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Category: Hospitals

Children’s Hospital Los Angeles receives $11-million gift

Children’s Hospital Los Angeles has received an $11-million gift from the estate of an Oscar-winning filmmaker and his wife.

The gift from Billy and Audrey Wilder will be used to create an endowed chair of the Division of Neurosurgery, which will be named after the late couple. Funds will also be used for general neurosurgical research and the treatment of neuro tumors, rheumatic diseases and other illnesses. 

The Wilders were longtime supporters of the hospital. Audrey, a singer and actress who died in June, met Billy on the 1944 set of “The Lost Weekend,” which won him his first of two film directing Oscars. He died in 2002.

“We were told we were going to get a gift in July because we were named in the estate, we just didn’t know how much,” said Lorenzo Benet, hospital spokesman. “We were surprised.”

The donation from The Wilder Family Trust is among the largest ever made to the hospital, officials said.

“This gift will enable us to build on our reputation as one of the finest pediatric brain tumor clinical programs and neurosurgery research centers in the country,” said Dr. Mark Krieger, chief of medical staff and the head of the neurosurgery division.

The neurosurgery division performs more than 500 surgeries a year, Krieger said.

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False alarm: Supposed gunman at L.A. hospital was security guard

A supposed gunman spotted at Cedar's Sinai Medical Center -- which led to the evacuation of dozens and a police search Wednesday -- turned out to be a security guard, LAPD officials said.

Deputy Chief Debra McCarthy said a custodian noticed a person with a gun or holster under his clothes in a bathroom Wednesday morning and immediately notified hospital security.

As a precaution, the public was cleared from part of the hospital as police arrived and searched for any potential threat.

An investigation determined the so-called gunman was an armed guard, said LAPD Officer Cleon Joseph.

McCarthy said it is always better to report suspicions than not, but in this case, there was no gunman.

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Local hospitals welcome 12-12-12 babies

The baby delivery ward at Glendale Adventist Medical Center has been a hub of activity this morning, with eight babies born by midday on the very rare date of 12-12-12 -- the last time a triple-date sequence will be on the calendar this century.

The hospital expects to have 14 births by the end of the day, said spokeswoman Alicia Gonzalez, adding that the average number of deliveries a day is eight.

As of 11:30 a.m., three of the births were C-sections, with two more scheduled for today, Gonzalez told the Glendale News-Press.

Jesse John Martinez Jr. was the first natural birth, arriving at 4:59 a.m.

He was supposed to be born on Christmas Day, but his mother, Nicole Medrano, 18, went into labor around 5 a.m. Tuesday.

Medrano said she wasn’t particularly surprised by the early arrival.

“I was born a week early and my mom was born two weeks early,” she said.

The baby’s father, Jess Martinez, 18, said he didn’t expect the baby to be born on such a special day.

“I guess we were just lucky,” he said.

The couple, who are engaged, live in Highland Park. Medrano is a recreation leader at the Monrovia Community Center and Martinez works at Domino’s Pizza.

At Glendale Memorial Hospital and Health Center, a baby was born naturally at 12:45 a.m. and a C-section is scheduled for around noon, according to spokeswoman Angela Giacobbe.

Verdugo Hills Hospital had a C-section scheduled for around 10:30 a.m., according to spokeswoman Celine Petrossian.

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It's 12-12-12, and numerous couples have a date to get married

Marriage-bound couples are expected to flood Southern California courthouses and county offices Wednesday in a quest to make the easy-to-remember date of 12-12-12 their wedding day.

The Los Angeles County registrar-recorder's office is extending its hours at six district locations, bracing for a wave of couples wanting to tie the knot.

Offices in Lancaster, LAX  Courthouse, East Los Angeles, Los Angeles and Van Nuys will open their doors at 8:30 a.m. and close at 3:30 p.m. The Norwalk location is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Before Wednesday, L.A. County officials encouraged would-be couples to apply for a marriage license online, at a cost of $90, and schedule their ceremony.

