Medical Terminology For Health Professions 7Th Edition

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Medical Terminology For Health Professions 7Th Edition



[music] [blank_audio] [sound]. i think there's an overwhelming sense ofpride here at the johns hopkins hospital. >> and now we're gonna have the



Medical Terminology For Health Professions 7Th Edition

Medical Terminology For Health Professions 7Th Edition, reputation with a facility that matchesthe sciences. >> it's the beginning of a new era. >> it's time. it's here and it's a whole new world.


>> ready to move in and get started. that's how i feel. >> these new buildings, i think, willnow match the quality of the faculty and staff thatwe have. that's been my aim since i came here. and these buildings were designed withthat in mind. not what was easy for us is the deliverers of care, but importantly what it is forthe patient. >> you walk in here and it feels airy.


you, you feel hope. you have natural light, so you'reenergized, the rooms are big enough so patients and their families could comeon rounds and participate with us. >> it is a completely different feel, acompletely different look. >> it's the light, the light, thelight. i mean, that is the biggest difference. >> it has helped to make what wouldtypically be a very scary, enormous, looming presence, into something that isfull of color and light and reflection. >> what you see almost in every cornerof this place is art that expresses


the feelings of incredibly talentedpeople, and it comes out in the smiles that you see. >> with john hopkins we know that theendowment to build the sheikh zayed tower, has been given to the right people and hasbeen placed in the right hands. >> my mother would want great advancesin medicine and whole bunch of children over the years walking out with awhole new lease on life. >> bringing computers to the bedside,the new technology that's being integratedinto the building. the nurse call system, the patient liftsystem.


even basic things, the way the bathroomsare set up for the patients are incrediblyfriendly. >> because we have the ct scanner,ultrasound suite, mri suite here in the emergencydepartment. that means less traveling for the patient. >> there is a lot of ingenuity that'splaced in this facility, not just for the nurses and for the physicians, butfor the support staff as well. >> we've added a service called at your request, it's similar to room service at ahotel.


>> it'd be very hard to walk from onearea to another, so this gives you a way to put heavy materials online, andyou can wait for it on the other side. >> i think in the hospital when youcome in, that initial reaction, that people are here to care foryou, sets the whole tone. >> having the emergency department atthe front entrance of the hospital, really represents i thinknot just an architectural change, but aphilosophical change in the way we have our, doors open to emergencypatients. >> but the core of, what makes hopkins,hopkins is the people.


it's the patients and the family and thestaff. >> we built the finest buildingpossible in healthcare to serve everybody,including the community. >> because the community is the hospital and the hospital is thecommunity. >> people are going to look on thehorizon and see these wonderful, beautiful, colorful, bright, welcomingbuildings, and feel good about coming to johns hopkins. >> their presence has also affected abudhabi medical institutions themselves.


where we have a transfer of knowledgemoving from baltimore all the way down here to abudhabi. >> everybody shares the same passionfor these children that need our help. and it, it's an honor to be part of it. >> i remember this one nurse that wouldsing to me, like cuz we'd watch like, high school musicalmovies and stuff, and she'd sing. >> having you know, just so much glassand openness you can see what is happening, you can see thatthere's life beside your door. >> because of the generosity of astranger, i'm alive today.


>> if we do our jobs right, medicinewill change here. >> and that's a legacy that anybodywould be excited to, to be a part of. >> i think my sister and i will be havea smile on our faces a number of times when we think of the charlotte rbloomberg children's center. >> my thanks is nothing compared to the innumerable moments that are gonna happenin this building. >> you know, when the sun comes up inthe morning it's a brand new day, right? and a day of hope. and i think that's what these buildingsare all about.


>> it's just a wonderful place to be. >> it's a family. >> hopkins gives you hope. >> welcome to the charlotte r bloombergchildren's center. >> we welcome you to the sheikh zayedtower. >> welcome to the hopkins community. >> welcome to hopkins. >> welcome. [noise]>> ladies.


