One of America's Best
 

January 2008 eNews

Sanford’s Robotic Surgery Center has a dedicated care team trained for a variety of procedures. Together, this team has performed nearly 1,000 robotic surgeries.
(Sioux Falls, SD) Verlin Ritchie of Sioux Falls won’t soon forget a conversation with his physician in December 2006. He heard the word “cancer,” soon followed by two other words he didn’t expect – “robotic surgery.”

Doctors told him after discovering a cancerous tumor they needed to remove a portion of his colon. Curtis Peery, MD with Sanford Clinic Surgical Associates then explained to him the safest way to do that surgery would be robotically.

“Dr. Peery gave me the reassurance of knowing robotic assisted surgery is a more precise procedure and would reduce my recovery time and get me back to work sooner,” said Verlin. The surgery was a success, and Verlin returned to work two weeks after the procedure. “I didn’t even have stitches,” he added.

Verlin is one of nearly 1,000 patients in the past three years who discovered the advantages of the experienced physicians at Sanford.

Sanford’s Robotic History In 2004, Sanford Health started a robotic surgery program because of the significant benefits for the patient, as well as the surgeon.

For the patient, robotic procedures mean smaller incisions, a shorter hospital stay and an overall faster recovery in order to get back to everyday activities. For the surgeon, robotic surgery greatly increases their visibility of the anatomy. Procedures are also performed through incisions no wider than a fingertip.

“The pencil-size video camera provides magnified, 3-dimensional images of the surgical site giving me more accuracy,” said Dr. Peery. “The hand controls that I use to guide the system’s arms are equipped with surgical instruments making the entire procedure more precise.”

In spring 2006, Sanford opened a state-of-the art Surgical Tower incorporating ideas from world renowned facilities. The sophistication of the Sanford Surgical Tower is unparalleled. The growth of the Sanford Robotics program spurred the need for a second robotic system. Sanford is one of only 44 institutions in the United States with two systems and the only one in South Dakota.

An Experienced Team
Sanford’s team is unique from other programs around the country because of the volume and variety of procedures performed by physicians. Sanford’s robotic team consists of 18 surgeons performing procedures in many different specialties including gynecologic oncology, gynecology, general surgery, pediatrics and urology. Sanford currently has more physicians trained to do robotic hysterectomies than any other institution in the country. Sanford’s Robotic Surgery Center also has a dedicated care team trained for a variety of procedures. Together, this team has performed nearly 1,000 robotic surgeries.

Surgical Success
Sanford’s robotic surgeons have had the opportunity to share their expertise by traveling to facilities across the country to train other surgeons. One Sanford surgeon, Maria Bell, MD, gained national media attention for her robotic expertise when she was featured on ABC News World News Tonight in 2006 along with her patient who received a robotic hysterectomy. For Verlin Ritchie and nearly 1,000 other patients, choosing the experience of the Sanford Robotic Surgery team was the right decision.

“I wouldn’t even hesitate to do it again,” he said. “Sanford’s Robotic Surgery Center made a believer out of me!”

Click here for more information on robotic surgery

(Sioux Falls, SD) Life tends to fly by quickly – sometimes faster than we would like. However, Leroy Feekes, a resident and farmer in Beloit, Iowa, is taking one step back and enjoying life as it comes after a near death experience.

On June 11, 2007, Leroy was doing chores on the farm and felt a pain in his right arm. Although he knew from a past heart attack this could be a sign of heart trouble, he ignored the symptoms when the pain went away. That changed 90 minutes later when the pain returned.

“I called my wife Nancy and told her I needed to get to the hospital right away,” said Leroy. “When Nancy asked me where I wanted to go, I told her to take me to Canton-Inwood Memorial Hospital because I didn’t think I could make it to Sioux Falls.”

Soon after arriving at the emergency room, Leroy lost consciousness and became unresponsive. Daniel Rath, MD, Sanford Clinic Canton Family Physicians, along with the rest of the emergency room team at Canton- Inwood, quickly began CPR because Leroy didn’t have a pulse. “I was in awe at how everyone seemed to know what to do. And nobody seemed to be in each other’s way,” Nancy said. “I was praying out loud. I had faith and just knew he would come back.”

