Calhoun Times

AdventHeal­th Ga. puts employees first through innovative education and leadership programs

- From AdventHeal­th Gordon

When Leah Hughes enrolled in a certified nurse assistant (CNA) course as a high school senior, she set her sights on a nursing career that would culminate in nursing administra­tion.

Her ambitions came full circle in January when AdventHeal­th Redmond named her nursing director of its med/surg unit.

“It was time for celebratio­n because I finally made it to where I originally wanted to be,” she said.

Hughes, who has family ties to AdventHeal­th Redmond nurses, said having her CNA license made it possible for her to work as a nurse tech throughout nursing school. AdventHeal­th Redmond also allowed her to work flexible schedules so she could concentrat­e on her studies.

Three years into working as a registered nurse, she stepped in as a charge nurse and followed a mentor’s advice to further her career. She took advantage of the hospital’s tuition reimbursem­ent program to pursue her master’s degree in nursing leadership and administra­tion and participat­ed in the hospital’s leadership developmen­t program.

“They continued to pour more resources into me to get me prepared to be where I am today,” she said.

Hughes’ experience is representa­tive of the ways AdventHeal­th invests in its team members to help them grow in their careers, said Patsy Adams, AdventHeal­th Redmond’s director of human resources.

“We provide tuition reimbursem­ent, career path mapping and career counseling,” she said. “We have support for certificat­ions and provide opportunit­ies for growth in promotions. We have leadership developmen­t programs, leadership courses and staff education courses for growth and developmen­t through our leadership and developmen­t team.”

Retaining skilled talent like Hughes, as well as bringing new faces into the pipeline, are top priorities for hospital administra­tors as they, like their peers across the country, strategize how to care for an aging population amid staffing shortages exacerbate­d by the taxing coronaviru­s pandemic. AdventHeal­th Gordon, AdventHeal­th Murray and AdventHeal­th Redmond all offer a nurse residency program.

“They’re our future,” said Jeni Ingersoll, vice president and chief people officer for AdventHeal­th’s Southeast Region. “When baby boomers start retiring, we will experience a great need to replace that workforce, so we have to invest now and early in these future health care workers.”

Garrett Nudd, associate vice president of marketing and brand strategy for AdventHeal­th’s Georgia market, said workforce developmen­t leaders anticipate Georgia will need an additional 120,000 health care workers by 2025. Nurses and skilled clinicians make up a significan­t portion of that number, he said, but they also need to fill other jobs vital to operating a hospital.

“Any job you can think of can be employed by a hospital — engineers, culinary services, I.T.,” he said. “We need everybody, and everybody is competing for every profession, so we want to make the hospital an attractive place to come to work.”

EDUCATIONA­L PARTNERSHI­PS FOR A

THRIVING FUTURE

In addition to investing millions of dollars in compensati­on and incentive packages to attract top talent, the AdventHeal­th Georgia market has leaned into its longstandi­ng partnershi­ps with area schools, career academies and colleges to prepare students for careers in health care, Ingersoll said.

“We have cohorts of nursing students who complete their clinicals here and partner with our local high schools for their work-based learning programs, where students can select a department of interest and complete a semester working in that department,” she said. “We also arrange job shadow days in different department­s so students can get a glimpse of a job that they’re interested in.”

While Brandi Hayes, EdD, director of college and career programs for Calhoun

City Schools, has worked with AdventHeal­th for years to design pathways for students to pursue careers in patient care and allied health care, she said the projected workforce needs have encouraged more creative solutions.

“They’ve been allowing work-based learning students to come in and do rotations for a really long time, but what we’ve started realizing is that’s not enough,” she said. “We have to get kids exposure to more things to deepen that relationsh­ip.”

She said they’ve collaborat­ed to increase CNA and other certificat­ion offerings, develop a new emergency medical technician pathway and implement a teacher externship program to expand educators’ knowledge about job opportunit­ies for students.

“We’re working on getting them into AdventHeal­th facilities so they can see what a great employer they can be and have a good experience, so they will stay on and work through college if they stay local, or if they go off to college, the experience will keep them tied so they can come back,” Dr. Hayes said.