[noise]. ladies and gentlemen. on behalf of the community at the peabodyinstitute of johns hopkins, good evening. >> and now, please welcome the dean ofthe medical faculty and ceo of johns hopkins medicine,edward d miller. [sound] >> well, good evening. on behalf of john hopkins medicine, iwelcome you to the dedication of the „sheikh zayedcardiovascular and critical care tower.


and the charlotte r bloomberg children'scenter at the johns hopkins hospital. the talented artists and musicians from our own peabody institute whoseperformance we just enjoyed are the first of manycommunities you will see this evening. we'll hear from many different groups. perspectives and disciplines whose hardwork built these sparkling towers. you will see them in the speakers who willaddress you. in the entertainment we have chosen foryou, in the program you hold in your hands, and in


the faces of the staff who will welcomeyou into the new front doors of the johnshopkins hospital. as wonderful as this moment is it did notcome easily, it took all of us. shortly into my tenure here i lookedaround at our outdated facilities and knew that weneeded to think big, to take risk, if we were to create clinicalenvironments that matched the quality of the faculty andstaff working within them. we needed more than a facelift, we neededa new idea of what a hospital truly shouldbe.


and i suspected what we now know, thatthis would mean taking on the largest hospital expansion projectof its kind in the nation. at the time i remember saying, you can build a children's hospital or an adulttower. you can't do both. after hearing no for a while i gave theman ultimatum. i said, tell us what we need to do to build and what we need, and how we willbuild it. and after six weeks we had a number, aframework and the beginning of a plan.


thanks to rich grossi and ron werbin. fortunately for us it was a plan that the communities represented heretonight embraced. in keeping with our history, these towers will foster new discoveries, new ways ofthinking and new advances that will shape and define medicine for the next century andbeyond. and like the vision that founded modernmedicine at hopkins, these towers were made possiblethrough partnerships and collaborations.


they were created and designed with the input of physicians, nurses, patients,families, elected officials and the residents of thecommunity in which we live and work. they reflect divergent perspectives,talents, disciplines, and cultures. today you will hear from two benefactors,whose stories illustrate the power of visionaryleadership and public service. one of these is his highness sheikh zayedbin sultan bin khalifa al nahyan, speaks to the legacy of one visionary leader,namely sheikh zayed bin sultan al nahyan. a legacy of an, of national and


international unity, prosperity and acommitment to improve the health and wellbeing of his people, and importantly, the people of theworld. our other great benefactor, michaelbloomberg, has a singular relationship with thisinstitution. as an alumnus, benefactor, board chair,visionary and passionate advocate of hopkins' continued leadership in healtheducation and public service. as the largest single donor in ourhistory, mike has given to and helped shape every part ofjohns hopkins.


from the endowed professorship in hismother's name, to his support for the school of publichealth just down the street that bears his name, tothe gift that created the charlotte rbloomberg children's center. mike has supported, challenged and grownthis institution, starting with his first donation of $5 asa new graduate in 1965. clearly, great things happen whencommunities come together, when art meets research, when philanthropy meets academia, and when medicine meetsengineering.


i invite you to see in the seats aroundyou and in your own seat, the full community who'svision made this day possible. in the last year of the 19th century, we opened a revolutionary hospital based on ashared vision of many today, in the early years in this 21st century, we are taking the next stepforward. i would now like to turn the stage over toa representative of the most importantcommunity of all, namely, our patients. >> [sound] hi, my name is gavin michaelbaird and i


feel very lucky to be part of the johnshopkins community. when i was nine months old, i was really,really sick. my parents found the gi department athopkins. and because of the, that, i'm not onlyhere, i'm great! being a sick kid is no fun, but the newchildren's center will make it a lot better for kidsand their family. lots of nice people helped build thisplace. i'd like you to meet one. a man who did everything he could to makeit the best it could be inside and out.


i think he supported johns hopkins morethan anybody except for johns hopkins. >> [laugh]>> actually, i'm a little mad with him. when i, when i told my parents he named abuilding for his mother, my mom react, my mom said, whatyou gonna name for me? >> [laugh]>> that's okay, i forgive him. ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the mayor of new york city, and also a memberof the johns hopkins university class of 1964. the honorable michael r bloomberg.


