South Nassau Communities Hospital Volunteers Achieve 50 Years Each of Service

It is that humility that has sparked Ruth Fortin of Oceanside, June Kane of Rockville Centre, and Jean Silvers of Rockville Centre, to serve as volunteers at South Nassau Communities Hospital for 50 years each.

Oceanside, NY, June 26, 2015 --(PR.com)-- South Nassau Communities Hospital volunteers Ruth Fortin of Oceanside, June Kane of Rockville Centre, and Jean Silvers of Rockville Centre, recently celebrated 50 years of volunteer work with the hospital.

The trio of 50-year volunteers was honored today at a special ceremony to mark their incredible achievement of service that stretches over five decades.

“It’s been very rewarding, and I met many fine people who have become long-time friends,” said Ms. Fortin, who has been working as a volunteer at South Nassau since January 1965, when Lyndon B. Johnson was President of the United States and the country was in the midst of the Vietnam War. Her first assignment was at the gift shop run by the Lynbrook Auxiliary. She was later assigned as a messenger, and has served in that capacity for a majority of the years she has volunteered at South Nassau.

Ms. Fortin, Ms. Kane and Ms. Silvers received service pins in recognition of their 50 years of outstanding volunteer service and helped blow out the candles on a special cake baked in their honor.

“We are so very proud and fortunate to have volunteers like Ruth, June and Jean who willingly give their time and expertise to help our patients and staff and have done so for so many years,” said Richard J. Murphy, South Nassau’s President & CEO. “They are part of what makes South Nassau so special.”

Volunteers contributed 49,797 hours – the equivalent of more than six years or 2,160 days – of invaluable service to South Nassau in 2014.

The volunteers’ zeal for South Nassau’s mission to meet the communities’
needs for high-quality, patient-centered healthcare has been essential to the hospital’s transformation to a 455-bed hospital with leading-edge surgical, medical and preventive healthcare services supported by a comprehensive network of 16 community-based satellite specialty healthcare centers.

Serving as a volunteer and watching from her home on Washington Ave. has given Ms. Fortin a bird’s-eye view of the growth and expansion of South Nassau. This, combined with the distinction of being the first mother to be admitted to South Nassau’s maternity unit when it opened 58 years ago, has forged a bond that is as unbreakable as South Nassau’s mission to meet the healthcare needs of the communities it serves. A cadre of photos that Ms. Fortin and her mother donated to the hospital archives chronicling the hospital’s transformation encapsulates the relationship.

When Ms. Kane started volunteering at South Nassau in October 1964, some of her neighbors told her she wouldn’t “last” in the fast-paced hospital environment. Little did they know that Ms. Kane and South Nassau went together like coffee and cream. Ms. Kane, her sister and her youngest son were born at South Nassau. And, she recalls vividly, as if it occurred just days ago, how she was inspired to volunteer at South Nassau after witnessing the compassionate care her father received at the hospital many years ago from nurses and doctors as well as a volunteer messenger while he recovered from a serious illness. The mother of three and grandmother of 6 children, Ms. Kane, is a volunteer in South Nassau’s EKG Department. “I love the EKG office,” she says, appropriately. “The patients are wonderful to talk to; 50 years is a long time here, so I must love it!” Ms. Kane, who was also honored for accumulating 25,000 hours of volunteer service, is particularly fond of working with Alice Birmingham, EKG supervisor.

A volunteer since 1964, Ms. Silvers has devoted her time and talents to the Pharmacy, Emergency and Nursing Education Departments. She is deeply appreciated for her dependable, jack-of-all-trades service to each department. “Volunteering at South Nassau has been very fulfilling,” she says, “it’s part of me; that’s all I can tell you.”
Contact
South Nassau Communities Hospital
Damian J. Becker
516-377-5370
southnassau.org
ContactContact
Categories