nature of the approach to care.
“By bringing emergency and inpatient pediatric services together we can dramatically reduce the time between an emergency department visit to an inpatient room for children requiring hospitalization,” he said. “It will also improve continuity of care by having clinical teams dedicated to patients from the moment they enter, through every stage of their experience.”
Funding for the center came, in part, from a $2 million grant from the Dorothy B. Hersh Foundation. Established in 1972, the organization supports capital expenditures to benefit New Jersey children.
Another $2.5 million from the Nicholas J. and Anna K. Bouras Foundation funded the relocation of the Michael Gordon Reeves ED, Atlantic Health said, in addition to more adult emergency patient rooms.
What’s new:
9inpatient rooms, including 2 isolation rooms and Liam’s Room for patients with serious chronic conditions or life-limiting illnesses
8 emergency department rooms, staffed by pediatric emergency physicians, pediatric subspecialists and pediatric nurses
1 flex room for emergency department patients or inpatients
In-room accommodations for parents to stay with their children
Structural and design elements to enhance safety, comfort and security
Generally, the efforts are also aided by donations to the Overlook Foundation, a nonprofit that supports the hospital.
In August, Atlantic Health System Public Relations Manager Robert Seman and Overlook Foundation Director of Strategic Gifts and Board Relations penned a piece for NJBIZ, exploring the ways the COVID-19 pandemic altered how the system was able to approach the changing scene at Overlook–which was set for construction of new wings, operating rooms, a maternity center and to double the number of private rooms at the facility.
“There are times when crises offer you the chance to stop, reevaluate, and find ways to take the advantage,” Alan Lieber, who had been Overlook’s president for 18 years but retired over the summer, said at the time. “At Overlook, our culture of continuous quality improvement not only helped us navigate the worst moments of the pandemic, but after the initial surge, also gave us the framework to put what we learned to work for us. It prompted us to take a look at what we had planned with a new perspective and use that to make it even better. The result will be a hospital fully optimized for the future.”
Overlook’s employee parking garage and Bouras Emergency Department entrance have also been completed, as was expanded wings on the hospital’s seventh and eighth floors. Those opened in 2020, and the new seventh floor wing was temporarily used as a COVID treatment unit during the state-designated health emergency.
COVID also prompted hospital officials to re-engineer ventilation systems. According to Atlantic Health, the Hersh Center and Bouras ED are able to utilize outdoor air for full circulation.
Atlantic Health System said Oct. 11 that Ophelia Byers joined the organization as chief nursing officer for Overlook Medical Center, as well as associate chief nurse executive for the health system.
As associate chief nursing executive, a new role at Atlantic Health System, Byers will partner with Trish O’Keefe, senior vice president and chief nurse executive for Atlantic Health System and president of Morristown Medical Center, to align and support nursing care across all clinical settings throughout the organization.
A skilled leader with more than 20 years of experience in clinical care and nursing leadership, Byers is an advanced practice and women’s health nurse practitioner and maintains national certifications in clinical practice, patient experience, and diversity and inclusion. At Overlook Medical Center, she will oversee the delivery and management of nursing practice as well as education, professional development, quality research and clinical services working closely with hospital leadership, physician leaders, and leaders across Atlantic Health.
“Ophelia has an extremely rich experience in health care and a deep understanding of nursing and will be a tremendous force for leading the future of care at Overlook,” said O’Keefe. “I look forward to working closely with Ophelia to implement the very best practices from throughout the profession to enhance nursing care throughout Atlantic Health System.”
Byers comes to Atlantic Health System from New York-Presbyterian Hudson Valley Hospital, where she most recently served as vice president of patient care services and chief nursing officer. She succeeds MaryPat Sullivan, who served as chief nursing and experience officer for Overlook Medical Center for more than 14 years and has transitioned to a new position as director of nursing education and professional development for Atlantic Health System.