>> wave at' em. down here. thank you, gavin. i enjoyed the story about your mother. but don't worry knowing the developmentoffice at johns hopkins, there will be plenty of things to name for your mother. [sound]your highness, dean miller, president peterson,president daniels, governor o'malley,


senator mikulski, distinguished guests,family, friends, all of you. on behalf of my sister marjorie and myentire family, it really is an honor to be here. over the past few years we've watched with great anticipation as this building hastaken shape. and today looking up at these magnificentnew towers, i cannot tell you the immense satisfactionthat our hopes and dreams have been fulfilled more thanwe could ever hope for and we could not be moreproud.


we are proud to be associated withhopkins, a beacon of scholarship, of innovation,and intellectual honesty. we are proud of these facilities and whatthey'll mean to the university, east baltimore,and the world. and i'm pleased to see that our new mayoris here with us. welcome, madam mayor. she was nice enough to receive me thisafternoon, i can tell you all mayors have exactly thesame problems. everybody wants something, and nobodywants to pay for it.


i'm sure that's not the way it is in the,in the united arab emirates but here we are proud of sharing space with thesheikh zayed tower, named for a man who brought the emirates together, and keptthem together, and put them on a path to economicprosperity. and proud that together all of us heretoday, have been part of the unique collaboration between patients andfamilies, between caregivers, community leaders, doctors, donors,designers, artists, and architects. the last three communities on that list, ithink, deserve a special mention, because inside and outthe new johns


hopkins hospital building is a placethat's intended to comfort and inspire through the innovative use ofart and design. and to understand what i'm saying you onlyneed to look behind me, it's a little bitblocked, but i don't often give speeches standing infront of a pair of colorful rhinos, at least not tomy knowledge. but thats exactly my point, it is thesesignature defining touches from the great designer robert israel, along with morethan 70 other artists from around the world.


including the brooklyn artist who designedthe facade, spencer finch, and they've all contributed to a unique and upliftingenvironment of support and healing. now, none of that would have been possiblewithout the amazing talent of the hopkins design team, sallymacconnell and michael iotti. the relentless commitment of the firm w,perkins and will of the firm olin and clarkcorporation, which incidentally is led by my goodfriend and a great hopkins and marylandbenefactor jim clark. by the flawless eye of our curator nancyrosin and consultant alan coscowits,


coscowits, sorry, and the tirelessattention to detail by my colleague patty harris. i also want to thank others for their invaluable input including lynettesmith and express my gratitude to ed miller, ron peterson, and ron daniels for theirsteadfast leadership. this week, they have been very nice insaying that i am generous, but i think there were days in the past three years, no doubt,when


they thought they should have chosen adifferent adjective. perhaps crazy, for wanting this buildingto be so many things at once, a world class hospital and theembodiment of design excellence. today i think we all feel incrediblypleased that the new facilities will heal the sick, andcomfort the soul. that the children's center will bear thename of my mother charlotte bloomberg is trulygratifying. for those of you who knew her and lovedher, i think it is only fitting. she and my father taught my sistermarjorie and me


many lessons but perhaps the mostimportant perhaps was the sense that the greatest and most rewardingthing we can do with our lives is to give back toothers. and to make sure that others would benefitfrom the good luck or good fortune that cameour way. and that is something that we in turnhopefully have passed to teach passed on to our own children and hope that theywill pass along to generations to come. because ultimately i know what will definemy life is not my years as mayor, or the company i founded, or even my 2008nomination from us magazine.


us magazine as one of the 25 most stylishnew yorkers. eat your heart out. it isn't any tangible thing but the immense satisfaction of making adifference. and it reminds me of something i'vebelieved for many years. it is so much better to share your goodfortune now, while you're around to see all the good things you can do withit, rather than after you're gone. i told this story last night at dinnerthat i learned this lesson from another hopkinsalumnus sandel krieger.


he was a wealthy baltimore lawyer who iknew planned to give the school a $50 million donationafter his death. and he realized on second thought, whywait? why let another generation go on withouteducation? why let some cure for disease bediscovered after more time has elapsed and more people havedied? so he gave his money then rather thanleaving it to, in his will, and that reallyimpressed me, and i watched him revel in the differencethat


his money really made for the rest of hislife. my mother came down to see the buildinggoing up a few years ago and to revive the plans forthe building. during this time we had a fantasticmeeting. cardinal keeler was there and i can justtell you it was one of the nicest things. when i invited cardinal keeler i thoughtthey were the same age. turns out the cardinal was 20 yearsyounger than my mother, but being a cardinal he certainly knew howto deal with her. and she talked about the cardinal for therest of her life.


