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Staff Updates - Craig Hospital
Staff Updates - Craig Hospital
Staff Updates
Barb Page to retire
Barb Page is planning to retire on April 15, “but will periodically be involved in small ways through July and will probably find ways to help as a volunteer for longer than they want me,” she chides. Barb came to know Craig initially because of volunteer work through the Junior League of Denver and Kappa Kappa Gamma. When her son’s friend became a patient at Craig, she spent countless hours with him. She soon became a Board member and met grads like Steve Peters who further inspired her. “This place grabbed my heart and never let go.” Then, assuming there was a full staff, she volunteered to help with the capital campaign for the Family Housing Building in 1999—and finding out she was the staff, the one and only staff, didn’t deter her. She quickly formed a team and was named director of development when her Board term expired. One of her favorite memories was rejoicing with the news of the $1 million gift from Dana Raimondi which sparked the successful campaign. She also recalls fondly the craziness of Craig during Survivor Week and Halloween. “Denny O’Malley’s costumes absolutely left us in hysterical laughter.” The stories she gathered during the 100-year anniversary celebration were funny, sad, and uplifting. Now she is looking forward to spending more time with her six grandchildren.
Barb, we wish you the very best and know you will continue to provide us with humor, wit, and inspiration. |
Welcome, Jessica Nurack
Jessica Nurack joined the Craig Hospital Foundation staff as a development officer in December 2010, but was first introduced to Craig Hospital as a child when her mother was rehabilitated at Craig after suffering a traumatic brain injury. Currently, Jessica is involved with seeking major gifts for the Foundation as well as coordinating Craig’s young philanthropist group. Before joining Craig’s team, Jessica held administrative and development positions for a number of non-profit organizations, including Iowans for Social & Economic Development (ISED), the Education Development Center (EDC), and the StEPP Foundation. Jessica earned her master’s degree in social and developmental psychology from Brandeis University in 2006. She is a member of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, and also serves on the Member Relations Committee for YNPN Denver. |
We have great volunteers
Volunteers are vital to our work at Craig. They bring true-to-life experience to share with patients. In real time, they are there to say that it is alright, and to demonstrate to patients that it is possible not only to survive this challenge they’ve been faced with, but that the outcome can be a full and wonderful life.
We’re grateful for all 160 of our volunteers. Meet three of them here in Movin’ On!
Christina Ripp
Christina played a vital role in the U.S. gold-medal women’s wheelchair basketball victory over Germany in July 2010. She also finished first in the wheelchair division of the 2010 Medtronic Twin Cities Marathon last October in Minneapolis, Minn. Congratulations!
Michael Laden
A 1990 Craig grad turned volunteer extraordinare, Michael vacationed last fall in Egypt and sent us this fantastic photo. Thanks, Michael, and we’re glad you’re back after your great trip.
Peter Pauwels
Peter recently received the Hal O’Leary Leadership Award. He has 30 years of experience designing, creating, and providing adaptive fishing equipment and watercrafts at minimal cost for individuals with disabilities. He also promotes participation by offering adaptive fishing opportunities throughout the Rocky Mountains. He recently went to Wichita, Kan., to present a chin-controlled fishing pole to Craig grad Carl Hall as part of ABC’s Extreme Makeover Home Edition. For more info, see accessiblefishing.org.
It was with great sadness that we learned of the passing of Craig Hospital’s longtime friend and volunteer, Jim Richards, on January 6. Throughout his more than 30-year tenure Jim volunteered as a board member, served holiday meals to patients and staff, supported fundraising events, and most recently gave the Monday morning tours to new outpatients. In 2004, Jim was awarded Denver’s Channel 7 Everyday Hero Award by Mitch Jelniker, news anchor. Even if folks around Craig did not know Jim by name, they knew him as the older gentleman with the white hair and big smile who was always singing the praises of each department as he introduced the new patient to them. Jim’s advocacy and passion for Craig are unmatched. We will miss him. Best to his family. |
Congrats to Craig pharmacists
Heather Cabiness Smith, PharmD, became a Board Certified Pharmaco-therapy Specialist, and Adrienne Mackzum, PharmD, BCPS, earned her second Board Certification in Psychiatric Pharmacy. Board certification is a distinction achieved by fewer than three percent of the pharmacists in the United States, according to Amy M. Goldstein, RPh, MS, Craig’s director of pharmacy. It is consistent with evolution of the role of the pharmacist from a solely dispensing function to one with significant direct patient care responsibilities. Board certification also supports Craig’s goal of incorporating specialty-trained pharmacists as part of the collaborative care team. The benefit of pharmacist involvement in inpatient and outpatient clinical care has been well documented. Involvement of a clinical pharmacist in inpatient care has been shown to reduce morbidity, mortality, and health care expenditures.
