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EXCITING NEWS ABOUT OUR
AREA
Sacred
Heart Opens High-Risk
Obstetric office in
Chipley
from Washington County
News
April 11,
2008
Sacred Heart Women’s
Hospital is extending
its expertise in
managing high risk
pregnancies into the
Florida Panhandle and
South Alabama by opening
a satellite office in
Chipley. The information
was received in a news
release.
This office will allow
pregnant women in
Okaloosa, Walton,
Holmes, Washington and
Bay counties in Florida
as well as Houston,
Geneva, Henry, Dale, and
Coffee Counties in
Alabama to receive
expert care from Sacred
Heart’s Regional
Perinatal Center without
having to travel to
Pensacola.
We wanted to expand the
regional availability of
our services and improve
birth outcomes in
Northwest Florida and
South Alabama, while
allowing patients to get
expert prenatal care
closer to home,” said
Dr. James Thorp, a
specialist in
Maternal-Fetal Medicine
and medical director of
the Regional Perinatal
Center.
Here’s how it works:
Once a month, a
Maternal-Fetal Medicine
(MFM) physician and
support staff from the
Regional Perinatal
Center in Pensacola will
travel to an office
adjacent to Northwest
Florida Community
Hospital in Chipley. The
patient must be referred
to the satellite office
by their primary
obstetrician. There, the
sonographer will perform
a high quality
ultrasound scan of the
mother’s womb to monitor
fetal development. Then
the MFM will perform a
physical examination of
patient and will review
his recommendations with
her and a plan of care
will be sent to the
referring physician.
“This innovative
approach of “bringing
the high-risk services
to the patient” has
allowed us to extend our
services to underserved
rural areas of Northwest
Florida and South
Alabama that do not have
a physician specializing
in high risk pregnancy,”
said Elisabeth
Allerellie, nurse
coordinator of the
satellite office. “It
will assist the
referring physicians by
providing them with a
documented plan of care
for their patients and
it will improve the
number of sick/low birth
weight infants born to
these mothers who would
not normally have been
able to access this
care. It also means
patients and their
families can save time
and money by avoiding a
long trip to Pensacola.”
Since there is a
critical shortage of
Maternal-Fetal Medicine
specialists throughout
the United States, the
satellite office will
allow the Regional
Perinatal Center to
provide these services
to underserved areas.
Ongoing clinical
research is planned to
monitor the cost,
feasibility, and patient
satisfaction as Sacred
Heart expand these
services
Sacred Heart is one of
11 hospitals in Florida
designated by the state
as a Regional Perinatal
Intensive Care Center (RPICC).
Since 1974, the state’s
RPICC program has
improved outcomes for
women with high-risk
pregnancies and improved
care to sick or pre-term
newborns by providing a
full range of
specialized services and
ongoing care.
Studies have found that
outcomes for high-risk
pregnancies can be
improved through
continuous specialized
care to pregnant women
with major medical or
maternal conditions that
puts their pregnancy at
risk or their newborn at
risk for disease, death
or disability. At Sacred
Heart, RPICC services
include specialized
prenatal care in a
high-risk pregnancy
clinic and at Sacred
Heart Women’s Hospital,
where obstetricians and
nurses with specialized
training in
maternal-fetal medicine
manage the pregnancies
and deliveries of
high-risk mothers. The
second component of the
program – neonatal care
for very sick or
premature newborns -- is
provided by Sacred
Heart’s Neonatal
Intensive Care Unit.
For more information on
Sacred Heart’s Regional
Perinatal Center, call
(850) 416-2477.
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