my mother was excited about the wonderfulproject. we kept her posted with pictures as thebuilding went up. but it wasn't the fact that having hername on the wall was what turned her on. her feeling about that was well, if mysister and i wanted it, then, okay, she'd go alongwith it. but today, i think marjorie and i sharethe feeling. if this culture, if this center will bringthe youngest and most vulnerable patients the kind of care and comfort that theyneed, if it will increase the knowledge and experience of the greatestdoctors and teachers, if it will


inspire other institutions to do more andto do better, then we all will be happy. i'll never forget the first day that i saw the hopkins campus slightly more then 50years ago. i was so impressed, o beautiful, i thoughti had died and gone to heaven. fortunately i was wrong, but today i thinki remember, just a little bit, how i felt. you make our family feel greatlyappreciated here today, and that is really a wonderfulthing. but i want you to know how much weappreciate what all of you here do every single day to make this abetter world for so many people.


i thank you, we all thank you. and i know my mother thanks you. god bless. >> good evening. i'm lauren adams, a local graphicdesigner, and one of the 70 artists featured in this newbuilding. it's refreshing that such a wide varietyof art is featured in this hospital. in my project, a series of patternedalphabet prints, i actually collaborated with youngpatients themselves.


workshops taught patients about papelpicado, the traditional latin american art of cuttingpaper. it was so rewarding to watch patients'delight as they revealed patterns when theyunfolded their tissue. these patterns became the inspiration yousee in the vivid designs of the alphabet and the phrasesthroughout the new facilities. tonight, i'm pleased to introduce anotherform of collaborative art. please welcome the all children's chorusof annapolis ensemble. >> 42 years ago, a young student from asmall college in minnesota opened


a thick white envelope, which containedhis acceptance to the johns hopkins school ofmedicine. to say the last, this changed his life. i know, cuz i was that student. i'm peter ogby, director of the johnshopkins malaria research institute at the bloomberg schoolof public health. those here today know that education,research, and clinical care form the bases of major events in ourlives. it's here at johns hopkins i met my wife,mary.


it's here at johns hopkins where i becamea medical doctor. and yes, it is here at johns hopkins i spent a major part of my medical career,doing research. and in these magnificent new buildings,future generations of students, having openedtheir own thick white envelopes, will come to johnshopkins to continue the mission for many decades tocome. indeed, there's something very specialabout johns hopkins. when we were celebrating opening of a new


building, the most recent discovery in alaboratory or clinic, or, yes, another call fromstockholm on behalf of one of our faculty members. i think we will all agree that johnshopkins is a different, a different kind of partyschool. and now it is my privilege to introducethe host of this party. our leader, our inspiration, and our friend, the fourteenth president of johns hopkins university, ronald j daniels.


>> well, thank you peter. in his characteristically modest way,peter seems to have overlooked one of his other accomplishments, since that fatefulwhite envelope, arrived from hopkins. he is of course the recipient of the 2003nobel prize in chemistry. it's still, it's still so great peter saythat again, and again, and again. we'll be doing that for a long time tocome. most of you will have seen john singer sargent's iconic portrait of thefour doctors that adorns the back wall of the westreading room of the welch medical library.


the four founding physicians of our medical institution, william welch,william halstead, william osler, and howard kelly are seengathered around a dark wooden table. they look pensive. their gaze fixed firmly ahead. the image is remarkable for a number ofreasons, but one that is often overlooked is that sargent declined toinclude a single medical instrument in thecomposition. instead, the setting in which the fourwere painted.