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Terry Chase earns certification as Gestalt-Equine Therapist
Terry Chase, MA, ND, RN, coordinator of patient and family education at Craig, has completed training and certification through Gestalt Equine Institute of the Rockies. Terry is now a certified Gestalt-Equine Therapist. Patients with spinal cord injury who are almost ready to be discharged from Craig, and who are interested in trying something new, now have the opportunity to interact with horses. This new equine program is an interdisciplinary education outing that pairs individual patients with a horse handler and therapist as an additional way to address personal issues and attitudes, knowledge, and skills needed for life after rehabilitation. Congratulations, Terry!
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Dr. Lammertse receives highest SCI honor
Dan Lammertse, MD, has been selected to present the 2010 Donald Munro Lectureship at the September meeting of the Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals. This is the highest honor given at this national annual SCI scientific conference. His lecture is titled “The Search for Cure in the Age of Information.”
Dr. Lammertse is the medical director of research at Craig, a position he has held since 2008. Dr. Lammertse came to Craig Hospital in 1981 and served as medical director of Craig from 1984 to 2008. He received his medical degree and specialty training in rehabilitation medicine at Ohio State University. He is board certified in physical medicine and rehabilitation and has sub-specialty certification in spinal cord injury.
Dr. Lammertse has authored numerous chapters and scientific articles on topics in spinal cord injury and is internationally recognized as an expert in spinal cord injury rehabilitation. He was the project director of the Rocky Mountain Regional Spinal Cord Injury System and served as chair of the NIDRR SCI Model Systems Project Directors Committee from 2000 to 2006. He also served on the Board of Directors of the American Spinal Injury Association from 1991 to 2003, as president from 2001 to 2003. He is on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine and is a member of the Spinal Cord Injury Medicine Examination Committee of the American Board of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Dr. Lammertse is associate clinical professor of rehabilitation medicine at the University of Colorado.
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The Mark P. Cilo Room and Lecture
This summer, Craig staff and Dr. Cilo’s family honored our beloved departed physician and friend with the naming of the 2-West Conference Room, where he spent much time teaching and leading family conferences. A plaque is now there in his name. We also instituted the annual Mark P. Cilo Lecture in his honor. Pictured here are (from left) Dr. Cilo’s sons Jason Haddock and Hy Lewis; his wife Janie Lewis; Alan Weintraub, MD; and Judy Lazar, CNS manager. |
Karen Sims inducted into Arkansas Softball Hall of Fame
Question: Which speech/language pathologist at Craig is also a famous women’s softball player?
Karen Sims, MA, CCC-SP, returned to Little Rock on July 2 to become the youngest inductee to date into the Arkansas Women’s Softball Hall of Fame. Karen started playing at the age of 5, pitched for six Arkansas state championship teams, pitched for the USSSA World Championship team in 1982, and was selected for the USSSA All-World Team 1982. Karen is famous for pitching multiple no-hitters and a perfect game in slow pitch softball. She has been playing ever since, and currently plays on two Denver teams, including Craig Hospital’s co-ed “Crazy Stix” team.
Over the years Karen has received congratulatory letters from President Ronald Reagan, Arkansas Governor Frank White, and others. Since the induction, she has received letters from the mayor of her home town, the Arkansas governor, and even the Colorado Rockies Baseball Club because they heard she is a big fan! |
Food service director goes two and one in local drag races
Wes Johnson, Craig’s food service director since 1988, took second place on May 29 at Bandimere Speedway in Morrison, Colo., then came back to win his class on June 26. Wes owns two nostalgic front engine dragsters powered by fuel injected 1953 Mercury engines. He is pictured here in the car in the foreground which runs on ethanol (E85), while his son Steven is in his other dragster which runs on methanol. Wes believes he is the first drag racer in the country running a competitive drag car with these engines on ethanol.
Wes has been drag racing at Bandimere Raceway since the mid ’60s. For Wes, the answer to “how I spend my Craig paychecks” is “priceless.”
The photo is of Wes racing against his son Steven last month at Bandimere almost at the starting line getting ready for a qualifying run in the first round of eliminations. Steven left .02 seconds before his light turned green, and so Wes was automatically the winner of that pairing. Wes lost in the finals by .0032 seconds over a quarter of a mile. Wes says, “Thank you, Frank Craig, for making this possible!”
