Monday, August 19, 2024

Freeman Health donates $1 million to MSSU's Roy Blunt Health Science Innovation Center


(From Missouri Southern State University)

Freeman Health System has given $1 million to support Missouri Southern’s new Roy Blunt Health Science Innovation Center, providing significant investment in a facility being created to educate the region’s next generation of healthcare providers.

The gift to the Missouri Southern Foundation also supports the university’s Lions Forward campaign which seeks to raise $42.7 million for seven key priorities.






 

The new center, currently under construction with an estimated completion date of Fall 2026, will provide Missouri Southern students with more immersive-learning opportunities and experiences to enhance their education in preparation for the ever-changing healthcare field. Not only will the state-of-the-art facility provide students with unique, immersive experiences such as the expanded cadaver lab and virtual reality simulation, but it will also include a simulation hospital featuring a NICU, labor and delivery unit, acute and critical care rooms, X-ray and CT scan suites, and more. Students will be integrated into a hospital setting without leaving the MSSU campus.

“The university is deeply grateful for Freeman’s generous investment in the Roy Blunt Health Science Innovation Center and in the future of health care in the Four States region,” Missouri Southern President Dr. Dean Van Galen said during a special event Monday. “Freeman’s investment will help provide unparalleled immersive learning opportunities for our students, ensuring that they are highly prepared for successful careers that make a difference in the lives of others. It’s another chapter in an extraordinary partnership between Freeman Health System and Missouri Southern.”

In recognition of Freeman’s generosity, the university is naming two important immersive learning spaces within the facility. The Freeman Skills Lab and the Freeman Simulation Classroom. The new Freeman Skills Lab will be a large, flexible space where students from a range of health science programs can practice what they learn. The flexible learning space will be designed so each professor can move or add equipment to enhance whatever learning will occur that day. It also will have large glass walls so visitors to campus can see learning on display. The skills lab will allow the instructor to set up stations throughout the building or to expand current lab capabilities when learned skills require more space.








The Freeman Simulation Classroom will be a space where students can complete other tasks when they are not actively participating in a simulation scenario. This room can be used for pre-briefing and debriefing of simulation scenarios, specialty lectures related to the scenario of the day, guest lecturers, or for students to complete assignments pre/post simulation.

“We’re honored to contribute to the growing array of options available to students pursuing careers in healthcare at Missouri Southern State University,” said Paula Baker, President and CEO of Freeman Health System. “Freeman’s gift to the Roy Blunt Health Science Innovation Cetner will help equip the school with simulation hospital rooms and skills labs that put the latest healthcare technologies into the hands of tomorrow’s nurses, doctors, technologists, and therapists. Real-life scenarios, ranging from acute care to labor and delivery and everything in between will give students experience that will serve them well as they progress through their education and through their careers.”

In 2014, Freeman and Missouri Southern signed a long-term, exclusive partnership with Freeman becoming the official sports medicine and rehabilitation service provider at the university, sponsoring and supporting the Freeman Sports Medicine and Rehab Center for athletes on Missouri Southern’s campus and providing medical professionals to support MSSU athletics. Dr. Robert Lieurance from Freeman has served as the MSSU team physician for the past 15 years, and athletic trainers from Freeman support Missouri Southern athletes daily.








The health system also continues to provide staff for the university’s on-campus student health clinic, the Willcoxon Health Center. Additionally, Freeman is one of the largest employers of Missouri Southern graduates.

Locally owned, not-for-profit and nationally recognized, Freeman Health System includes Freeman Hospital West, Freeman Hospital East, Freeman Neosho Hospital and Ozark Center – the area’s largest provider of behavioral health services – as well as two urgent care clinics, dozens of physician clinics in three states and a variety of specialty services. With more than 350 physicians on staff representing more than 90 specialties, Freeman provides cancer care, heart and vascular care, neurology and neurosurgery, orthopedics, children’s services and women’s services. Additionally, Freeman is the only Children’s Miracle Network Hospital in a 70-mile radius.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Still has the most miserable nursing staff in the region but loves to give money to charity for the tax write-off. Kudos to Freeman.

Anonymous said...

Gave Paula Baker a $700K bonus...nothing to the rank and file..but $1M to MSSU who nearly lost their ability to having a nursing school. Wonderful idea.

Anonymous said...

Just wait until people find out how much of a bonus she will get when she retires. It’ll shock people What her retirement package is.

Anonymous said...

The days when you could hire good help cheap are long gone!

You have to spend money to make money!

Anonymous said...

With all the Lawsuits, Claims, Bad Press, and Incompetant Management - Freeman needs to Re-Invent itself.

Anonymous said...

How about into a good hospital. lol.
Beyond parody at this stage.

Anonymous said...

yEE HAW!