in fact sargent's london studio, is filledwith the symbols of the humanism that marked and defined these men and fueledtheir landmark achievements in medicine. and so the portrait depicts an outsizedglobe, an el greco painting, a quill in osler'shand. and a book later identified as a 1515edition of petrarch's poems. these symbols that are found in thisportrait are fitting. the grand project that these four menpioneered at john hopkins did not spring exclusively fromthe field of medicine. what was imbued with insights gleaned from


the natural sciences, from arts andletters, and the social sciences all of which were gloriously represented in our younguniversity. in this way, our school of medicine andhospital became places that not only sought to cure thephysical afflictions that plague us, but aim to acknowledge andunderstand the joy and despair, the achievement andaspiration that lie at humanity's core. there is little doubt that in true hopkinstradition, the buildings beside us will always be, as ed miller said, sitesof imaginative,


basic clinical research that will stand atthe very forefront of medical advancement. but they will also be places of humanitynourished by the spirit of collaboration and truth seeking that knits ouruniversity together, and for that, we are deeplyfortunate. it is, of course clear, that our greatcause, is not confined by the constraints, by thelimitations, of geography. the community we call hopkins, extendsbeyond baltimore. it encompasses and connects people acrossthe globe. today, i have the very distinct honor ofintroducing


his highness sheikh zayed bin sultan binkhalifa al nahyan. sheikh zayed is the grandson of the late sheikh zayed, for whom this tower isnamed. his presence here today symbolizes in avery tangible way the power of good and noble ideas to linkpeoples across the world. i'm grateful that sheikh zayed is joinedtoday by his father, his highness sheikh sultan bin khalifa al nahyan and hisexcellency the united arab emirates ambassador to theunited states yussef al [inaudible]. and of course their presence representsthe generosity and


support of people who were not able tojoin us today, including the president of theunited arab emirates, his highness sheikh khalifa binzayed al nahyan. and the crown prince of abu dhabi, his highness sheikh mohammed bin zayed alnahyan. the relationship between johns hopkins andthe uae began several decades ago. since that time, it has grown to includenot only compassionate care, but acts ofgreat, indeed, extraordinary benefaction. an alliance that we are confident will


shape the future of medicine in theemirate. we are grateful for this relationship anddelighted that sheikh zayed has agreed to speak attoday's celebration. sheikh zayed. [music]. >> thank you, president daniels, forthat heartfelt introduction. on behalf of his highness sheikh khalifabin zayed al nahyan, president of the unitedarab emirates. it is a great pleasure to be amongst youall on this landmark occasion.


his highness, sheikh [unknown] al nahyan, adviser to the president of the uae, mayor bloomberg, governor o'malley. dean miller. and president peterson. distinguished guests and friends, the story we are celebrating today hasit's origins over half a century ago. it all started with one man, one vision, and one relationship that now spansnations and geography.


over 40 years ago in 1971 [foreign] the late founder and first president ofthe united arab emirates, inspired the separate emirates to create a new federation that would advance the commongood. under his leadership, the uae developedinto a prosperous, modern, diverse nation. one that, one that has contributed a lotand has actually evolved the way, socially, social ambitions in terms of human development and, and healthcarehave actually taken before. the uae also serves as a successfulexample, for unity within the arab world.


over the following years sheikh zayeddevoted himself and devoted his life to the service of hispeople. and to advancing opportunity in health, in education, and general all aroundwell-being for peoples, peoples of the world, the ones who needed it themost at that specific point in time. john hopkins has worked closely with abudhabi and the rest of the uae realized sheikhzayed's vision. since the mid 1980s hopkins has providedspecialized care for thousands of emirati citizens here inbaltimore including sheikh zayed himself.


johns hopkins has also helped build andimprove overall healthcare development in the uae byassisting with management and oversight of three of its majorhospitals, including the tawam hospital, the corniche hospital,and the rashba hospital. our partnership continues to grow withjohns hopkins. the health authority for abu dhabi workingclosely with the university of johns hopkinsschool of medicine. and the bloomberg school for public health have launched a new graduate level studyprogram


in health management and leadership thatwill further enhance the expertise of the emirates'healthcare professionals. and today we celebrate perhaps the most visible sign of that long and importantrelationship. the dedication of the sheikh zayed cardiovascular tower at the johns hopkinshospital. this achievement would not have beencompleted without the close attention of his highness, general sheikh [unknown]deputy supreme commander of the uae armed forces,


who has been long devoted to ensuring theproject would provide excellent services and world cl, world class treatment to its current and futurepatients. i would like to take this opportunity topay a tribute for his efforts and dedication throughoutthe phases of this project. this beautiful state of the art newbuilding reflects the shared passion forexcellence, and innovation and a common commitment to advancing the understanding and treatmentof disease.


