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					 From left: Shelley Gray, R.N., 
					Jessica Spiedel, R.N., and Marty Ahrends, executive director 
					of the Abraham Lincoln Healthcare Foundation
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            Donor gifts make hospice patient wishes come true, help families 
			cope with grief 
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            [May 09, 2013] 
            A check representing collective 
			donor gifts of $8,332.21 from the Abraham Lincoln Healthcare 
			Foundation's Dr. Wayne J. Schall Hospice Fund was recently presented 
			to the Memorial Home Services nurses who work with Logan County 
			patients and their families.  |  | 
		
            |  The Light Up A Life and memorial contributions from local donors 
			will help promote a bereavement support group and support the final 
			wishes of local hospice patients. Memorial Home Services is a 
			not-for-profit affiliate of Memorial Health System and serves 14 
			central Illinois counties. Shelley Gray, R.N., and Jessica Spiedel, 
			R.N., (pictured above) commute daily from Girard and Chatham to work 
			with Logan and Mason County patients of Memorial Home Services. The 
			two nurses do so because they "love the families, pharmacies, 
			physicians and hospital in the Lincoln community." As part of their daily routine, Gray and Spiedel visit hospice 
			patients in their homes to help make their final days as pain-free 
			and rewarding as possible. They also partner with ALMH case managers 
			and Dr. Mary Bretscher's chemotherapy clinic to ensure that the 
			transition to hospice care is as smooth as possible. 
			
			 Gray says that the gifts passed along from the Abraham Lincoln 
			Healthcare Foundation will be used to support a new bereavement 
			support group, which meets in the ALMH Steinfort Room the third 
			Thursday of every month from 6 to 8 p.m. Spiedel added that the gifts will also help them grant wishes for 
			local patients as part of the Memorial Home Services Hospice Sharing 
			Wishes Fund. Gray and Spiedel work with the Memorial Hospice team of 
			social workers, chaplains and volunteers to get to know the patients 
			and their desires, and then use the Sharing Wishes Fund to make 
			those wishes a reality. Wishes granted to Logan County patients have 
			included a ride in a hot-air balloon, a laptop needed to Skype with 
			far-away family members, a hearing device, and a haircut and special 
			dinner. 
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			 According Marty Ahrends, executive director of the Abraham 
			Lincoln Healthcare Foundation, ALMH started its own hospice program 
			in the late '80s and named it in memory of beloved physician Dr. 
			Wayne J. Schall. Even though the Schall Hospice at ALMH merged with 
			Visiting Nurses Association of Central Illinois in the mid-'90s, the 
			community continued to support the Schall Hospice Fund. More than 
			$522,000 from 6,047 donors has been donated to the fund since then. In 2004 the local hospice advisory group recommended that Schall 
			funds purchase low-air-loss mattresses and other items that hospice 
			patients would use in their homes. Later they approved the 
			renovation of a hospice respite care room at the former ALMH 
			facility and voted to use funds for pain medications that keep local 
			hospice patients comfortable during their final months. Gifts for the Schall Hospice Fund can be sent to the Abraham 
			Lincoln Healthcare Foundation, 200 Stahlhut Drive in Lincoln. For 
			more information, contact Ahrends at 605-5006 or visit
			www.almh.org. 
            [Text from file received from 
			Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital] 
            
			 
            
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