“We used the defibrillator on Leroy once. I looked at the monitor and there was nothing,” Dr. Rath said. “Then all of a sudden we got a pulse – it was incredible. Sometimes there is divine intervention in a person’s life. I was also very pleased with our staff. They responded quickly and did a great job.” Leroy was stabilized and air lifted to Sanford USD Medical Center. The flight nurse on duty that day believes the staff at Canton-Inwood Memorial Hospital is the reason Leroy survived his heart attack.

“The staff and physician did an excellent job,” Kay Boik, Intensive Air and Trauma 1 Flight Nurse, said. “When we arrived at their facility with the Trauma 1 helicopter, his condition was stabilized and ready for a rapid transport to Sanford USD Medical Center in Sioux Falls.”

At Sanford USD Medical Center, Adam Stys, MD, with Sanford Clinic Heart Partners discovered one of Leroy’s arteries was 100 percent blocked and inserted a stent to keep the artery open.

Today, Leroy does not have any heart damage. He returned to work two weeks after the experience.

Click here for more information regarding Sanford's Heart & Vascular services.

Physician Spotlight: Allison Wierda Suttle, MD, FACOG - Sanford Clinic Women's Health
Family:
Husband, Gary;
Son, Raymond (3 ½)
Education:
Lincoln High School 1988; Undergraduate: Brown University, Providence, RI; Medical School: Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago; MBA: University of Sioux Falls (February 2009)
Hometown:
Sioux Falls, SD
Favorite Food:
Banana pancakes made by my husband
Favorite Book?
“Tell Me Again about the Night I was Born” by Jamie Lee Curtis; “The Incredible Book Eating Boy” by Oliver Jeffers
What’s on your iPod:
Clare Burson, Mozart, Wilco’s “Sky Blue Sky”
Physician Spotlight
Allison Wierda Suttle, MD, FACOG
Sanford Clinic Women’s Health

As a kid in Sioux Falls, what did you think you would do when you grew up?

I really thought I’d be a pathologist or pediatrician. I remember watching “Quincy” in high school. I always liked the sciences a lot. I also remember watching my dad (a retired radiologist) reading x-rays, but I fell in love with OB. My little sister is a third year medical student. She’s at the University of South Dakota, and she hasn’t decided her specialty yet. You have to decide yourself what you truly love because it’s a demanding job.

What’s it like being back home?

Sioux Falls has changed a lot, and I love it. It really still has that small town feel. It is also great running into people you knew growing up, and it’s fun getting together with our kids now.

Now from MD to MBA. What prompted you to get your MBA in healthcare from the University of Sioux Falls?

I think there is a lot physicians can do to improve medical care and the business of medicine. It’s going to take physicians to do it, people from the inside. I’d like to transition after a nice long practice and maybe do some administrative work.

What do you like best about your job?

I like being there for the delivery and seeing that on a regular basis. A child being born never stops being amazing. It is really a miracle. Also, I love surgery and the robotic surgery I’ve been doing. I know because of the robotics the patient is going to feel better and go home sooner, and it’s not going to be six weeks of recovery. It’s really changed my practice.

Robotic surgery also utilizes a hobby you started as a child and still practice today.

I love to knit. My aunt owned a needlepoint store in town, so I took up knitting. I think the knitting makes me a better surgeon.

How does being a mom influence your work?

My son, Raymond, always says my work is to “give people hugs.” I always remember that at the end of whatever I say and I do. I need to give them a “hug” and let them know it’ll be okay. I love taking care of women, helping them with pregnancy and delivery and being able to do surgery. To help women be strong and independent is great.

For more information on Alison Wierda Suttle, MD, contact Sanford Clinic Women's Health at (605) 328-7700.


Where Does a Spine Surgeon Go for Spine Surgery? - Trust, Proven Quality & First-Rate Facility

(Sioux Falls, SD) As a new physician at Sanford Clinic, just moving to Sioux Falls from Aberdeen, I never expected to be on the patient side of caregiving, but that is exactly where I found myself this fall. After several years of difficulties with my back, sudden and unrelenting pain forced me to proceed to surgery.