this new facility will continue the legacyof sheikh zayed, but most importantly we are hopeful thatit will provide generations of patients with the best and mostinnovative care and that the discoveries made here will benefitpeople all around the world. finally this tower represents the goodwillof the people of the united arab emirates. and their history of philanthropy andactive commitment to improving healthcare at homeand abroad. other recent u.a.e initiatives includeleading the fight against malaria in the gulf region.


a partnership with the bill and melindagates foundation for the immunization of children inpakistan and afghanistan, and the creation of thesheikh zayed institute for pediatric surgicalinnovation at the children's national medical center inwashington, dc. i would like to take a moment to recognizeand thank the uae's ambassador, his excellency, [unknown]for, or, and members of the staff that i have seen from, the uae embassy who areamongst us this very afternoon. the on-going work that the embassy andeveryone


working in it, so far, has contributeddirectly to the great, positive and good relationsthat the uae share with the united states ofamerica, and many fine institutions, americaninstitutions, like johns hopkins. in closing, on behalf of my family, andthe people of the uae, allow me to congratulate and thank johns hopkins for its enduring friendship and itscommitment. thank you as well to the people ofbaltimore, and of maryland, for their warm hospitalitythat they have shown both


my family and many emirati citizens whohave come all the way, all the way across the atlanticto be here. and our congratulations to mayor bloombergfor his generosity and his kindness that he has shown johns hopkins and manyother institutions in the past decades. thank you very much, it is truly a pleasure to be amongst you on thislandmark occasion. >> hello everyone. i'm robert imes. i've been at hopkins for 23 years, workingin the facilities.


and, a lot of you, already know about mystory. it says a lot about hopkins' community. i was out, for dialysis treatments, and onthe first day i came back to work, i ran into pamela paulk, the vicepresident of human resources. she asked me if she could do anything forme. well i said, i could use a kidney. and she said, well, i'll give you one ofmine. and she did. so, i was out for two and a half months.


[sound] and, i, came back to work. and recently, i've been working on manycolors in our new clinical building here. and, what i have to say now is, the paintis dry. lets move in. [laugh] okay? okay. and now here to help celebrate, we also in the family of hopkins, from theuniversity, they are students from hopkins an example ofhopkins global community.


please welcome, south asian fusion singing group, crante [sound] >> what an exciting day this is for thehopkins hospital community. as you will see when you tour these twowonderful buildings as i have. and you will marvel at how exceptionalthese awe-inspiring buildings are. i'm doris fader. i've been a member of the johns hopkinswomen board for 35 years. i was a child when i joined. >> [laugh]>> i am proud of that association.


and i'm very proud of the work of our board members to support clinical careof the patients and most recently, the gift of a beautiful lobby in the charlotte rbloomberg children's center. today's dedication is about the opening oftwo state of the art facilities that will enable hopkins to do even more for the people of baltimore and the citizens ofmaryland. we're so lucky to have the support of a dedicated governor who stands behind ourmission, and it


is my pleasure to introduce him today, thegovernor of the state of maryland, the honorablemartin o'malley. >> wow. doris, thank you very, very much. it's a great honor to be here with all ofyou. you look great from up here i must say. what a, what a terrific day for our state. so many people have come together in thisplace of healing. our place of healing, johns hopkins.


some of you are from all over, have comefrom far distances across the country and, andfrom other countries indeed. and i stand here on behalf of the peopleof maryland, and on behalf of senator barbaramikulski, mayor stephanie rawlings-blake. and the other elected officials here we'revery, very proud of this accomplishment today, and i thank thepeople of maryland, and they thank you. people who have contributed $100 millionto this great institution, and these terrificbuildings of healing. to his highness, sheikh zayed bin sultanbin


khalifa bin zayed al nahyan and all of our friends from the united arab emirates, wethank you for your generosity in making this daypossible. we thank you for bringing to reality thebeautiful truth of islam. as we seek to make whole to cure toreform, the ways in which we heal ourselves andone another. to my friend mayor michael bloomberg. hopkins alumnus, mayor bloomberg, and tohis sister marjorie tivien and the bloomberg family, thank you for makingreal the hope of tikun olam.


of repairing this world of ours and formaking real the beautiful talmudic truth, that the highestform of wisdom is indeed kindness. the great american mystic thomas murtanonce wrote, what has to be healed in us is our true nature. what we have to learn is love. the healing and the learning are the samething, for at the very core of our essence we are constituted in god'slikeness by our freedom. today in baltimore, the original land ofthe free and the home of the brave, because of yourgenerosity, because of your compassion.


we write together with johns hopkinshospital, a new chapter in our shared story of discovery, oflearning, and of healing. and it is our freedom that moves usforward. forward with the freedom to dream. forward with the freedom to build. forward with the freedom to give. forward with the freedom to love, and thefreedom to heal this world of ours, one life at atime. thank you, and congratulations to each andevery one of you.