Some chapels, like Guadalupe Wedding Chapel, with three locations in L.A. County, were offering 12-12-12 specials -- "Get married in any chapel for $295 with a trip to Las Vegas!"

The Orange County clerk-recorder planned to double its staff in anticipation of a record-setting number of marriages at county offices. The clerk-recorder had 229 appointments for weddings scheduled for Wednesday.

Continue reading »

Hospital worker gets 4 years in attacks; victim calls him a 'creep'

Narcisco Romanes BlandoA patient-care assistant at a south Orange County hospital was sentenced Friday in the sexual assault of two women in his care and the battery of another, prosecutors said.

Narcisco Romanes Blando, 48, pleaded guilty to two felony counts of sexual battery on an institutionalized person and two misdemeanor counts of battery, according to a statement from the Orange County district attorney's office.

He was sentenced to four years in state prison and will have to register as a sex offender for life, the statement said. 

Prosecutors said that at the time of the crimes, Blando worked at Saddleback Memorial Medical Center in Laguna Hills. 

One of the women, in a statement read to the court Friday, said Blando damaged her self-esteem and dignity.

"I had self-esteem and knew I was a good person," said the 65-year-old patient, a retired special education teacher.

"The creep took advantage of me and my condition, took all of my dignity and self-assurance and threw it away. I feel dirty and can't seem to get his rage and the look in his eyes out of my head."

Prosecutors said they documented three instances in which Blando, a resident of Orange, caressed, kissed, molested and assaulted patients at the medical facility.

On Aug. 11, 2011, prosecutors said, Blando stroked the hair of a 60-year-old patient recovering from surgery and kissed her lips and cheek against her will. 

Continue reading »

L.A. marks 100th 'safe surrender' newborn left at hospital

Public officials and community members will gather in downtown Los Angeles' Grand Park late Tuesday afternoon to mark the 100th and 101st newborn babies left at local hospitals under the county's "safe surrender" program.

A baby boy was left at a Torrance hospital on Nov. 13, Supervisor Don Knabe's office said, marking the 100th time an infant was surrendered under the 11-year-old program. Two days later, a baby girl was surrendered at a hospital in Downey.

Approved by the Board of Supervisors in 2001, the program allows someone to surrender an infant no more than 3 days old to a fire station or hospital without risk of prosecution as long as the baby shows no signs of abuse.

Knabe's office said the candlelight ceremony Tuesday, which will feature firefighters and hospital workers who participated in a safe surrender along with parents who adopted safe surrender babies, will begin at 5 p.m. after a 30-minute news conference.

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Suspects sought in shooting of L.A. County sheriff's deputy

A Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy was believed to be in surgery Friday night after being shot in an incident in unincorporated Florence-Firestone. Law enforcement officers were pursuing multiple suspects.

Deputies set up a containment area that stretched as far as 30 blocks near the scene of the shooting, which occurred about 9:30 p.m. near 81st Street and Parmalee Avenue.

Residents called in reports of possible suspects they believed to be fleeing through their yards or trying to hide, according to broadcast reports.

The wounded deputy was rushed to St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood. He appeared to be sitting in a slightly raised position as he was brought in on a gurney. Video from KCAL-TV Channel 9 captured his arrival at the hospital.

The Sheriff's Department set up a command post at the hospital to provide developing information from the scene. The wounded deputy was believed to be a member of a gang-suppression unit.

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11% of children in California are uninsured, study says

Children in California are more likely to be uninsured than children nationwide, with 1.1 million lacking health coverage in 2011, according to a new study by the Keck School of Medicine of USC.

About 11% of children lacked insurance last year -- and they were less likely to seek medical care than those with coverage, the authors reported.

The study, released Wednesday by the California HealthCare Foundation, detailed children's insurance trends over a 10-year period. During that time, the percentage of children covered by their parents' employers dropped while the percentage of children in public programs increased. In 2011, 56% of the state's children had private coverage and 38% had public insurance. Some children were covered by both types of programs.

The authors noted, however, that enrollment in the state's main public insurance program for children has stalled over the last three years, which they attributed to budget cuts.

