Today's Deal Promo Box - corkys

Login or Signup

Facebook user?
You can use your Facebook account to log in.
Join The Community
Login | Register | Subscribe
 

Patient lifesavers, robotics group share first Chanute Prize

Region's 'Nobel Prizes' awarded

Region's 'Nobel Prizes' awarded
Font Size:
Default font size
Larger font size

HAMMOND | Two years ago, several people died at St. Margaret Mercy's hospitals in Dyer and Hammond because of ventilator-assisted pneumonia.

In 2006, though, a team of about 15 people working for St. Margaret Mercy and the Sisters of St. Francis Health Services introduced a practice that has saved the lives of at least a dozen VAP patients, officials say.

On Thursday, St. Margaret Mercy was honored for its lifesaving technique as it shared the first Chanute Prize for Team Innovation with Team Hammond Robotics at the third annual Society of Innovators Induction Ceremony.

"In Hammond, we have virtually eliminated the incidence of VAP," said Jamie El Harit, a business transformation specialist at the Hammond hospital, after the award was handed to St. Margaret Mercy Healthcare Centers President Thomas Gryzbek at Horseshoe Casino. "In Dyer, we have totally eliminated it."

VAP is a common disease that affects about 15 percent of patients on ventilators nationwide. El Harit and Kristina Dimoski, the manager of the intensive care unit in Hammond, estimated that the disease kills up to 50 percent of its victims.

"We've saved at least a dozen lives," El Harit said. "And we've prevented complications in many more people than that."

The Chanute Award is named after Northwest Indiana pioneers who designed airplanes before the Wright Brothers flew. It was added to awards that were presented by the Society of Innovators of Northwest Indiana. On Thursday, the society inducted 29 people and named six of them Fellows -- Shirley Caylor, Roman Dziarski, Bill Keith, Johnny Mathis Jr., Ivan Nesch and Emerson Spartz.

Roy Evans, Society of Innovators chairman, called the awards "our Nobel Prize." The winners received a plaque and a $500 check.

In accepting Team Hammond Robotics' Chanute Prize, Bill Beatty, of team sponsor Beatty International Inc., praised Hammond students who have won four first-place awards in 12 annual international robotics competitions.

"It's fantastic what this team has accomplished," said Beatty, who said his team includes six students each from Clark, Gavit, Hammond and Morton highs as well as local teachers and advisers from several area companies. "There will be a lot of smart people. It's the innovative people who will make society grow."

Each year, the students and their advisers design a 130-pound robot that performs a variety of tasks at competitions. Last year, the team finished second out of 1,325 participants.

Copyright 2012 nwitimes.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Print Email

Sponsored Links

Current Conditions
30° F
Sponsored by:
Promo Banner - iPad App

Latest Local Offers

Dr. Jeffrey A. Bona D.D.S
Customer friendly dental services!
Dr. Jeffrey A. Bona D.D.S
Pizza Palace
Free small pizza with purchase of a extra large!
Pizza Palace
Levin Tire Center
$24.95 Oil Change w/4 Tire Rotation Special...
Levin Tire Center
Pines Village Retirement Communities
At Pines Village we Celebrate Life by enriching the lives of older adults.
Pines Village Retirement Communities
Let It Shine Christian Cleaning Services
We offer some of the lowest cleaning rates in town!
Let It Shine Christian Cleaning Services

Featured Businesses

Hint: Enter a keyword that you are looking for like tires, pizza or doctors or browse the full business directory, powered by Local.com

Poll

Is an additional $5 a month too much to pay for pristine quality tap water?

Loading…
Yes
No