Tracy Farriba, director of community outreach for AdventHeal­th’s Georgia market, said more comprehens­ive workbased learning has helped students enter the workforce while still in high school or right after graduation.

“They get an idea of what it’s like being in here and the day-to-day, so they can say, ‘I don’t like that,’ or, ‘I love doing this,’” said Farriba, a registered nurse who also serves on the board of directors for the Calhoun College and Career Academy. “We want students to know you don’t just have to be a clinician to work in health care.”

She’s also organized career fairs and arranged for health care profession­als to speak to students and future health profession­als student organizati­ons. One of the highlight events, said Farriba is the surgical outreach days for students, hosted by AdventHeal­th Medical Group Urology at Calhoun. At this event, director of robotics and urology Hak Lee, MD, and his team devoted a day to training select local high school students to develop basic suturing skills, laparoscop­ic surgical skills, da Vinci robotic skills and endoscopic urological techniques.

“It’s all about relationsh­ips — partnering with schools, making it easy for their

nts to come here for student placeor clinicals,” Adams said. torically, the AdventHeal­th Gordon dation has funded scholarshi­ps for students, which are awarded each o candidates who apply and have n progress toward a health care caThe Foundation started the scholardec­ade ago and has awarded well $100,000 in scholarshi­ps, funded y on the interest from the investMemb­ers of AdventHeal­th Gordon’s al team working today are recipients scholarshi­p and have used it to adtheir training and degrees.

ESTING IN PHYSICIANS OF THE

FUTURE

entHealth Redmond serves as a ng ground for nurse residents, inmedicine residents and physician nts seeking to hone their clinical while waiting to transition into a lty program. are one of the largest community resiprogra­ms in the state,” said Kathryn ann, MD, director of AdventHeal­th ond’s Internal Medicine Residency

Program. “We’ve seen an increasing number of applicants and the quality of applicants are improving, as well.”

She attributed the increase — more than 1,000 applicants nationwide for 13 program seats this past year — to AdventHeal­th Redmond’s growing reputation for turning out highly skilled internal medicine physicians.

“We’re getting those applicants because our residents have gone out and said this is an exceptiona­l training environmen­t,” she said. “The thing that sets this residency program apart is we are situated in a hospital that is almost specifical­ly designed to build strong internal medicine doctors. Their education is one-on-one with an attending physician or a specialist. That means it’s really unfettered learning that’s directed and produces very competent doctors.”

The program also enjoys a healthy number of applicants from Georgia, she added, thanks to formal partnershi­ps that bring in students from the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta and the Suwanee campus of the Philadelph­ia College of Osteopathi­c Medicine for clinical rotations.

“Once you have establishe­d a robust residency program, you get those medical students to come in and create a medical education environmen­t,” Dr. Lohmann said. “What we want is to grow our own and retain those good doctors in the state or the region.”

Many of the graduates stay in Northwest Georgia to practice medicine, she said.

“Every single year, we have had at least one individual from the graduating class, if not up to three, join as faculty and stay right here,” she said. “It’s a good place to live and a good place to be a doctor.”

JOIN A MISSION THAT MATTERS

AdventHeal­th Georgia is currently hiring positions across Northwest Georgia in many areas of the hospitals and clinics, in Chatsworth, Calhoun and Rome, Georgia. Potential employees can find out more and interview on the spot each Wednesday at any of the three locations from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at an event called “Walk in Wednesdays.” To discover open positions at AdventHeal­th Georgia, visit https://bit. ly/3xWfSK9 or drop by an AdventHeal­th Georgia hospital on a Wednesday morning.

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 ?? Adventheal­th Gordon ?? Garrett Nudd presented a talk focused on health care careers to the Gordon County Chamber of Commerce’s Youth Leadership program on January 12, 2023.
Adventheal­th Gordon Garrett Nudd presented a talk focused on health care careers to the Gordon County Chamber of Commerce’s Youth Leadership program on January 12, 2023.
 ?? Adventheal­th Gordon ?? Hughes, director of the med/surg unit at AdventHeal­th Redmond began her career as a nurse tech.
Adventheal­th Gordon Hughes, director of the med/surg unit at AdventHeal­th Redmond began her career as a nurse tech.

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