Impact

Program reunites patients with emergency physicians

Ed Frederick thanks Dr. Elizabeth Werley at the first “See Me Now” program for helping him during a trauma he suffered last spring. Credit: Penn State Health / Penn State. Creative Commons

HERSHEY, Pa. — Edward Frederick plans to retire soon with full use of both legs — something for which he will always be grateful to staff at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, and he wanted them to know it.

The Londonderry Township man had just dropped off his wife at the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center for a doctor appointment last spring when he had an accident in the parking lot that caused extreme blood loss.

“I knew I was in big trouble,” he said. “I managed to drive myself to the front door of the hospital, but I lost consciousness while I was being taken in. The next thing I remember was being wheeled from the emergency department to the operating room.”

Dr. Elizabeth Werley, an emergency department physician, oversaw triage care that ultimately saved Frederick’s life. Within 15 minutes of arriving, he was headed to the operating room for leg surgery.

“We were able to do something that we trained for years to do, and our rapid response team worked together so smoothly,” Werley said. “Otherwise, I’m confident he would have died, but that day, we saved somebody’s life.”

Today, Frederick is walking normally, quite the reverse of the initial expected outcome that he would need a leg amputation if he lived long enough to receive it.

If those who saved his life could see him now, he often thought, they would see the future they gave back to him — and how grateful he is for it.

When Frederick heard about “See Me Now,” a program that reunites patients with their emergency department physicians, he didn’t hesitate to participate — and he brought a dozen family members and friends with him to the first reunion in February.

“I talked about what a hard time it was and that the only reason I made it through was because of their skills,” Frederick said. “There were tears all over the place. It was an important time for us to be able to express our thanks.”

The program, made available through a Penn State College of Medicine wellness mini-grant aimed at addressing physician burnout, was the brainchild of Dr. Jeff Lubin, vice chair for quality and patient safety outcomes at the Hershey Medical Center Department of Emergency Medicine, and Linda Gangai, program manager for quality and patient safety outcomes.

“In the emergency department, patients don’t have repeated contact with the doctors like they do in primary or specialty care because they are either going to the intensive care unit, the operating room or home,” Gangai said. “There’s no time to build that bond or relationship that can be so rewarding, and often doctors don’t know the outcomes.”

Read the full article on Penn State Medicine.

Last Updated April 24, 2019

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