>> john hopkins. this place may carry the name of a singleman. but what we do, our promise, has always been, not about the one, but about themany. numerous men and women each fulfilling auniquely important role. some are legends we will always celebrate. some are names we will never know. all are part of the promise. partners, teams, whole communities,


sharing a single dedication, a commitment that reaches through the years, around the world, across the bed, a beacon lit long ago that still shines. to illuminate another century. johns hopkins medicine. together, we are building on the promise. my name is ovine [unknown] and i am anurse in the neurocritical care unit. i have been in the neuroscience departmenthere in hopkins for the last 17 years.


i am humbled and honored to be here, torepresent the thousands of dedicated nurses who are thebackbone of this hospital. ask any nurse. we're really the ones who run this place. [laugh]>> [sound] >> hopkins is a huge caring family. and i love being a part of a huge family with the best people from all overthe world. my first impression, the very day i touredthe new building was that we


finally have a place that matches the image and prestige of the world's besthospital. at hopkins we talk about the promise ofmedicine. to me, the word promise means what we dois a calling, not just a job. one person that represents and understandsour calling, is our president. friends and hopkins family members it'swith great privilege i introduce to you the president of johns hopkins hospital and health system, mister ronald rpeterson. >> well thank you very much ovine.


for those of you who may not already knowthis i'd like to share a fact that should bebetter known. no one group is more responsible for theoverall continuity and quality of care in our hospitals than ouroutstanding nursing staff. how about a round of applause for johnshopkins' nurses? >> [sound] >> now i'd like to follow the remarksof governor o'malley by acknowledging the elected officials at the federalstate, and local level, who represent all of the diversecommunities present with us this


evening, and whose commitment to thosecommunities helped shape and support this effort. and governor, we are particularly gratefulfor the financial support we have received from the state of maryland for this project which has indeed totaled $100million. thank you. and to our senior senator, barbaramikulski, i would like to personally thank you, barbara, for yoursteadfast support, and for that of the entire congressionaldelegation over these many years,


we greatly appreciate all that you havedone for johns hopkins. and right here in baltimore of course mayor stephanie rollings blake and citycouncil president jack young, we are most grateful for your leadership and support of johnshopkins. and we appreciate the presence of all of our elected officials who are here thisevening. now, we are getting near the end of thisevening's celebration. i know that i've been thinking about thismoment for at


least ten years, and i'm sure many of youhave as well. today, we mark the end of one journey, andthe beginning of another. we dedicate the sheikh zayed tower and thecharlotte bloomberg children's center to those who inhabit it now, and those whowill inhabit it in the future. years from now, people will gaze uponthese magnificent towers and say, this is what can happen when good people come together with good and noble commonpurpose. it is not a clear-cut moment, however, andit is not easy to choose the words toacknowledge it.


when preparing for these remarks i thoughtof many things, the thousands of meetings with ed millerin which we have sat together, the moments of anxiety,pride frustrations along the way, and the thrill of seeing thesebuildings come to life. but eventually for this moment i felt itmost appropriate to go back to the vision we all inherit in the wordsof john hopkins himself. hopkins' original letter of instruction tothe hospital's first trustees is striking inits simplicity. his stipulations were few.


that there be erected on 13 acres of land,situated in the city of baltimore and bounded by wolf, monument, broadway, and jefferson streets,a hospital. which shall in construction andarrangement compare favorably with any institution of like character inthis country. or in europe, and which shall form a partof the medical school of that university for which i have madeample provision in my will. hidden in the simplicity of theinstruction was the genesis of a new model and mandate.