“I am elated to join Atlantic Health System and contribute to the nursing and interdisciplinary excellence that has made it health care leader in New Jersey,” Byers said in a prepared statement. “It is an honor to work with dedicated teammates who power the organization’s reputation for high-quality, compassionate care that spans patients, their families, the community, employees, and professional partners.”
“As Overlook prepares to begin its next chapter as a leader in health care for the region, dynamic leadership in nursing will be vital,” said Stephanie Schwartz, interim president of Overlook Medical Center. “As an accomplished nurse leader, Ophelia will bring fresh perspectives and a collaborative approach to nursing care at Overlook.”
Prior to her role at New York-Presbyterian Hudson Valley Hospital, Byers served as a director of nursing at New York-Presbyterian Lawrence Hospital. She joined New York-Presbyterian as an obstetrics patient safety nurse at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and soon after became a patient care director at New York-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital.
A Camden native, Byers earned her Bachelor of Science in nursing from Rutgers University-Camden. She then earned her Master of Science in the Women’s Health Nurse Practitioner program at Stony Brook University, and Doctor of Nursing Practice from Case Western Reserve University. She also spent eight years as a chemical operations specialist in the United States Army Reserves where she was awarded the Army Medal of Achievement for soldiering skills and leadership.
She has been an advocate for diversity and inclusion in health care and organizational leadership/culture, and has written about the impact of racism-related stress on Black/African American nurses. She serves as a board member of Kids Creative, a nonprofit organization in New York City.
Timing is everything, the saying goes. At Overlook Medical Center, the timing of recent events coinciding with a plan to transform the facility opened the window for hospital leaders to be better prepared for health care in a post-COVID world.
Overlook was well on its way to creating the hospital of the future when, in March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic struck. It had a sweeping plan to enhance the hospital, which included the construction of new wings with “super-units,” a new slate of ORs, a state-of-the-art maternity center and doubling the number of private rooms.
Although the virus’s effects seemingly paralyzed nearly every sector of business and industry for months, Overlook officials instead found opportunity.
Overlook offi cials cut the ribbon on the redesigned emergency department entrance on July 15, 2021. – ATLANTIC HEALTH SYSTEM
“There are times when crises offer you the chance to stop, reevaluate, and find ways to take the advantage,” said Alan Lieber, who has been Overlook’s president for the last 18 years. “At Overlook, our culture of continuous quality improvement not only helped us navigate the worst moments of the pandemic, but after the initial surge, also gave us the framework to put what we learned to work for us. It prompted us to take a look at what we had planned with a new perspective and use that to make it even better. The result will be a hospital fully optimized for the future.”
An (over)look ahead
Proposed in 2017, Overlook’s plan to upgrade the hospital by 2022 was already expansive – it would push the hospital significantly closer to having all private patient rooms. Many existing units and services throughout the hospital will be relocated from one area to another to align clinical programs and make care more patient-centric. Overlook’s maternity center will undergo a significant redesign and expansion, with new and modernized C-section suites, an enhanced triage and recovery unit, brand new private obstetric rooms, and additional post-partum beds.
The plan includes additional operating rooms with the most advanced technology, with two hybrid ORs and an enhancement of Overlook’s endoscopic capabilities to support its growing GI program and related services.
A rendering of the future Hersh Children’s Center, adjacent to the new entrance to the redesigned emergency department entrance at Overlook. – ATLANTIC HEALTH SYSTEM
Two new wings will be built on the hospital’s seventh and eighth floors to create patient-centered “super units” for neuroscience and cardiac and critical care. A designated observation unit will be created to ensure optimal care. The front entrance of the hospital’s Bouras Emergency Department was completely redesigned, including a new lobby and triage area. The entrance opened in July.
A 12,000-square-foot extension has been added, including the new Hersh Children’s Center, which will open in fall 2021. It will co-locate and centralize all pediatric services in one new, state-of-the-art facility for expert, efficient and compassionate care for children and their families.
A new parking garage, which also opened in July, frees up space for patients and visitors in its existing parking garages and makes parking throughout the campus easier and more convenient while providing on-site parking for all team members eliminating the need for street and remote parking in the community.
