Littauer presents check to Make-A-Wish Northeast New York

Littauer presents check to Make-A-Wish Northeast New York

GLOVERSVILLE – The Nathan Littauer Hospital & Nursing Home’s Courtesy Counsel annual Holiday Basket raffle raised $5400 for Make-A-Wish Northeast New York this year.  The donation remains local for a medically eligible child.

 

Over 20 baskets were donated from departments throughout the hospital and nursing home. “The employees here at Nathan Littauer are very giving and willing to help their community” said Moshgan Jones, NLH Courtesy Counsel Chairperson. “Each department is so creative.”

 

“Every year we support a local community non-profit organization, and typically raise $5000,”said Jones. “We are thrilled that Make-A-Wish gives back so greatly to those in our community. We met the recipient of last year’s donation, and it meant to world to our employees.”

 

For the second year in a row, the NLH Courtesy Counsel has partnered with Make-A-Wish Northeast New York.  In the course of two and a half days on Dec. 10, 11 and 12, 2014 employees and guests of NLH brought $5400 for the fundraiser.

 

Receiving the check for Make-A-Wish Northeast New York was the foundation’s CEO, Dr. William Trigg. He told the crowd gathered at the celebration, “Know that you are bringing hope, strength, and joy to a special child with this generous donation.” Adding “We can’t thank you enough for your generosity and this money will be used locally to make a child’s wish come true.”

 

Make-A-Wish grants the wishes of children with life-threatening medical conditions to enrich the human experience with hope, strength and joy. Since 1987, Make-A-Wish Northeast New York has granted nearly 1,500 wishes in the 518 area code and currently grants 90 to 100 wishes each year.

 

Littauer CEO and President Laurence Kelly, left, Littauer Courtesy Council Chairman Moshgan Jones and Make-A-Wish CEO Bill Trigg

Littauer CEO and President Laurence Kelly, left, Littauer Courtesy Council Chairman Moshgan Jones and Make-A-Wish CEO Bill Trigg

Nathan Littauer Hospital & Nursing Home goes mobile

GLOVERSVILLE – Nathan Littauer Hospital & Nursing Home has recently introduced their mobile responsive website, allowing for the latest Littauer information and updates to available in the palm of your hands.

“Our website can be easily searched form any mobile device from a cell phone to a notebook, IPad, or PC” said Cheryl McGrattan, Littauer’s Vice President of Marketing and Communications. “Information can be easily processed with simply a swipe to the department you are interested in.”

“We have always been early adapters’ technology whether it is in our diagnostic department or in our communication tools” McGrattan added.

The community is encouraged to engage the new responsive site. Please go to www.nlh.org.NLH goes mobile_jpeg

 

The Ferguson Fund supports Littauer and employees

DSC_0011GLOVERSVILLE – Recently, the inaugural recipients of the Priscilla Parkhurst Ferguson and Robert A. Ferguson Fund for Education scholarship award were presented at Nathan Littauer Hospital & Nursing Home. Scholarships of $ 2,500 each were granted to Lisa A. Winchell and Brooke M. Nellis, both employees at Littauer.

 

Lisa Winchell currently serves Nathan Littauer Hospital as an operating room technician and is pursuing an Associate’s Degree in nursing from the Belanger School of Nursing at Ellis Hospital.  Upon completion Ms. Winchell will be trained as a Registered Nurse.

 

Brooke Nellis currently serves Nathan Littauer Hospital as a Med / Surg. Registered Nurse and is pursuing her Bachelor’s Degree in nursing from Utica College.

 

“The Littauer Foundation is honored to have the Fergusons create this prestigious and generous award for Littauer employees” said Geoffrey Peck Vice President / Executive Director Nathan Littauer Foundation. “They have become great benefactors.”

 

Peck added it was important to the Fergusons that donations be used where they would have the most impact. “They chose Littauer, and we are so thankful.”

 

Priscilla Parkhurst Ferguson is a Gloversville native. She and her husband Robert are both professors at Columbia University, Priscilla in the Department of Sociology and Robert is the George Edward Woodberry Professor in Law, Literature, and Criticism in the Law School. They own a house in Gloversville and are active in community life here. The Ferguson Fund comes out of a family tradition of support for the Hospital. Priscilla’s father, Richard B. Parkhurst, served as a longtime member and officer of the Nathan Littauer Hospital Board of Directors.

 

As educators, Priscilla and Robert appreciate that learning never ends, and they know that the need for incremental learning is especially important and exciting in the medical field where necessary advances in health care take place all of the time. They also feel it is a good way to serve the community generally. Just as Littauer employees are the heart and soul of the Hospital, so the Hospital itself helps to sustain Gloversville as a vital and desirable place to live. Priscilla and Robert hope that the Ferguson Fund will grow to the point where it can help many employees to advance their own careers through continuing education while furthering the goals of ever better and safer patient care.

