Carondelet Health Network
{{Short description|Hospital networks in the United States}}
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Carondelet Health Network is a large Catholic health care provider based in Tucson, Arizona. It has five facilities: Carondelet St. Mary's Hospital (the first hospital in Arizona), Carondelet St. Joseph's Hospital, Carondelet Neurological Institute, Carondelet Heart & Vascular Institute (all in Tucson), and Carondelet Holy Cross Hospital in Nogales, Arizona.{{cite web|title=About Carondelet|url=http://www.carondelet.org/about.aspx|website=Carondelet Health Network|accessdate=16 December 2014}}
In 2015, owners Ascension Health sold a majority stake in Carondelet to Texas-based Tenet Healthcare, with Dignity Health also taking part ownership, turning it from a non-profit to a private profit making hospital chain.{{Cite web| last = Innes| first = Stephanie| title = Ownership change for Carondelet Health Network is finalized| work = Arizona Daily Star| date = September 2015| accessdate = 2019-06-21| url = https://tucson.com/business/local/ownership-change-for-carondelet-health-network-is-finalized/article_8edf5454-02b3-58d4-981a-918adc629318.html}}
Services provided
Carondelet provides a wide range of health services at multiple locations. Only hospice and palliative care are described in the dated material below.
Carondelet Hospice and Palliative Care seeks to attend to the "physical, spiritual, and psychological needs of people living with a life-limiting illness", ensure that the physical and psychological needs of family members are met, and educate the public on the end-of-life process. Each patient is serviced based on individual needs and desires and a unique plan is created in order to best care for them.{{cite web|title=Hospice and Palliative Care|url=http://www.carondelet.org/services/hospice-palliative.aspx|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141216080353/http://www.carondelet.org/services/hospice-palliative.aspx|archive-date=16 December 2014|website=Carondelet Health Network|accessdate=16 December 2014}}
Hospice and Palliative Care Services at one time included:
- Nursing visits
- Personal care
- Durable medical equipment and oxygen
- Medications and supplies
- Pain and symptom management
- Nutrition counseling
- Emotional support and counseling
- Spiritual support
- Bereavement follow-up
- Support groups
- Specialized therapies
Nurse management study
Carondelet Health Network created a Community Nursing Organization (CNO) model, implemented in 1994, to determine if community-based health services could be efficiently managed by nurses. Key features of the Carondelet model included:
- Risk assessment of all members at enrollment and designated intervals
- Matching of nursing and clinical resources to member need and risk level
- Integration of primary, secondary and tertiary prevention services
- Participation of members in development and selection of educational programs and clinical interventions
- Individual and group interventions
- Community-based service delivery
Carondelet's CNO model included an analysis of the Southern Arizona health care market, in order to localize their nursing services.{{cite journal|last1=Zazworsky|first1=Donna|title=The Carondelet Model|journal=Nursing Management|date=1997|volume=28|issue=3|pages=27–8|pmid=9287754 }}
The outcome of this study, or whether components of the model were adopted, is not known.
Historical community support
In 2011, Carondelet hospice received a $4.5 million donation (equivalent to ${{formatprice|{{inflation|US|4500000|2011}}}} in {{inflation/year|US}}){{inflation/fn|US}} from the estate of Winifred Q. Witt, a Tucson resident who, alongside her husband Samuel Witt, was known for her philanthropy in Southern Arizona.{{cite news|title=Estate gives $4.5M to Carondelet hospice|url=http://www.insidetucsonbusiness.com/news/estate-gives-m-to-carondelet-hospice/article_2863271c-71e2-11e0-bcd8-001cc4c002e0.html|accessdate=16 December 2014|work=Inside Tucson Business|date=29 April 2011}} Executive director of Carondelet Hospice and Palliative Care Lupe Trieste said "With this gift, Carondelet will be able to ensure enduring, quality programs of support and comfort."
In 2002, all proceeds from the Nogales Debutante Cotillion were given directly to Carondelet Hospice.{{cite news|last1=G.H.|first1=Gutierrez|title=Hospice to Benefit from Cotillion|work=Nogales International|date=2002}} Cotillion Committee President Dora Dexter said that the committee chose Carondelet Hospice because "It’s a charitable cause that a lot of people overlook."
Staffing Issues
The first nursing strike in Arizona took place at two Carondelet network Tucson hospitals in 2019, soon after the change in ownership, with workers in the National Nurses United asking for more resources for nursing staff "to bring staffing into alignment with what research shows is optimal for patient care.”{{cite news |last1=Schmidt |first1=Ethan |title=Registered nurses go on one-day strike at 2 Tucson hospitals |url=https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona-breaking/2019/09/20/registered-nurses-go-on-strike-st-josephs-hospital-st-marys-hospital-tucson-national-nurses-united/2385277001/ |access-date=Jan 13, 2022 |publisher=AZcentral.com |date=September 20, 2019}}
In January, 2022, nurses with National Nurses United protested outside Carondelet's St. Joseph's Hospital and St. Mary's Hospital protesting what they called unsafe and unsustainable conditions due mainly to staffing shortages.{{cite news |last1=Machelor |first1=P. |title=Union nurses claim 'unsafe' conditions at two Tucson hospitals |url=https://tucson.com/news/local/union-nurses-claim-unsafe-conditions-at-two-tucson-hospitals/article_e1f55b44-748f-11ec-887f-d7774b4e92df.html |access-date=Jan 13, 2022 |work=Arizona Daily Star |date=Jan 13, 2022}} A St. Mary's Registered Nurse said "Our hospital is in crisis."{{cite tweet |user=AndrewKVOAdreee|number=1481666389622472707 |title=Nurses speak out outside of St. Joseph's Hospital regarding working conditions, staff being pushed to "breaking point" and "insufficient pandemic precautions." @kvoa |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220113164121/https://twitter.com/AndrewKVOAdreee/status/1481666389622472707 |archive-date=2022-01-13 |access-date=January 13, 2022}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{official website|https://www.carondelet.org/}}
{{Tenet Healthcare}}
{{Ascension Health}}
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Category:Catholic Church in Arizona
Category:Healthcare in Arizona
Category:Medical and health organizations based in Arizona