SVMC Nurse Wins Worldwide Recognition

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BENNINGTON, Vt. — Southwestern Vermont Medical Center nurse Barbara M. Richardson is one of five nurses named as a 2016 American Nurses Credentialing Center National Magnet Nurse of the Year.

The award was bestowed for Richardson's commitment to structural empowerment, one of the five tenants of the Magnet model.

"I am honored and humbled to be recognized as a Magnet Nurse of the Year," Richardson said. "And I am tremendously grateful for the opportunity to be doing this important, groundbreaking work at SVMC as well as for the impact the Transitional Care Team and I have been able to make for patients in our community."

Richardson, a champion for transitional care nursing, partners with local primary care providers to identify at-risk patients and helps patients navigate from one care setting to another. Richardson created a support network within the community, establishing partnerships with mental health services, Meals on Wheels, and the Support and Services at Home Program, which provides support to individuals who choose to live independently at home. She collaborates with a community care team that works on decreasing emergency department visits. These efforts have resulted in a 69 percent decrease in hospitalizations and a 26 percent decrease in ED visits for patients enrolled in the program. As a result of its work, the transitional care team was awarded a $200,000 innovation grant from the state of Vermont in 2015.


"Barbara is an exceptional nurse, and what she and the Transitional Care Team have been able to achieve really sets Southwestern Vermont Medical Center apart from other health systems worldwide," said Carol Conroy, SVMC’s chief nursing officer. "We are proud beyond words to see her bring this award home to Bennington, and are grateful to our nurses for their tireless work and to our leadership for their support in pursuing the absolute best in nursing care."

The 2016 award winners were announced at the ANCC National Magnet Conference in Orlando earlier this month, where Richardson delivered an acceptance speech before the conference’s 10,000 attendees and SVMC was recognized as a four-time Magnet designated hospital. Earlier in the conference, the Transitional Care team presented a concurrent session titled "Beyond Care Transitions: Nurses Building an Accountable Community."

Twenty-five of SVMC's nurses were there in person to support Richardson and to accept the organization's fourth designation as a Magnet Center for Nursing Excellence. The hospital is one of 444 Magnet hospitals in five countries worldwide. Only about 30 have held the designation as long as SVMC.

"SVMC is a small rural hospital, but the work Barbara and the TCN program have done is revolutionary," said Thomas A. Dee, FACHE, SVHC’s President and CEO. "To see our nurses elevated as examples in this elite national forum, alongside tens of thousands of nurses from 444 Magnet hospitals worldwide, many of which are much larger academic medical centers, is awe inspiring."

 


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