 

“We need the best and brightest minds to enter and remain in the field of healthcare” said Laurence Kelly, Littauer President and CEO. “The field of healthcare must have our finest and most prepared people. This scholarship ensures that its recipients desiring to further their education will have the support to do so. It is hard to anticipate the demands that will be placed on hospitals in the future, but this scholarship helps us prepare our workforce for whatever that future will be. “.

 

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Nathan Littauer Hospital and Family of Health Services serves Fulton, Montgomery, and Hamilton Counties in Upstate New York with a full-service 74-bed acute care hospital, eight primary care centers, a nursing home and a community education center. The hospital was founded in 1894, has 1,000 employees and recently hosted ground-breaking spine surgeries. For more information please visit www.nlh.org.

NLH supports the Peck’s Lake triathlon

Thanks to all for help with Peck’s Lake triathlon

The Daily Gazette – Sunday, September 7, 2014,  Leader Herald – Thursday, August 7, 2014
Letters to the editor:

Thanks to all for help with Peck’s Lake triathlon

The fifth annual Peck’s Lake Sprint Triathlon took place on Aug. 2 on and around Peck’s Lake. The day’s conditions made for a great day. The event hosted 111 athletes and their families and friends, with approximately 76 percent of participants from outside of Fulton County including participants from nine states. These participants spent money in our county on lodging, food and refreshments, and more. We are grateful to all of them for making our county their destination on that day and hopefully to return to Fulton County on many more occasions.

The continued success of this triathlon would not be possible without the help of our entire Fulton County community and its businesses — Nathan Littauer Hospital, Brown’s Ford, Benjamin Moore Paint, Wal-Mart Distribution Center #6096, Alpin Haus, the Fulton Montgomery Regional Chamber of Commerce and its dedicated staff, the Peck’s Lake Protective Association, the Peck Family and Peck’s Lake Enterprises, the residents and volunteers of Peck’s Lake, the Fulton County Sheriff’s Department, the Ambulance Service of Fulton County, the volunteer fire departments of Meco and Caroga Lake, and many other individuals who helped in many ways to make this a great event.

A special thank you to the children of the Boys & Girls Club of Gloversville for their assistance at the finish line. Their help was greatly appreciated.

We are thankful to all of these businesses and individuals. And we are grateful to our Fulton County residents who welcome with open arms these and thousands of other visitors as they explore the great resources of Fulton County.

Mick Brenno,

Gina DaBiere-Gibbs

The writers are, respectively, Triathlon coordinator and director of Tourism for the Fulton Montgomery Regional Chamber of Commerce

Many wonderful things come without planning

The Rev. Bonnie M. Orth is the Pastoral Care Coordinator at Nathan Littauer Hospital and Nursing Home

Many wonderful things come without planning

September 6, 2014

By The Rev. BONNIE M. ORTH, Leader Herald

During the summer, when the children in our church are on break from Sunday school, we have what we call “adult time” during our worship service. I have been reading snippets from a wonderful book by Mr. Rogers called, “Life’s Journeys According to Mister Rogers, Things to Remember Along the Way.” Fred Rogers was a Presbyterian minister whose specialized ministry was his wonderful children’s television show.

This past Sunday, I read the following entry from his book, “I saw a friend who is a freelance writer and asked him what he was working on. ‘Nothing right now,’ he answered. ‘You know how it is for freelancers. But at times like this I tell myself I’m in between opportunities. That way, I don’t have to feel I’m nowhere.'”

Mister Rogers continued, “There’s often a tendency for us to hurry through transitions. We may feel that these transitions are, ‘nowhere at all’ compared to what’s gone before or what we anticipates next to come. But you are somewhere, you are ‘between.'”

September is a time of transitions for many of us. Children transition to a new grade, and teachers transition to a new group of students. College students transition to living in a dorm on campus and parents transition to empty nests. For many churches, September is also a time of transitions, the beginning of a new Sunday school season, often the gearing up of church activities, Bible studies, stewardship campaigns, committee meetings and the business of the church after a restful break for the summer.

Many of us are thrown by transitions. They seem an awful lot like that dreaded word “change.” I wonder if we too looked at the transitions of our lives as “in between opportunities” we might be more open to them and would embrace them.

Mr. Rogers finished his lesson by saying, “Sometimes it surprises me to think that my work on that first children’s program was almost by chance! Isn’t it mysterious how so many wonderful things in life come to us seemingly without our planning? We start traveling down one street, and we find ourselves interested in something we never expected on a side street, and as we explore it, the side street becomes the main street for us.”

As we enter the transition times of our lives, may we have the patience not to hurry through, but to take our time and experience the plans that God has for us. None of us can go back and make a new start, but we can all begin today and make a new ending. Trust in the words from Jeremiah 20:11-13, “For surely I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope. Then when you call upon me and come and pray to me, I will hear you. When you search for me, you will find me; if you seek me with all your heart.”

The Rev. Bonnie M. Orth is the pastor of the Mayfield Central Presbyterian Church and the pastoral care coordinator at Nathan Littauer Hospital and Nursing Home.