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Three dozen to hike for Team Craig in 25th annual Pikes Peak Challenge
Thirty-six hikers signed up for Team Craig and trained to ascend 14,000-foot Pike’s Peak to raise money for the Brain Injury Association of Colorado and Think First on September 11. Way to go, Team Craig!
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Occupational therapist visits Ukraine
In August, Angela Dillbeck, OTR, traveled to Artemivsk, Ukraine, with three other occupational therapists to complete community development projects. All alumni of Creighton University, the OTs facilitated a group of occupational therapy students in donating toys to area orphanages and kindergartens for disabled children, and renovating a space for a local support club for disabled children and their families to meet.
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Xio Acosta wins Daisy Award
Xio Acosta, RN,of Craig's outpatient clinic is this year’s DAISY Award recipient. DAISY is an acronym for Diseases Attacking the Immune System, and the award is a nationwide program in honor of J. Patrick Barnes. “Whenever I need anything, I know I can count of Xio to help,” says Craig grad Trish Downing, ’00, Denver, Colo. “She is great at supporting patients not only physically, but mentally and emotionally through tough times. I cannot think of another nurse who has given me more of her time and energy than Xio. She is a true example of a caring individual who is dedicated to the welfare of her patients.” Congratulations, Xio, on this well-deserved honor.
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Medical director Tom Balazy, MD, named “Top Doc”
Tom Balazy, MD, Craig’s medical director, was voted Top Doc by his peers in 5280 magazine’s “Top Docs,” in the Spinal Cord Injury Medicine category.
Dr. Balazy has been at Craig since 1987 and served as Craig’s medical director of the Multitrauma Unit at Swedish Medical Center for 17 years. He is board certified in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and is also assistant clinical professor at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. In 2006 Dr. Balazy received the Jerome Gersten Clinical Teaching Award from the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at the UCHSC School of Medicine. Congratulations, Dr. B!
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ACRM’s highest honors go to Craig staff
At the closing banquet of the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine (ACRM) meeting in October 2009, Gale Whiteneck, PhD, FACRM, and Cindy Dahlberg, MA, CCC-SLP, CPHQ, FACRM, received top honors in front of 150 of their peers.
Dr. Whiteneck, director of Craig’s research department since 1986, received the Gold Key Award of Merit, ACRM's highest honor. Cindy Dahlberg, director of quality and former director of Craig’s speech and language department, received ACRM’s prestigious Fellow Award for her contributions in the field of rehabilitation since 1973.
Congratulations, Gale and Cindy, for this well-deserved recognition and for your lifetime of service to patients and families with spinal cord injury and traumatic brain injury.
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Pharmacists receive awards
Congratulations to Craig pharmacists Stacia Wilhelm and Adrienne Mackzum who both became board certified pharmacotherapy specialists in December 2009, a distinction achieved by fewer than 3 percent of licensed pharmacists in the United States.

“This accomplishment signifies that an individual pharmacy specialist possesses an advanced body of knowledge and skill in addition to that of a general pharmacy practitioner,” explains Amy M. Goldstein, RPh, MS, Craig’s pharmacy director.
Stacia graduated from the University of Colorado School of Pharmacy in 1992 and has been a pharmacist at Craig for 12 years. She has spent the last five years in CU’s non-traditional PharmD program working toward earning her doctorate in pharmacy and is on track to graduate in May. By earning her
PharmD and BCPS, she hopes to contribute to the continuing development of progressive clinical pharmacy services at Craig.
Adrienne decided to become a pharmacist after spending the first 18 years of her career in environmental research and testing. She graduated with her doctorate in pharmacy in 2006, and began working at Craig the same year. She is proud to be a pharmacist at Craig; she especially enjoys teaching patients about their medications.
