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Help Transform the MoBap NICU

Although it might be mini, the MoBap NICU is mighty, delivering the extraordinary care associated with a large academic medical center to our tiniest patients.

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With His New Shunt, Glen Returns to Enjoying Retirement

Glen's life took an unexpected turn one afternoon while working in his shed. He received specialized care at Missouri Baptist Medical Center, helping him to a path of recovery.

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“You only get one life”

Michelle Mondello was breastfeeding her youngest child of three when she noticed a lump in her breast. Michelle was only 35 years old and had no family history of breast cancer. Because of her age and background, she wasn’t a candidate for regular mammograms. But after a biopsy at the Breast HealthCare Center at Missouri Baptist Medical Center, Michelle was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), an aggressive form of cancer that accounts for 10 to 15 percent of all breast cancers.

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Get the care you need, when you need it

Knowing where to get medical care is important, especially for sudden injuries or illnesses. For health concerns, Peter Fletcher, MD, Washington University emergency medicine physician and interim medical director of emergency medicine at MoBap, advises contacting your primary care provider first unless it’s an emergency.

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Cathy and Paul Benefit from Early Screening

As former smokers, Cathy and Paul both experienced the benefits of Missouri Baptist Medical Center’s (MoBap) early lung cancer screening program. 

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Michael Bruner
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Operational Excellence Cohort

Finding Solutions for Everyday Health Care Challenges

Finding Solutions for Everyday Health Care Challenges

Operation Excellence
From left, Joseph Scherrer, PhD; Leroy Love; Nitin Anand, MD; Jim Berges and Elizabeth Mannen Berges; Ann Abad; Aaron Bobick, PhD. (Photo by Diane Anderson.)

The Operational Excellence (OE) cohort at Missouri Baptist Medical Center empowers clinical leaders to tackle hospital challenges and improve patient care through business insights.

Through the generosity of the Berges Family Foundation, these leaders develop operational excellence skills to achieve the most efficient, compassionate and effective processes for delivering care.

“We saw the OE cohort as the optimal way to combine the resources of people, their talents and the efficiency of their time to work toward solving everyday problems that could significantly benefit patient care. That made it a slam-dunk investment for us,” say Jim and Elizabeth Berges.

Together, the Missouri Baptist performance improvement team and Washington University McKelvey School of Engineering professors have created a curriculum that teaches leaders about analytics, culture and optimization for excellence.

Each OE cohort has participants from various departments. Working together, they present problems, find solutions using engineering principles and implement changes.

Since 2020, OE cohorts have addressed challenges such as bed management and laboratory turnaround times, among others. As a result of the program, the waiting time for in-patient beds for patients in the emergency department has improved. Also, MoBap’s lab result turnaround time has become the most efficient in the BJC system, and its process has been adopted by other hospitals in the network.

Elizabeth Berges describes the medical professionals in the cohorts as “extraordinary individuals dedicated to improving patient care.” After seeing the results achieved at MoBap, the OE methodology is being adopted throughout the BJC HealthCare System.

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