LeadingAge New York Adviser Winter Vol. 1 | Page 26

ST. MARY’S HEALTHCARE SYSTEM FOR CHILDREN Interview with President and CEO Dr. Edwin F. Simpser, MD and Assistant Vice President/ Inpatient Administrator Vivian Figueroa, LNHA The mission of St. Mary’s Healthcare System for Children is to improve the health and quality of life for children with special needs and life-limiting conditions and their families. We are New York’s largest and most experienced provider of long-term care to children with medically complex conditions and New York City’s only free-standing post-acute care facility for children. Has your mission changed over time? Our mission has definitely changed over time. Historically, our mission has followed the evolutionary landscape of care. If you look at St. Mary’s 25-30 years ago, the in-patient skilled nursing facility was pretty much a long term care facility with most young people living there for years. Some went home but the percentage of those going home was relatively small. There wasn’t a lot of turnover. Over the last 10-15 years, we’ve restructured our physical plant, our staffing model and our capabilities to be able to care for much sicker children largely to be more responsive to hospitals that wanted to send us very sick children needing shorter stays but that could possibly go home, for example, kids with brain injuries, respiratory problems or feeding needs. It might be called sub-acute care if we were going to give it a designation. For a pediatric skilled nursing facility we have considerable turnover. We have 97 beds for which we have over 200 admissions and discharges per year. Our average length of stay for the children we discharge is somewhere between three and five months. However, the children occupying about half the beds in the organization stay long term, with some never going home. So when you look deeper into the numbers, you realize that those 200 admissions and discharges really represent only 50 beds turning over four to five times a year. The discharge numbers really speak to the success of this approach. The other evolution is that 30 years ago we were just a skilled nursing facility and now we have this broad continuum of care with a focus of moving children from the acute care environment to home while using this wonderful array of programs. Some programs that we offer in addition to the skilled nursing facility to help move children back to the community include: • A licensed medical model adult day care program with over 100 registrants for only 31 slots. While we are open seven days a week some children come for two days, some for four and some all seven. This is an ideal transition tool to help move children out of the facility and into living in the community. • A special education preschool on campus for medically fragile preschoolers. We are able to handle children with complex medical needs who otherwise could not attend regular special education preschools (continued on page 26) 25 Adviser a publication of LeadingAge New York | Winter 2015