Hoag celebrates 50 years of health
June Casagrande
Before John Applegate came here from Indiana, he had a very
different picture of how hospitals operate. In the places he had
seen, there was always a Catholic hospital and either a Protestant or
government hospital competing for support and funding.
It was Hoag that opened his eyes to how things could be.
“In those places, the resources of the community were divided, so
neither hospital could afford the best equipment,†Applegate said.
“But Hoag represented a unique situation in which you had a Catholic
family, the Hoags, who were working with the Presbyterians with the
undivided support of the community. That’s the difference.â€
Hoag Hospital Memorial Presbyterian celebrates its 50th
anniversary with a dinner tonight honoring some of the people who
have continued the hospital’s original vision of excellence. As they
look back on the last half century, they point to different elements
that have made the hospital great. But they all agree that the
central secret of Hoag’s success is an unwavering commitment to
taking care of people.
“It’s a very wonderful place for doctors to practice,†said
Applegate, an obstetrician gynecologist who came to Hoag in 1964 and
who served as chief of staff from 1986 to 1987.
Since it opened in 1952 with 75 beds, the hospital has racked up
an impressive list of honors. The National Research Corporation named
Hoag the “Orange County Quality Leader†every year from 1995 to 2000.
In 1998, Hoag Heart Institute received a five-star rating for its
coronary artery bypass graft outcomes -- the first five-star rating
ever bestowed by the Health Grades agency. In 2001, Hoag scored three
stars in all major categories of the Patients’ Evaluation of
Performance in California.
“Community support has been crucial,†said Al Auer, a member of
Hoag’s Board of Trustees for 34 years. “The community continues to
help Hoag financially, and that support can be seen in the type of
care patients get there.â€
For example, Auer said, unlike many emergency rooms where patients
might wait three or four hours to get medical attention, Hoag
instituted a policy to assure that all emergency-room patients are
treated within 30 minutes. And the care they get, he said, is
outstanding.
The attitude that people should come first extends all the way
back to Hoag’s humble beginnings and was especially evident in people
like George Hoag II, son of the hospital’s founders.
“He would come to the hospital almost every day and talk with
almost everyone,†Auer said. “He knew the janitors and the gardeners
and the nurses. And whenever someone was having a serious crisis in
their personal life, say if a nurse had a relative with cancer, he
would make sure the money was there to take care of them. He never
called any attention to it, never told anybody, but that kind of
commitment developed, especially in the nursing staff, an espirit de
corps that most hospitals don’t have ....That attitude became part of
the institution and it carries through to today. Nurses know they’re
part of a family, [and] that their work is appreciated.â€
Auer, who is still active as a volunteer for the hospital, said
that the new Women’s Pavilion will be the next step in Hoag’s ongoing
commitment to providing the community with the best health care
possible, and that it will help keep Hoag in the forefront of patient
care.
“We are a crowded hospital now and though the women’s pavilion is
still years away, it is going to be a real help to this community by
adding additional beds and continuing to bring this community the
best care,†Auer said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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