SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WAND) - Hospital Sisters Health System has donated 129 hospital beds to Hospital Sisters Mission Outreach as they standardize their beds across the health system.
By the time the first project phase is finished, 190 beds taken out of service will be donated from five hospitals in Illinois and Wisconsin, including HSHS St. Mary’s Hospital in Green Bay, HSHS St. John’s Hospital in Springfield, HSHS St. Joseph’s Hospital in Breese, HSHS Holy Family Hospital in Greenville, and HSHS St. Francis Hospital in Litchfield.
Erica Smith, Executive Director of Mission Outreach, said hospital beds are the number one requested item, and they are already being shipped out to hospitals in other countries such as Tanzania, Nigeria and Lebanon, with more to go.
“I recently was in Uganda, and I saw a hospital where the pediatric ward the children were on the floor recovering from surgery because there are no beds there,” said Smith.
Usually when beds are requested, Mission Outreach sends one or two in the recipient’s 40-foot container. Ratish Kumar, Biomedical Engineer with Mission Outreach said, “We never had a situation like this before where we can meet our recipient’s need for an entire year.”
Mission Outreach is the only Medical Supply Recovery Organization in the nation that is affiliated with a health system. Kumar said, “That gives us an enormous opportunity to work in partnership with the 15 (HSHS) hospitals and see how we can streamline the donations and better serve our recipients overseas.”
“It's been a huge success,” said Smith. “We had one example of beds that we got in Green Bay that were on a container to Tanzania within two weeks. So it's amazing, it is a blessing for us, and it's also a blessing for many people around the world who otherwise may not have something as simple as a hospital bed to receive care or recover in.”
“It’s an honor to share these beds with Mission Outreach and watch our mission extend through their ministry. A nurse once stood beside a bed in Green Bay caring for a patient, and now that bed is in Tanzania, where another nurse stands nearby, with the same passion to bring healing to their patients. It’s powerful to have that connection across the globe, to know that we share resources and our mission,” said Damond Boatwright, President and CEO of HSHS.
“The bed project is the ideal collaboration,” said Smith. “It may seem like a lot of work and sometimes we may even wonder how much does this cost or what's the return on investment? For me, the return on investment is that when I go to Uganda next time, I don't see a kid recovering from surgery on the floor. And to that kid and to his or her parents this is why we do this work, and this is the mission of our Sisters and our health system.”
Copyright 2023 WAND TV. All rights reserved.