One might imagine the decision would be difficult, given I could choose to go anywhere in the world. As a member of the Spine Section of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons, I have had contact with many notable surgeons. Choosing a surgeon involves several factors: trust, proven quality and a first-rate facility.

The trust factor was easy. Wilson Asfora, MD has been a trusted colleague for nearly ten years, since I first arrived in South Dakota to practice neurosurgery. He is a man of nearly inexhaustible energy and innovation. Furthermore, I knew I had a team looking after me, with Bryan Wellman, MD conferring with Dr. Asfora.

There is more to surgery than just the surgeon, however difficult as that might be for a surgeon to say! The hospital is just as important. As an insider, I knew that my care at Sanford USD Medical Center would be second to none. After all, I have been operating here for some time, and have experienced the commitment to quality that resonates through the entire facility, from the new Sanford Surgical Tower with its state-of-the-art surgery suites and equipment, to the nursing and anesthesia staff.

Despite my optimistic outlook, nothing prepared me for my experience. From the moment I arrived, the care was compassionate, privacy-focused and extraordinarily professional. I may be an insider, but I am still new enough that I was, for the most part, unrecognized. That made the care that I received all the more special to me, knowing my patients will receive that same level of quality.

Finally, the choice of Sanford was clearly the right one to make. I left the hospital the day after a multiple-level reoperation for spinal fusion, and look forward to continuing to be a part of a great team!

Click here for more information regarding Sanford's Neurosurgery & Spine services.


Sanford Health In The News
Holiday Giving-Sanford Clinic Family Medicine 69th & Minnesota
Sanford Clinic Family Medicine 69th & Minnesota
“Instead of employees giving each other gifts, we pooled our money and put it to good use,” said Vickie Trefz, Clinic Director.
(Sioux Falls, SD) Giving is better than receiving – a motto many facilities throughout the Sanford system live by this time of year. One great example of this generosity is Sanford Clinic Family Medicine 69th & Minnesota.

“Instead of employees giving each other gifts, we pooled our money and put it to good use,” said Vickie Trefz, Clinic Director.

This year, the employees donated more than $500 to give to the Holiday Clearing House Adopt a Family program. With this money, the employees sponsored two families and purchased coats, clothes and toys for the kids.

The clinic also made fleece blankets for children at the Children’s Inn, an emergency shelter for women and children who are victims of abuse and neglect in Sioux Falls. A total of 20 brightly colored fleece blankets were donated.

Dakota Food Court Recognized as “Best of the Best”
Nancy Geffre, Director of Nutrition and Food Service, RDLN and Retail Manager Lynne Stack
(Sioux Falls, SD) The Dakota Food Court, located in the Surgical Tower at Sanford USD Medical Center, recently celebrated its one year anniversary with a special honor from Hot Stuff Foods®. The Dakota Food Court, along with Nancy Geffre, Director of Nutrition and Food Service, RDLN and Retail Manager Lynne Stack, was awarded membership into Hot Stuff’s President’s Club and recognized for its outstanding service and customer commitment.

“This milestone was created to reward operators who are successful and committed to the highest quality food service possible,” noted Roxanne Van Loon, Hot Stuff Vice President of Marketing. “To attain President’s Club status after only one year is almost unprecedented and reflects incredible leadership, knowledge, profitability and team effort from Nancy, Lynne and the entire food service team at Sanford USD Medical Center.”

Hot Stuff Foods® Chief Executive Officer, John Fontana said Sanford Health Center’s membership in the President’s Club recognizes them as the “best of the best.”

Sanford Clinic Watertown Earns Laboratory Excellence Award
Sanford Clinic Watertown Earns Laboratory Excellence Award
(Watertown, SD) Sanford Clinic Watertown’s laboratory was recently selected as a recipient of the COLA Laboratory Excellence Award. This award signifies the lab’s commitment to performing quality patient testing and overall laboratory practices.

The Laboratory Excellence Award is achieved by those COLA laboratories that are found to be compliant with all COLA essential and required criteria at the time of their on-site survey. COLA is a premier clinical laboratory education, consultation and accreditation organization.



 

Improving the Human Condition