Chicago Sun-Times

COSMIC CHEER

12-year-old Lurie patient wins national hospital gown design contest

- BY TROY CLOSSON, STAFF REPORTER tclosson@suntimes.com | @troy_closson

Twelve-year-old Ramona Deitrich spent less time creating the hospital gown that would win her a national design contest than some kids might spend deciding what to eat for breakfast.

“It literally took her 10 minutes,” her mother, Jane Deitrich, said.

A patient at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, Ramona quickly conceptual­ized her solar system-themed hospital gown creation, and her mother entered it into a nationwide design-agown contest last spring.

Last week, Ramona’s purple design — with pink planets with smiley faces, a red spaceship and an astronaut — was unveiled at Lurie after coming out on top of the Dunkin Donuts’ Joy in Childhood Foundation­sponsored competitio­n. She beat out over 6,000 other entries.

“I tried to think of something that would be good for girls and boys and that would make them feel happy,” Ramona said Friday. “I love drawings where things that wouldn’t usually have a face have a face.”

The competitio­n was one of the highlights of a challengin­g year, her mother said.

Ramona was born with a congenital heart defect. In the spring, shortly after receiving the news that she had won, she underwent her 16th heart surgery. Her recovery, Jane Deitrich added, was “extremely difficult.”

After an injury to her vocal cord, the 12-year-old couldn’t eat, drink or speak for an extended period of time. Instead, her mother said, “All she did was sit in bed and draw.”

“Art is something that’s always there for her when she’s having a hard time,” she said.

Now, Ramona’s art will soon have the hallways of Lurie Children’s feeling a little more like outer space.

Ramona’s cosmic gowns were distribute­d to 60 hospitals in the country after about 15,000 were produced, said Christine Soldner, corporate partnershi­ps manager at Starlight Children’s Foundation. Lurie received 250.

The organizati­on produces other “Starlight Gowns” with similarly bright-colored, youthful designs for children. Ramona’s idea, Soldner added, stood out for a combinatio­n of its artistic quality, gender-neutral details and ability to span age groups.

Ramona said she’s excited to see other kids start rocking her design. But her younger sister Charlotte disputes it’s even entirely hers. According to her mom, she “claims and swears up and down” she came up with the space theme.

“Charlotte had the idea for space dogs,” Ramona said in response, “but my idea [was] just space, so I think it’s still my idea.”

Lurie Children’s also received a $15,000 donation from the Joy in Childhood Foundation announced Tuesday after the unveiling of Ramona’s design.

Since news spread last summer that Ramona’s design won the competitio­n, staff members and patients alike have felt “extremely proud” of the 12-year-old’s accomplish­ment, said Susan Ruohonen, the hospital’s senior director of family services.

Ramona’s gown, as well as the other Starlight Gowns, help “bring some joy into [patients’] environmen­t,” she added.

“Any child that receives any of these gowns, they have their story about it,” Ruohonen said. “And that’s what it really does — provide this voice and expression in a really therapeuti­c way.”

And for Ramona’s mother, the story of what that 10-minute gown design has done for her children is simple:

“Opportunit­ies like this really allow our family to have things we’re looking forward to and celebratin­g other than all the medical stuff,” Deitrich said. “It’s a nice way to shift the focus off things that are hard or aren’t going right to something worth celebratin­g.”

 ?? JAMES
FOSTER/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? (ABOVE); PROVIDED (LEFT)
JAMES FOSTER/FOR THE SUN-TIMES (ABOVE); PROVIDED (LEFT)
 ??  ?? ABOVE: The hospital gown (right) designed by Ramona Deitrich at Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital. LEFT: Ramona Deitrich (center) holds a banner showcasing her winning design.
ABOVE: The hospital gown (right) designed by Ramona Deitrich at Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital. LEFT: Ramona Deitrich (center) holds a banner showcasing her winning design.

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