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Technology & Medical Growth
We've Come A Long Way...

By Elissa Christensen
CN Staff Writer & Account Executive

Take a minute and think about your body. Close your eyes and imagine the millions of connections between your cells, the incomprehensibly complicated activities of your brain, every beat of your heart, the very act of breathing in and out, over and over, day after day for the rest of your life. It’s a rhythmic, even hypnotic system, and when everything is in good working order, it’s a perfect system. Unfortunately, one glitch can seriously kick this symphony of human health out of tune.

Enter Sacramento, one of the greatest hubs of healthcare in the nation. With nationally ranked medical programs and facilities densely scattered throughout the region, we live next door to the cutting edge of medical knowledge.

Now don’t be misled, I am perhaps the last person who can claim expertise on technology, research, or advances in the field of medicine. I am, in fact, a prime example of a person who takes their health for granted right up until the point when it becomes the slightest bit impaired. A head cold sends me over my pain threshold…now if that is the case, what on earth would I do about something like cancer or heart disease? Cry about it?

Far from it – after all, I’m no baby. And luckily, I live in a region rich with medical history. As I recently discovered, you can take a first-hand look at the long path of medical progress made in our own neighborhood through at the newly opened Sierra Sacramento Valley Medical Society Museum. One tour through the museum floor reveals the leaps and bounds made since Old Town was shiny and new.

As I wandered around the displays of artifacts, illustrations and old medical journals, I discovered a few interesting bits and pieces about Sacramento’s health records. For example, Alexander Butler Nixon, M.D., who served as the first President of the California State Medical Society, made the final decision to allow women to join the society. Dr. Nixon arrived in Sacramento at the height of the gold rush in 1949, and treated his patients with a medical kit that resembles a modern toolbox, as well as various bottles of 100 proof alcohol. After looking at the items in his bag of professional tricks, including the jagged teeth of his “bone saw,” and silk thread the size of packaging string that was used for sutures, I fully understood the desirability of a bottle of something strong to be taken down before any medical procedure.

To be fair, booze did not comprise the whole of Sacramento’s Nineteenth Century health care needs. The first X-Ray tube bought in Sacramento in 1897 cost a whopping $195 and can be viewed in the museum across the way from a display of old pharmaceuticals. J.L. Polhemus, the man who brought “perfectly pure water” to the Sacramento Valley also sold imported and patented medicines at his apothecary shop at the corner of J and 7th. Of course, he also sold sealing wax and fireproof paint in the same store. Did I mention that the average lifespan in 1900 was 48?

In comparison, the average lifespan as of 2000 is 76. Perhaps this is not surprising; however, along with our improved health, modern humans often take the source of that good health for granted. I know I am no better. I did not consider, for example, the great comfort of lying down for an exam on a (gasp) padded table…until I came face to face with a hardwood table complete with metal stirrups. Nor did I consider such procedures as open-heart surgery miraculous…until I sat down and really thought about the amazing steps taken since Willem Einthoven developed the first system to measure electrical impulses of the human heart. In 1903, this system required two rooms and five people to operate. Today, Mercy General Hospital plans to revamp their nationally renowned cardiology program by building the new Alex G. Spanos Heart Center, where microscopic precision developed out of the awkward innovation of “electrocardiography” saves lives on a daily basis.

This brings me to the next point of business: the latest medical boom in the Sacramento region. Our home has been celebrated as the medical hub of California for years, but in the coming months its prestige may become even greater – as well as, perhaps, more controversial. As local facilities plan to expand, the future of Sacramento medicine is, once again, in the advance.

The new Spanos Heart Center at Mercy General serves as a prime example of this advance. Plans for the new facility will be submitted to the State for approval in April 2005, and from there the staff hopes they will be running full steam towards their revamped heart center. Already ranked as one of the premier cardio-care facilities in the nation, Mercy General wants to expand their facility in order to maintain their program’s growth.

While such news sounds exciting and promising for Sacramento Valley residents (after all, who wouldn’t want to know that the best and brightest in medical heart technology operate right next door?), the reality of Mercy General’s plans comes at a certain cost. For example, due to Mercy General’s location in the heart of East Sacramento, local residents are torn about hospital plans. The general outcry against expansion plans has little to do with the potential advantages in the medical field, and more with convenience and livability for those who live and work near the hospital. Traffic issues, accessibility to the adjacent Sacred Heart Elementary School, imposition on existing homes, and the preservation of heritage trees are all sticky issues being passed back and forth like chewing gum between fingers.

No one seems to know how these issues can be resolved with certainty, yet expansion of the hospital is nevertheless a major priority. In addition to the need to expand the heart center, Mercy General must respond to the Seismic Retrofit Law passed in California in 1996. This law states that all California inpatient hospitals must meet the law’s structural requirements to protect patients in the event of an earthquake. Considering that the South Wing of the hospital was built in 1926, the hospital must at least remodel.

While the concerns of local residents are certainly valid, and quite compelling, the general plans for the new facility show so much promise and demonstrate a true dedication to improved health care service. The hospital plans include a brand-new, five story building, revamped parking lots, improved landscaping – including the addition of a “healing garden” for patients, staff, and visitors, as well as a greater number of cardiac surgery suites and catheterization laboratories.

Down the street, also in the heart of midtown Sacramento, Sutter Medical Center is planning a large-scale makeover as well. Named after the man who discovered gold in the days when amputations were accompanied by whiskey, Sutter Medical Center has grand plans to remodel their current site. The project plans include a new Women and Children’s Hospital, a new Emergency Department, and general expansion throughout the campus.

Sutter Medical Center, already ranked among the top 100 hospitals in the United States, hopes to promote further advances in their cardiovascular, neurological, neonatal, cancer treatment, and other programs through their renovation and expansion. Added features on the hospital campus will even include helicopter access on the roof, and a “village” area on the central campus to facilitate patient and staff traffic.

Technology, expansion and medical advance seem to be the call of the day in Sacramento. Though the impact may be felt upon the immediate community, one can’t help but realize how miraculously lucky we are to live in the midst of this kind of technical advance. When it comes down to it, health care is one of the most essential steps we’ve taken during the last century, and it’s further growth promises greater peace of mind and wellness of body. Is that something really worth curtailing? Perhaps the answer to that question is not cut in such black and white terms. However, after taking a look at the practices used upon Sacramento patients only a few decades ago, I think most people would go to their next doctor’s appointment with a spring in their step and a whole new outlook on their friendly neighborhood M.D.

For more information, contact Elissa Christiansen at EChristensen@ConnectedNow.com

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