>From today's DP
 
Maybe they should build this into the original house at 40th & Pine --  an 
obvious use that doesn't need an 11-story monstrosity, a Byzantine valet  
parking service, excessive noise and traffic, etc.
 
Not that we can expect the Nobel Prize winners in the Penn Real Estate Dept  
to know (or give a damn) about what's going on at the University in general 
when  they're too busy covering up for their own poor judgement.
 
 

Al  Krigman


reminding you that you read it first, here, on the popu-list 

  
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Penn Med to build 'home away from home' for families of  transplant patients
House at 39th and Spruce will provide accommodations,  education, support
Colin Kavanaugh

 

         
Media Credit:  David Hilbert/DP Senior Photographer
Penn Medicine breaks  ground on the Clyde F. Barker Transplant House, which 
will focus on  easing the economic and emotional stress of transplant patients 
and  families. The House is designed to function like the Ronald McDonald  
House.

Thanksgiving  isn't until tomorrow, but Penn Medicine is already in the 
spirit of giving.  

Last night, Penn Med unveiled the Clyde F. Barker Transplant House, a  "home 
away from home" for transplant patients' families during and after  transplant 
surgeries. 

"The transplant is one of the most graphic acts of  giving," said Ralph 
Muller, chief executive officer of the University of  Pennsylvania Health 
System. 
"And this facility is very important to the overall  well-being" of our 
patients and their families.

The facility, set to be  built at 3930 Spruce St. on Penn's campus, offers a 
less expensive - and more  convenient - housing option for families already 
strapped with medical costs.  

Since the project costs more than $2 million, the event also recognized  the 
support of critical donors.

Muller noted that more than 400 organ  transplants take place at the Penn 
Transplant Institute each year, with more  than 6,000 transplants completed in 
the 40-year history of the program.  

Now, Penn's transplant facility is considered one of the best - and  busiest 
- in the country. 

One-third of Penn transplant patients live  more than 50 miles away, said 
Roger Reina, the senior major gifts officer for  the Penn Medicine Development 
office. 

However, organ patients must  typically return to the hospital dozens of 
times after the surgery for follow-up  care, putting a strain on families and 
patients. 

"That's a significant  hardship economically and emotionally to travel that 
distance and support a  patient," Reina said.

Reina said the facility will have two main  functions.

"It will provide affordable accommodations for families, and  it will have 
ongoing opportunities for patient education and support," he  said.

He added that the facility will have its own social coordinators  and nurses 
on staff to provide for families.

A Penn Med press release  said the house will also have a 24-hour shuttle to 
the Hospital of the  University of Pennsylvania.

Abraham Shaked, director of the Penn  Transplant Institute, told the story of 
a first-year Penn student, who, more  than a decade ago, required a liver 
transplant. 

But circumstances  prevented her mother from staying nearby. 

"This will offer support for  families who need help," Shaked said. "And our 
program's growth tells you how  much we need this kind of place." 

Speakers at the event compared the new  transplant house to the Ronald 
McDonald House at 39th and Chestnut streets,  which offers living arrangements 
for 
families of medical patients undergoing  long-term treatment. 

The facility is being named in honor of Clyde  Barker, who performed the 
first living donor transplant 43 years ago. His  patients from that surgery, 
Joseph and Howard Mehl, also attended.



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