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2010 Awards of Excellence nominees
We recognize our fantastic rehab techs and unit secretaries through our annual Awards of Excellence event. Congratulations to all the nominees! Names of award recipients are in bold. Asterisks indicate those who received more than one nomination per category. |
Patient/Family Educator
Chris Crowley
Evelyn Johnson*
Alison Love*
Kelly Novosel
Caring/Compassion
Amanda Abbott
Veronica Alberca
Courtney Allen
Dana Day-Martinez
Mallory Dow*
Virginia Feld
Makai Hall
Sylvia Hammond
Tyne Hardwick
Shatasha Honegger
Marzena Kowynia
Sandy McClellan
Tina Mudra
Mary Lynch*
Melody Nowak*
Rob Richardson*
Jean Staudt
Professional Role Model
Henok Abate*
Lori Allington
Kris Donahoo
Susan Foster
Cindy Hardinger
Shatasha Honegger
Larry Kline
Lin Williams*
Ginny Wood*
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Teamwork
Amanda Abbott
Veronica Alberca
Courtney Allen
Stephanie Barajas
Carolyn Bauer*
Christi Bohm
Kelly Craig
Chris Donnelly*
Sylvia Hammond
Larry Kline*
Alison Love
Mary Lynch
Tanya Linhoff
Hannah Na
Amanda Sniadach
Yvonne Tulloch*
Quality of Care
Courtney Allen
Carolyn Bauer
Dana Day-Martinez*
Mallory Dow*
Jessica Floy Bruce
Howard Gonzales
Makai Hall*
Sylvia Hammond
Shatasha Honegger
Mary Lynch
Kandondo Mpulamasaka
Tina Mudra*
Jacki Murphy
Kelly Novosel
Melody Nowak |
Two at Craig retire after long careers
On January 15, the Craig family gathered to honor two outstanding women. Nena Robbins, OT, has retired after 43 years - the longest tenured Craig employee in history. Beth Langen, '75, Springfield, Ill., may have put it best when she said about Nena: "You have given 43 years of your life to making Craig the magic place it is. You embody its spirit. You are that 'magic.' You are part of the foundation upon which Craig has grown and flourished, as the faces changed and the challenges grew. And you have graciously and expertly passed that mantle on to those at Craig who continue to carry it forward. May you leave Craig knowing that you have blessed the lives of thousands of us who are grateful tohave shared a step in our path with you."
Eileen McLaughlin has retired after 33 years, which also rates right up there, no doubt about it. She held several positions at Craig, but is best known for her extraordinary pioneering work in our community re-entry program, helping hundreds of patients be productive again by returning to work and school. As a community re-integration specialist, Eileen was a renaissance maverick, working creatively with patients, families, Craig staff, vocational rehabilitation counselors, employers, co-workers, school teachers, counselors, and others. She founded the WIT ("Whatever It Takes") model to help patients get back to the community.
We thank each of you, Nena and Eileen, for your lifetime of contributions to Craig and our patients.
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Sam Andrews retires
Sam Andrews retired in September 2008 after 34 years of tireless and unselfish
service to Craig and the field of therapeutic recreation and disability.
Sam was director of therapeutic recreation at Craig from 1974 to 2006 and then served as director of volunteer services from 2006 to 2008.
With his leadership, Craig’s therapeutic recreation program created opportunities for patients and graduates previously unheard of — river rafting, hot air ballooning, SCUBA diving, hunting, Hobie Cat sailing, handcycling, and more. Sam was also an early pioneer and key developer of organized disability sports in Colorado, the U.S., and throughout the world. His contribution to the field is unmatched.
Sam is a member of the Colorado Parks and Recreation Association, the National Therapeutic Recreation Society, the Colorado Therapeutic Recreation Society, and the Colorado Society of Directors of Volunteer Services, and was a cofounder of the Outdoor Buddies program. He was named Colorado Therapeutic Recreation Professional in 1978 and again in 1983.
Rumor has it that Sam and his wife, Donna, Craig’s school tutor, will still help buy merchandise for our gift shop.
See you around, Sam, and thanks for all you have done!
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OTs go out on the town to benefit regional health organization
Who says OTs don’t know how to have fun? A number of Craig’s occupational therapists attended a benefit for the Rocky Mountain Multiple Sclerosis Center on January 9. The evening was a big success for the center and a terrific bonding experience for the OTs. They represented Craig’s support of other important health organizations in our community (and, in the process, showed them how much fun we have at Craig).
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Craig staff central in creating “Academy of SCI Professionals”
After decades as separate organizations, the American Association of SCI Nurses (AASCIN), American Association of SCI Psychologists and Social Workers (AASCIPSW), and American Paraplegia Society (APS) will be merging this year into a
single “Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals.” A strategic planning council has been working for two years on this significant and historic merger. Members of this group include Craig’s Lester Butt, PhD, ABPP; Indira Lanig, MD; and Diane Reinhard, RN, all past presidents of the three organizations. The Academy will be primarily and significantly supported by Paralyzed Veterans of America (PVA). A unique aspect of the Academy is that its overall governance board will have equal representation from four “sections,” more accurately representing a true interdisciplinary SCI team. The newest section will be the therapy leadership council (TLC), with which Ellen Severe, Craig’s OT director, and Darrell Musick, Craig’s PT director, are involved. The TLC is comprised primarily of occupational and physical therapists.
