Corporate Leadership: Keep your key people
My thanks this month to Vistage/TEC (The Executive Committee) resource specialists Roger Herman and Malcolm Moore for their input...
Just a minute with Bill Buerger
Company address: 1515 N. RiverCenter Drive, Level M, Milwaukee, WI 53212Company Web site: www.securitymicro.comIndustry: Enterprise content managementNumber of employees:...
Repeat the Sounding Joy
Linda Kiedrowski is accustomed to being in control. As president and owner of The Paranet Group Inc., a networking association for CEOs and top-level managers of manufacturing companies, she’s in the driver’s seat, leading her members though lengthy conversations, seminars and idea-exchange forums.
THOMAS SMALLWOOD Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital
After a long career defending hospitals as a medical malpractice attorney, Thomas Smallwood retired. These days, he lives in Wisconsin during the warmer months and in California during the colder months. And he has become a full-time community service agent.
“Community service is the rent you pay for the space you occupy in the community,” he says. “I felt it was important to do volunteer work in the community.”
“Community service is the rent you pay for the space you occupy in the community,” he says. “I felt it was important to do volunteer work in the community.”
BILL PARKINSON Horizon Home Care & Hospice Inc.
After retiring from teaching English at Homestead High School, Bill Parkinson could have spent his retirement surrounded by books and may have been quite content. He could have caught up on some reading he’d been long postponing.
However, Parkinson’s wife insisted there was work to be done and people he could help. On her recommendation, Parkinson reluctantly went to Community Memorial Hospital in Menomonee Falls to see what he could do.
However, Parkinson’s wife insisted there was work to be done and people he could help. On her recommendation, Parkinson reluctantly went to Community Memorial Hospital in Menomonee Falls to see what he could do.
THOMAS SHILTZ Rogers Memorial Hospital
Self-mutilation is growing as a problem among young people at an alarming rate. According to a recent large scale survey published in the Pediatrics professional journal, about 17 percent of college students report that they have cut, burned, carved or harmed themselves in other ways.
As he watched the problem become more prevalent among his students, Mark Flottum, coordinator for comprehensive school health programming at the Cooperative Educational Service Agency (CESA) #2 in Milton, sought the professional advice of Thomas Shiltz, a therapist, consultant, author and workshop presenter on mental health at Rogers Memorial Hospital in Oconomowoc.
As he watched the problem become more prevalent among his students, Mark Flottum, coordinator for comprehensive school health programming at the Cooperative Educational Service Agency (CESA) #2 in Milton, sought the professional advice of Thomas Shiltz, a therapist, consultant, author and workshop presenter on mental health at Rogers Memorial Hospital in Oconomowoc.
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MARY CONTI, R.N. Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital
Mary Conti started out as a licensed nurse practitioner in long-term care in 1976. After five years, she returned to school to become a registered nurse, working in critical care at County Hospital.
In addition to being a registered nurse, she serves as the clinical resource management coordinator at Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital, a role in which she is responsible for finding ways to improve the hospital’s quality of care while lowering costs.
In addition to being a registered nurse, she serves as the clinical resource management coordinator at Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital, a role in which she is responsible for finding ways to improve the hospital’s quality of care while lowering costs.
KATHLEEN TIMM, R.N. Horizon Home Care & Hospice Inc.
They may have a feeding tube. They may be attached to a machine that breathes for them, unable to communicate. They may be 2 months old or 10 years old.
Regardless of their individual condition, Kathleen Timm is by their side. She has dedicated her heart and love to sick children for 25 years.
Timm has three children who are married and have families of their own. They remind her of how blessed she is.
“I get to come home,” says Timm, who is a private duty nurse for Horizon Home Care & Hospice Inc. in Brown Deer. “The parents are still behind me taking care of that child.”
Regardless of their individual condition, Kathleen Timm is by their side. She has dedicated her heart and love to sick children for 25 years.
Timm has three children who are married and have families of their own. They remind her of how blessed she is.
“I get to come home,” says Timm, who is a private duty nurse for Horizon Home Care & Hospice Inc. in Brown Deer. “The parents are still behind me taking care of that child.”
LORI BANKER-HORNER, L.P.N. Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) Association – Wisconsin Chapter
It’s another cool, crisp autumn morning, and Lori Banker- Horner is up before daybreak. She rises early to prepare herself mentally for the day to come.
She cooks breakfast for her three children, Daniel, Julia and Billy. She smiles at them as she makes French toast – their favorite.
Ring-ring. Banker-Horner knowingly looks toward the phone. It’s time to resume fighting where she left off earlier this morning. She often doesn’t get much sleep. Her job requires her to be on-call 24/7.
She cooks breakfast for her three children, Daniel, Julia and Billy. She smiles at them as she makes French toast – their favorite.
Ring-ring. Banker-Horner knowingly looks toward the phone. It’s time to resume fighting where she left off earlier this morning. She often doesn’t get much sleep. Her job requires her to be on-call 24/7.
DR. IAN GILSON Aurora Medical Clinic
Dr. Ian Gilson, a clinical physician, is one of the top AIDS doctors in the Milwaukee area.
Gilson says he learned a valuable listen early on in his practice. One of his first AIDS patients was dying from pneumonia. The patient had previously made it clear that he didn’t want anything done to resuscitate him. He wanted Gilson to let him die.
Gilson says he learned a valuable listen early on in his practice. One of his first AIDS patients was dying from pneumonia. The patient had previously made it clear that he didn’t want anything done to resuscitate him. He wanted Gilson to let him die.