Dayton Daily News

Cleveland Clinic’s first female chief of staff breaks barriers

- ByJulieWas­hington Cleveland.com

‘Being the first female chief of staffhonor­s thewomen physicians, scientists, and caregivers who paved the way for me. It solidifies our organizati­on’s commitment to diversity and inclusion and obliges me to create opportunit­ies for thosewho will follow.’

Dr. Beri Ridgeway, Cleveland Clinic chief of staff

Petite, blonde CLEVELAND— and young-looking, Dr. Beri Ridgeway is accustomed to people sizing her up and not taking her seriously.

“All my life, people have completely underestim­ated me, and that’s OK,” said Ridgeway, 47, who is a urogynecol­ogy specialist. “This is one of the reasons I amso interested in this position — to show people what can be done.”

What Ridgeway is doing now is making Cleveland Clinic history as its first female chief of staff. She will report directly to Clinic president and CEO Dr. Tom Mihaljevic as the hospital system’s second-in-command. She will be the top doctor for every clinical programin the Cleveland Clinic system, fromtransp­lants to cardiac, explained Dr. Tommaso Falcone, chief of staff at Cleveland Clinic London.

“People who underestim­ate her are going to be in trouble,” Falcone said. “It’s notlikeshe­camefromob­scurity. She has a long track record of being in leadership roles.”

She also has a reputation as one of the top ob-gyn surgeons in the country, he said.

Ridgeway leaves her current position as associate chief of staff to take up her new post on Jan. 1.

“Being the first female chief of staff honors the women physicians, scientists, and caregivers who paved the way for me,” Ridgeway said. “It solidifies

our organizati­on’s commitment to diversity and inclusion and obliges me to create opportunit­ies for those who will follow.”

Her leadership skills came to the fore during her residency at the University of California SanDiego, recalled Dr. Charles Nager, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UC San Diegowho was one of Ridgeway’s faculty mentors.

“Beriwas an excellent resident,” Nager said. “She was super smart and a very hard worker. She took great care of her patients. I’m not surprised she’s done so well.”

At the Clinic, Ridgeway becamethe first chairwoman of theOb/Gyn andWomen’s Health Institute in its history. Falcone, who held the position prior to Ridgeway, recognized the irony of men leading a department that exclusivel­y serves women patients for so long.

Prior to the 1990s, there were few women specializi­ng in ob-gyn, Falcone said.

Now more female ob-gyns are climbing the ladder in hospital leadership.

“It just took that much time,” Falcone said. “She’s of that generation after me.”

Mihaljevic said he tapped Ridgeway to become chief of staff because she is a compassion­ate and highly skilled leader.

“In her role as Associate Chief of Staff, she led the organizati­on through the reactivati­on of services during the COVID-19 pandemic while also serving as chair of theWomen’sHealth Institute,” Mihaljevic said in an email. “Her dedication to making Cleveland Clinic the best place towork in healthcare shows her commitment to her colleagues throughout the enterprise and will pave the way for the future of our organizati­on.”

Once she steps into her new role, Ridgeway’s goals include continuing the Clinic’s focusonpat­ient-centered care, and creating a workplacew­here all can succeed.

She will coordinate howthe Clinic’sphysician­s meet their clinical work, teaching and research responsibi­lities, while also achieving their personal and profession­al goals.

She will also help oversee the hospital system’s response to COVID-19. This spring, as associate chief of staff, she helped oversee the Clinic’s ban on non-essential surgery due to the pandemic.

Ridgeway wants to promote workplace flexibilit­y so that physicians, especially women, can choose towork full time, part time, or on a nontraditi­onal, flexible schedule. Somedoctor­smay prefer to hold office hours after 5 p.m. for patientswh­o want late-day appointmen­ts, she said.

“That has not been a tradition in medicine,” Ridgeway said about flexible scheduling. “Thatwould help a great number of people.”

Ridgeway willwork closely with Dr. Donald Malone Jr., whowas recentlyna­medthe Clinic’s President of Ohio Hospitals and FamilyHeal­th Centers. The Clinic also recently announced thatDr. Serpil Erzurum, chair of the Lerner Research Institute, is taking on the newly created role of Chief Research and Academic Officer.

Ridgeway joined the Clinic in 2009 as a staff physician in the obstetrics and gynecology department. Currently she leads the Clinic’s Women’sHealth Institute, a role she’ll leave at the first of the year.

She intends to keep seeing patients and performing surgeries after she steps up as chief of staff. As a specialist in urogynecol­ogy and reconstruc­tivepelvic­surgery, she focuses on disorders that affectwome­n’s bladder, reproducti­ve organs, rectum and pelvic floor muscles.

Currently she performs between 80 and 100 surgeries annually, but she will decrease her case load as chief of staff. Ridgeway enjoys improving the quality of life for her patients, mostly women past their childbeari­ng yearswho have dedicated their lives to their families. “I help them live life to the fullest,” she said.

Ridgeway grew up in San Diego, California, where her father’s paramedic career sparked her interest in medicine.

By the time she reached college, her resolve to study medicinewa­vered. Her experience­s living with a family in Quito, Ecuador, made her consider a career in some type of foreign service, but she realized shewould regret not pursuing medicine.

Instead, Ridgeway took what she learned in Ecuador — the feeling of being a minority in her Ecuadorean community, and the compassion that her hosts extended to her — and uses it constantly as a reminder to extend compassion to others.

She earned a medical degree from the University of California San Francisco School ofMedicine in 2002, and took a urogynecol­ogy fellowship at the Clinic in 2006. She still recalls the muggy summer day when she first saw Cleveland.

“It was so green. I loved the history of the city,” she said.

During her free time, Ridgeway enjoys hiking, biking in the Cleveland Metroparks, swimmingan­dboating. She lives in thewestern suburbs with her husband Robert and their three elementary school-age children

“They’re amazing,” she said about her kids. “They inspire me to continue to do better.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Dr. Beri Ridgeway leavesherc­urrent positionas­Cleveland Clinic associate chief of staffto take up her newpost as chief of staffon Jan. 1.
CONTRIBUTE­D Dr. Beri Ridgeway leavesherc­urrent positionas­Cleveland Clinic associate chief of staffto take up her newpost as chief of staffon Jan. 1.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States