According to Dr. Butt, this is an exciting development in the evolution of the national SCI professional community. The Academy’s goals are to consolidate resources and expertise, increase the power of advocacy, promote interdisciplinary education and research, and hold an annual conference. The merger should be completed by the end of the year.
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Remembering Dr. Cilo
We are deeply saddened to report the death of our colleague and friend, Mark Cilo, MD, 65, who died suddenly on July 30, 2009. Dr. Cilo was a local, state, and national pioneer in brain injury rehabilitation. He worked at Craig Hospital from 1978 to the present, and consulted with numerous other hospitals and organizations in Denver. Dr. Cilo helped develop the Brain Injury Association of Colorado, and nationally he chaired the Standards of Care Committee for Acute Brain Injury Rehabilitation Programs
for the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Dr. Cilo was a visionary, team leader, program developer, teacher, public speaker, and friend. He was well loved by thousands of patients, families, and colleagues.
Dr. Cilo is survived by his wife, Janie, of 22 years, brother Stuart Cilo of Lewiston, Penn.; children Kelsey Haddock and her husband, Jason, of Centennial, Colo., and Hiram Lewis IV and his wife, Jessica, of Nashville, Tenn.; brother Stuart Cilo and his wife, Judy, of Lewiston, Penn.; and his beloved dogs, Jasper, a Jack Russell terrier, and Baby, a retired and rescued greyhound racer.
Donations can be made to: Craig Hospital Foundation, 3425 S. Clarkson Street, Englewood, CO 80113, 303-789-8650; or the Colorado Humane Society/SPCA,
2760 S. Platte River Dr., Englewood, CO 80110, 303-781-9344.
Our thoughts and prayers are with Janie and the entire Cilo family.
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Memory and new learning focus of Grand Rounds
This spring, the rehabilitation team was privileged to have Lyn Turkstra, PhD, CCC-SLP, visit Craig Hospital as part of an interdisciplinary project funded by the Art and Julie Seiden Award for Excellence. The presentation was coordinated by Wendy Gordan, MA, CCC, director of Craig’s speech and language pathology department. Dr. Turkstra is an associate professor in the Department of Communicative Disorders at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She presented “Memory and New Learning,”
emphasizing differences between declarative memory (learning through language) and implicit memory (learning through doing).
The next day, Dr. Turkstra conducted a workshop focusing on evidence-based research, applications of procedural learning in the therapy environment, attention issues, and other cognitive considerations. The workshop included time for small groups to discuss how the concepts could be incorporated into Craig’s existing programs. Since then, the TBI team has been developing changes that will incorporate the key principles.
Dr. Turkstra is board certified in neurologic communication disorders by the Academy of Neurological Communication Disorders and Sciences (ANCDS) and is a member of the ANCDS writing committee on Practice Guidelines for Cognitive-Communication Disorders after TBI.
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Staff kudos!
Congratulations to Darrell Musick who received the 2009 Outstanding Clinical Instructor Award from the University of Colorado Denver Physical Therapy School. The Cerasoli Award for Outstanding Contributions to Physical Therapy Education is awarded to an individual who demonstrates “significant contributions toward the academic or clinical education of the student physical therapists, role model-worthy professional behavior in the educational process, creativity or innovation in educational activities, and membership in the American Physical Therapy Association (APTA).” Way to go, Darrell!
Congratulations, too, to Lonnie Martinez, BS, RRT, named Leadership Practitioner of the Year by the Colorado Society for Respiratory Care. Lonnie has been at Craig for 13 years and serves on the advisory boards for PIMA Medical Institute, Concord Career College and T. H. Pickens College where he earned his respiratory care practitioner diploma. Lonnie is the director at large for the Colorado Society for Respiratory Care and has been a member of the National Board for Respiratory Care since 1996. He has made numerous presentations throughout the country regarding various leadership topics, as well as respiratory care and mechanical ventilation for people with spinal cord injury.
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Craig Hospital · 3425 S. Clarkson St. · Englewood, CO 80113 · (303) 789-8000 © 1996-2011 Craig Hospital All Rights Reserved. No reproduction of this website or any content is permitted without the written consent of Craig Hospital. |
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