The insurance trends are expected to change in 2014, when the federal healthcare law takes effect. More children will be eligible for coverage either through Medi-Cal or the health benefits exchange, which will provide access to government-subsidized private insurance.

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20-year-old soldier who lost arm and foot refuses to quit

Geoffrey3

When Pfc. Geoffrey Quevedo was airlifted late last year to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center after being severely wounded in Afghanistan, his family in California was told to hurry to Washington to say a final goodbye.

The 20-year-old from the farming community of Reedley in Fresno County was not expected to live beyond a few days.

The blast had ripped off his left foot and his left arm above the elbow. It knocked out four front teeth, broke his nose and jaw, and collapsed a lung. He was blinded in his left eye and his blood loss was enormous.

But the doctors' gloomy prediction failed to take into account Quevedo's refusal to die -- and possibly underestimated the military medical system's ability to pull a young soldier back from the brink of death.

"My family was told to pack their bags and come see their son for the last time," Quevedo said. "The doctors didn't know something: I'm a hard head."

Now, after a stay at Walter Reed and then at the poly-trauma unit at the Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Palo Alto, Quevedo is receiving care at Naval Medical Center San Diego, including for traumatic brain injury.

In response to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Naval Medical Center San Diego has become one of the nation's top hospitals in treating traumatic amputations. Since 2006, the hospital has had 169 patients who suffered amputations in the war zones.

As the war in Afghanistan winds down, there are fewer new cases: 23, including Quevedo's, this year, compared with 58 in 2011. But the cumulative impact of providing continuing care has meant a soaring patient load and forced a remodeling of the prosthetics laboratory at the medical center's Comprehensive Combat and Complex Casualty Care facility.

Many patients receive more than one prosthetic, each specialized for a certain task: running, walking, exercising, etc. Last year the facility provided 418 prosthetic limbs; the number this year is already close to 500.

Quevedo is eager to get his prosthetics and, after leaving the Army, get a job. There are still surgeries and months of therapy ahead but he is doing an internship with the U.S. Marshal's office in San Diego handling administrative paperwork.

"I never feel sorry for myself," he said recently after a rigorous morning of exercise in a class for amputees. "I knew the risk when I enlisted. I don't want to be treated like a baby by American society."

He had been in Afghanistan for eight months when, as a cavalry scout for the 10th Mountain Division, he went on a patrol to clear out the buried explosives that are the Taliban's weapon of choice. It was four days after his 20th birthday.

He does not remember much about the explosion. "I just saw a light," he said.

The days after that are a haze, except he remembers having a dream about his 3-year-old daughter. While he has no regret about enlisting, he has a kind of sorrow that therapists say is common to the war wounded: that their injury represents a failure to do their job.

"When I woke up I just kept saying, 'I'm sorry, I'm sorry that I let everybody down,' that I could have done better on that patrol. I felt like I let my family and buddies down."

Those feelings aside, Quevedo refuses to consider that his life will be limited by his injuries, that there are things he will no longer be able to do.

"If you tell me 'no,' I just say, 'watch me,'" he said.

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Photo: Army Pfc. Geoffrey Quevedo. Credit: Tony Perry / Los Angeles Times

Newborn left at L.A. hospital is 99th under 'safe surrender' program

A newborn girl has been left at a Los Angeles hospital, the county's 10th "safe surrender" of the year, county Supervisor Don Knabe said Tuesday.

The infant was placed in protective custody and will be eligible for adoption by a family approved by the Department of Children and Family Services, Knabe said.

Formed 11 years ago, the county's safe surrender program allows someone to surrender an infant no more than 3 days old to a fire station or hospital. As long as the baby shows no signs of abuse, there is no risk of prosecution.

Monday's surrender marked the county's 99th since the beginning of the program, Knabe said.

"Thanks to the Safe Surrender program, this baby has a second chance at life and hope for bright a future," the supervisor said in a statement. "I’m thankful that this mother decided to surrender her baby, rather than put her in a harmful situation."

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