Impact of Philanthropy 2014 | Page 5

Fostering innovation in care Propelling pediatric heart care forward New and improved medical care saves both lives and money, essential at a time when health care expenditures threaten the U.S. economy. Launched in 2004, Advocate’s pioneering Clinical Integration Program has improved patient outcomes and achieved significant cost savings by accelerating the adoption of evidence-based best practices among more than 4,000 affiliated physicians. That success has helped make Advocate a national leader in accountable care, in which reimbursement is based not on how much care is provided, but on how effectively patients are kept well. Donors foster innovation at Advocate by funding technology and programs that enable clinicians to offer new treatments and to develop new approaches to delivering care. Named after internationally renowned Advocate Children’s Hospital surgeon Michel Ilbawi, MD, the Ilbawi procedure is one of the medical advances that have dramatically increased survival rates for children born with congenital heart defects. Recently the hospital was approved to start implanting the Berlin Heart, an artificial heart that can help keep children alive while they await a heart transplant—as up to four Advocate Children’s Hospital patients do each year—and even give their own hearts the opportunity to heal in some instances. Philanthropy is supporting the education and training of caregivers in the use of this state-ofthe-art device. A new paradigm for Alzheimer’s care Because the ranks of the elderly are swelling while the ranks of geriatricians are not, Advocate has taken a revolutionary approach to caring for patie nts with Alzheimer’s disease. Funded by a multimillion-dollar estate gift, the Alzheimer’s Support Center educates thousands of caregivers across the system about how to recognize and respond to signs of dementia in seniors they may be treating for other conditions. Among many other benefits, the Center has supported nurses with advanced training in elder care, and these nurses in turn are creating a system-wide initiative to identify, treat and prevent delirium. Improving treatments through research A kindergartener when he was diagnosed with a brain tumor, third-grader Isaac Parris was operated on by neurosurgeon John Ruge, MD, founder of the Midwest Children’s Brain Tumor Center at Advocate Children’s Hospital. Credited with developing several new neurosurgical techniques, Dr. Ruge was the first in the state of Illinois to perform Intraoperative MRI–guided surgery, and he was the first in the world to perform tumor-dye surgery on children: Infusing a special dye into the patient’s blood makes it easier to see and remove the entire tumor while avoiding healthy tissue and blood vessels. 515 pediatric open-heart surgeries performed at Advocate annually $763,333 Cures for many non-infectious diseases remain elusive, but countless lives are saved thanks to incremental improvements in care. Such improvements are identified by physicians and nurses who record and analyze patients’ responses to existing procedures and medications. Advocate is active in quality-improvement and comparative-effectiveness research; its large, diverse patient population and integrated, multisite delivery network uniquely position Advocate to compile the kind of data that can influence the practice of medicine nationwide. In addition, Advocate Lutheran General Hospital clinicians are collaborating with laboratory scientists on translational research projects designed to bring basic-science discoveries “from bench to bedside.” Donors funded nearly $600,000 in research conducted through the hospital’s James R. and Helen D. Russell Institute for Research and Innovation in 2013. in donor support of Advocate research in 2013 40% projected increase in incidence of Alzheimer’s disease by 2025 4 4