to bring together communities of thoughtfrom across the world and across disciplines for thecommon welfare. now while we have exceeded the physical boundaries of mr. hopkins'original stipulation, we continue to follow his instructions andfulfill the vision of our founder. today you have met some of the people whowill carry out this important work. people who will fill these buildings withhope. who will bring healing and comfort topatients who will come here from virtually all over theworld.


you have also heard this evening from many whose names and faces you recognize frompublic service. but i would also like to take a moment toacknowledge the thousands, the literally thousands ofpeople whose names you will never know. people whose stalwart commitment broughtthese buildings up from the ground. people who day after day did quiet,essential, methodical work. to ensure, ensure that our shared visionwas executed with absolute integrity. along this journey, there have also been a few very special people with whom we haveworked.


people like trustee mark rubenstein. who, for years, traveled here on a regularbasis from his home in philadelphia as a volunteer, and at his own expense, to oversee the construction of these newfacilities. people like our own sally mcconnell. sally, happy birthday. michael [sound] happy birthday, sally. [sound] what a day. and her associates michael audi and howardreal, who


oversaw and brought to fruition thecompletion of these buildings. the american architect, john horshmen oncesaid, buildings should serve people, not the other wayaround. and we have been so ably served by perkinsand will, the architects of the project, by brna,and thwarten thomasetti, our engineers. clark bank joint venture, the constructionmanagers, and a very creative group of people from mayor bloomberg's team who helped makethis building the very special place that itis.


in my role as president of the johns hopkins hospital and health system,throughout my career in hospital administration, i canhonestly tell you that i've seen my share of buildings. i can tell you that it is rare to see, inone moment, and in one facility, such a deliberate andelegant expression of what we stand for. the new sheikh zayed cardiovascular andcritical care tower and the charlotte r bloomberg children'scenter at johns hopkins hospital. represent the best of who we are as ahospital, as a university, as a community.


we are grateful to the royal family, andto michael bloomberg and his family, fortheir generosity, and trust. and are honored to have these two towers bear the names of two remarkableindividuals. his highness sheikh zayed bin sultan alnahyan and charlotte r bloomberg. you are about to be welcomed into thefacilities you yourselves helped create. it is my hope that you see in them thefulfillment of a promise to our founder, to ourpatients, to each other. a promise kept.


now if you would please join me inwelcoming baltimore's own ellen cherry, who will lead us up to the momentof the dedication itself. >> okay let's go, let's go. >> yeah. >> okay good, good. go. >> [inaudible], stay with us boy. [inaudible] good, great job. [inaudible] you should be very proud.


congratulations. >> congratulations, [inaudible]>> you know, i didn't notice the [unknown]until later. >> okay, you're okay here. >> [inaudible] okay folks please joinme in another round of applause, for all of the performers today, including ellen cherry, and the northwestern high school choir. >> now, as we get ready to officiallydedicate these buildings, i'd like to


invite the additional docents and staffwho are in the buildings to join us. let's bring as many members of ourcommunity together as possible. [inaudible] nancy mccall from the hopkinsarchives is here. and she has brought with her thedissecting scissors used by vivian thomas. nancy, wherever you are, oh you're behindme. >> she's hiding. >> she's hiding the scissors, okay. thank you nancy. as the surgical assistant, doctor thomas


collaborated with alfred blalock, andhelen tossick in pioneering a landmark procedureto correct a congenital heart defect. known as the blue baby procedure, it savedthe lives of thousands of infants, enabling them to leave, leave, leadhealthy adult lives. equally important in open the door in thenew era of heart surgery previously believedto be impossible. we can think of no better means by whichto get this ribbon to open our new doors. >> your highnesses, mayor bloomberg, marjorie tibbin, senator mccolsky,governor o'malley.


mayor rollings blake, president daniels,honored guests, we are so grateful to have you here to take part in this occasion, which has such significance for thehopkins community. for baltimore, for maryland, and indeedfor patients around the world. and we have asked one very special patientto cut the ribbon today. this is, gavin. [sound]not yet, we're gonna count. >> three, two, one, go gavin.


we're done. we did blew the last part. >> that's alright. >> ladies and gentlemen the doors arenow open. please join us inside where thecelebration continues with a reception and tours of the newfacility. have a great evening. >> [music]





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