“While this clearly expands our campus and greatly enhances specific services, this plan isn’t simply about growth,” said Lauren Yedvab, chief operating officer for Overlook. “It was about building an Overlook that is not only responsive to our current needs but also provides for the future needs of our patients and health care providers.”
All of these changes result from Overlook officials’ conscious attention to feedback from patients and visitors, the hospital’s doctors, nurses and overall workforce, community advisory board, foundation board, donors and supporters of the hospital, and other voices in the communities Overlook serves.
“The vision for what we needed to do was generated by listening to the people who both provide and use our services,” said Robert Peake, vice president, facilities management and real estate for Atlantic Health System. “At the end of the day, these changes need to work for these same people, and we paid close attention to their needs.”
Learning from crisis
But no one could have predicted the slew of new needs that faced health care providers across the board in the spring of 2020. Hospitals throughout New Jersey immediately pivoted and reassessed how to provide care to a tidal wave of new patients. Changes to facilities, processes and protocols followed, in some cases overnight.
Remote patient monitoring at Overlook Medical Center. – ATLANTIC HEALTH SYSTEM
Overlook’s entire workforce took an “all-in” approach as the hospital worked to transform itself as it became one of the busiest in the State at the time of the surge. Multispecialty clinical care teams, hospital administration, and environmental staff flexed on a dime.
“All job descriptions were blurred as everyone rolled up their sleeves,” recalls Dr. Sharen Anghel, chair of the Department of Medicine at Overlook and a clinical educator with Atlantic Medical Group Hospitalists and the Internal Medicine Residency Practice in Union.
Key to this effort was the adaptation of the hospital facility itself, as the need to expand critical care beds rapidly, upgrade ventilation in each room, and create physical barriers became an immediate need to provide the safest environment for Overlook’s patients and the care team.
“Early on, there were no specific guidelines for reconfiguring hospital environments in response to the coronavirus. Our instincts were put to the test, and we figured out what we needed to do to keep everyone safe,” says Austin Murphy, director of facilities and clinical engineering for Atlantic Health System.
Murphy’s team of engineers overseeing biomedical equipment as well as HVAC technicians, electricians, carpenters, plumbers, painters, boiler operators, and general maintenance mechanics went right to work. They converted 155 patient rooms, as well as an entire 32-bed wing, into negative pressure rooms by installing custom windows with permanent ports to accommodate HEPA exhaust fans.
To preserve the supply of PPE and facilitate better patient monitoring, windows were placed in all patient room doors, cameras were installed in patient rooms, cardiac telemetry channels were added, and pulse oximeter cables and IV tubing were extended through walls, allowing nurses to monitor vital signs and medication levels from hallway stations.
Two adjoining offices were converted into a UV Sanitizing Department for sterilizing N95 masks. Overlook’s oxygen system was upgraded to accommodate the increased use of ventilators. Thermal cameras were installed in the main entrances of the hospital and the adjoining Medical Arts Center to scan the body temperatures of everyone entering the buildings in addition to symptom screening every time someone entered the building.
While most of the construction on the enhancement projects took a pause during the surge, part of the project found a new, temporary purpose in Overlook’s COVID-19 response. The added wing that was planned to be the neuroscience super unit – 7 East – was re-worked to become a temporary, dedicated unit for COVID critical care during New Jersey’s state of emergency. Perhaps more than anywhere else in the hospital, the unit was a showcase for many of the improvised and innovative enhancements that sprang up in response to COVID – and ultimately became a model for their continued use.
“Even as we’ve returned most of the hospital back to ‘normal’ function, we’ve kept many of the things we implemented, like enhanced ventilation, remote patient monitoring and greater use of windows in design and adapted them into the improvements we have planned,” said Peake. “These are changes whose value extends well beyond the dire circumstances we faced and can greatly enhance the safety for all of our patients, visitors, and team members.”
Robert Seman is manager of public relations at Atlantic Health System and Marianne Devlin is director of strategic gifts and board relations at the Overlook Foundation.
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