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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1959)
Cheese tray: Cheddar wedge, Pimiento spread. Gruyere, Blue cheese. Limburger and your favorite garnishes. ' . y v 4 - V . '''2 I Let Ritz add the Crisp Touch... Ritz in the new Stack Pack 1 . v-n, A . . 1 V I 4 V" s? v;v 1 s Ml 1 Crens t: -!al". Try a TM c'.iru t cr cccl tid lr.trrn. r" titJ tilt w!2 C.j crisp tsuch only richer tastina K.tz Crtsters tJ. r;:;7 h Vr.tz d;"ornt siz packzas: ' C.i c-rc:vi CtU rtc!t convenient, rtclosabte tzzlz), t3 ry.t:j-ecarJ Kcqa!ar Tcck iind the big, h&vdm4nfaitlMl0lll&i,Mi i Mann m'Jmm Ingenuity and modern techniques are cutting costs antl improving the care of patients Mayo Clinic physicians had been plan ning a new kind of hospital for Roch ester, Minn. It was to be a circular struc ture, where nurses at the center would be within 11 feet of all patients, able to see them at all times. Then they heard that the idea wasn't unique, that the Atomic Energy Commission was planning a simi lar hospital at Broqkhaven, N. Y. The Mayo doctors learned it was true, not only at Brookhaven but also in Brook line, Mass., and Van Nuys, Calif., where new hospitals will have patients on circu lar floors with nurses in the center, to save - nursing mileage and assure better care. In a variety, of "ways, many hospitals in the U. S. ale using ingenuity and a will ingness to break with traditions to solve many of their problems. But not only in construction is ingenuity at work.' San Francisco's Mt. Zion Hospital has no new building. But it has a week-end hospitali zation program for many people who need . short-term treatment or. diagnostic serv ices. It saves time, money and worry and improves the hospital's efficiency. Entering Mt.- Zion -up to 7 p.m. Friday, a patient can be ready to leave by 11 a.m. Sunday after getting X-ray, laboratory and other services and -treatment. Typical of many patients was the housewife who . : required . minor surgery. She got it over a week end, while her husband was home to care for the children.' '. All hospitals are open seven days a week, but major services are provided on only five. Mark Berke, Mt. Zion's director, realized that not . only did hospital ex penses for nurses, kitchen, janitors and so on go right on over week ends, but also that - week-end treatment would be ideal for many people. Why not have a full staff on duty for week ends? If short term patients could be cared for then,, empty beds would be filled, pressure taken off during the week and over-all operat- ' ing costs spread over seven days. It's a long way from Mt. Zion's week end service to the University of Okla homa's terminal rooming-in plan, but that is also a fresh approach. For the process of giving birth, hospi tals provide wonderful efficiency ana safety. But manywomen and medical au thorities wonder about the cold practice that separates mother and newborn child except for brief intervals. A few hospitals have adopted the rooming-in principle, which calls for major changes, with special facilities to allow a mother to keep her baby with her all the 12 Family Weekly. September 13,1959