18 S moke S ignals march 15, 2014 Lorenz passionate about work HEALTH SERVICES continued from front page and raised $1 million to keep the hospital afl oat and begin a trans- formative remodeling process. The community anteed up another $1 million before the building and pro- gram renovations were complete. He evaluated services and made operational changes to “make things work better and provide great ser- vice. I wanted to make sure we were wowing people,” he said. The hospital became more ef- fi cient. The needs of both staff and patients improved. “If I meet staff needs,” he said, “then they meet patient needs.” In a nutshell, his philosophy is, “I work for them. I like to be able to tell patients, ‘Yes, we can do that.’ ” On an administrative level, ef- ficiencies followed a number of actions, including taking back operation of the pharmacy, negoti- ating better reimbursements from insurance companies, opening clin- ics in areas beyond the hospital’s usual patient base and improving the facility’s “fl ow and processes.” On a patient-centered level, the hospital did things like sending dinner home with mothers who had just given birth at the hospital. The rejuvenated hospital began building a reputation as a place with a family atmosphere. The process took time. In 1990, when he arrived, 14 physicians worked in the hospital. None of them were specialists and none were female. In-patient rooms were four- and fi ve-bed wards with com- mon bathrooms in the hall. Many halls led to dead ends. The local fi re marshal frequently reported the need for safety improvements. At that time, hospital births were about 40 a month, emergency visits were 60 to 80, and surgeries were in the low 30s. Five years later, after the first phase of an extensive remodel, all the patient rooms held two at most “and we tried hard to keep them private as much as possible,” Lorenz said. Bath facilities were brought into rooms. A new patient care section emerged with a central nursing center. By 1998, the second phase had turned the old patient areas into management offices and surgery suites. The remodel, along with satellite facilities that brought in patients from the surrounding area, resulted in a hospital doing 160 births a month, 2,000 emer- gency visits and 200 surgeries. “We were hopping,” Lorenz said. By then, half of the 80 medical providers were women. Throughout his career, Lorenz has been passionate about his work. While still in high school, he started with a summer work/study volunteer job transporting patients to the local hospital in his home- town of Wallingford, Pa., on the outskirts of Philadelphia. A friend’s father who was a physi- cian asked him if he would like to learn to draw blood. “I got pretty profi cient at it,” he said. “I was really interested in sci- ence, and they taught me to operate the machine that analyzes blood.” At that time, he wanted to be a phy- sician, but later learned that he had a better instinct for administrative and management work, and he turned his education in that direction. Throughout his career, starting all the way back in high school, Lorenz has made every effort to broaden his knowledge, taking on new working experiences and staying until he learned everything about the job, and much about the jobs he supervised. While at Tuality Community, he took on staff responsibility as direc- tor of Administrative Services, and at the same time he was picking up line management experience as manager of two immediate care centers. For a couple of years, he added to those a position as director of Home Health Services. There is one exception, however, to this record of success. Though he plays golf every week, he said, “I can’t seem to put two good nines together.” Lorenz lives in northeast Salem with his wife and two daughters. The couple’s oldest child, a son, has opened his own business in Beaverton. He succeeds Mark Johnston, the Tribe’s general manager, in the position. n Share Your Home Share Your Heart PROVIDE RESPITE CARE Want to help a Tribal child but unable to foster full-time? Become a respite care provider! • • • • Provide care on a short term/emergency basis Receive specialized pre-service training Competitive respite care support payments 1-on-1 support for respite care providers FIND US ON Children & Family Services is a Proud Part of: Facebook! For more information contact: 800.242.8196 or 503.879.2039 Email: amanda.mercier@grandronde.org CTGR Children & Family Services www.grandronde.org