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July 11, 2025

Chestertown Spy

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8 Letters to Editor

Commentary: Our Mid-Shore Health Workers by Shore Regional Health’s Keith McMahan

May 12, 2020 by Letter to Editor

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Hospital Week – always the second week of May – takes on a special meaning this year as health care workers across the nation and here on Delmarva find themselves caring for patients in the midst of the first pandemic in just over a century. This year, University of Maryland Medical System elected to fold Nurses Week, May 6-12, and Hospital Week, May 10-16, into a single celebration of Health Care Heroes Week. As chairman of the UM Shore Regional Health Board of Directors, and on behalf of the entire board, I’d like to commend all our team members who certainly deserve this special recognition.

In the past several weeks, I have had the privilege of witnessing the amazing dedication, professionalism, creativity and teamwork of the UM SRH workforce as they navigate the extraordinary challenges posed by COVID-19. Working with the guidance and support of University of Maryland Medical System and in cooperation with the emergency operations teams of Caroline, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne’s and Talbot counties, the UM SRH Incident Command Structure (ICS) – a broad team including physician and nurse leaders, and directors and managers in several key areas — has done a masterful job of preparing for the possibility of a surge in COVID-19 patients. We are now prepared for twice our normal, total bed capacity between our three hospitals, and quadruple the number of intensive care beds.

For frontline workers and also those behind the scenes, each day brings new demands and parameters in providing safe, effective care to both COVID and non-COVID patients. There is no “business as usual” in our hospitals, and in most areas, these essential workers assume some degree of personal risk — and in many cases, greater stress and fatigue.

I am grateful that even before Health Care Heroes Week was declared, our local communities – including individuals, businesses, churches, civic groups and more – have been treating Shore health care workers and first responders throughout the region as heroes. Donations of meals, snacks, treats and much-needed supplies have poured in from all quarters, week after week.

In turn, UM Shore Regional Health is giving back to our communities with a $5,000 gift to the Maryland Food Bank, designated to the outlets serving our five-county region. It is both amazing and gratifying to me that our hard-working heroes at Shore have followed suit by launching their own collection drive this month to benefit local food banks. We are truly “in this together” as we all pitch in wherever help is needed.

We have lost members of our community to COVID-19, and every loss is hard to bear not only for loved ones and friends, but also for UM SRH frontline team members working so hard to save every life. Mercifully, so far, many of our patients have survived COVID-19, and every patient who recovers enough to go home is a cause for celebration.

For now, each of us can support the health care heroes who made those recoveries possible by following guidelines to reduce the spread of COVID-19 – wearing our masks, washing our hands and maintaining our “social distance” as long as needed. UMMS offers excellent resources for anyone seeking more information about COVID-19 and what to do if you suspect that you or a family member may have contracted the disease. Visit https://www.umms.org/coronavirus or call the 24-7 nurse hotline, 1-888-713-0711. And please, be safe.

Keith McMahan is chairman of the University of Maryland Shore Regional Health Board of Directors.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor Tagged With: Shore Health

UM Shore Regional Health Announces Cancellation of Meetings and Classes in All Facilities

March 12, 2020 by Spy Desk

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Effective Friday, March 13 at 5 p.m., all support group meetings, classes, seminars and professional meetings scheduled in UM Shore Regional Health hospitals, outpatient and other facilities are cancelled until further notice.

Earlier this week, free blood pressure screenings conducted by hospital volunteers were cancelled and the hospital gift shops are temporarily closed.

“These cancellations are implemented in an abundance of caution to help reduce the spread of the coronavirus, COVID-19, throughout our five-county region,” says Dr. William H. Huffner, senior vice president, medical affairs and chief medical officer. “The health and safety of our patients, their families, our staff and volunteers are paramount. We are undertaking all measures possible to minimize the possibility of exposure and infection in our hospitals and outpatient facilities, and in our communities.”

Cancelled events include: support groups for behavioral health, cancer, diabetes, hospice, stroke and behavioral health; meetings for members of AA, OA and NA; childbirth and parent education classes; nursing education classes, educational seminars and meetings of special-interest and professional groups.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 2 News Homepage, Health Homepage Highlights, News Portal Highlights Tagged With: coronavirus, Shore Health

Hospital Should Commit to Kent’s Older Population

February 11, 2020 by Spy Desk

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Margie Elsberg’s recent report from Save the Hospital offers wonderful, unexpected good news about a new plan to save our local hospital.  Like hospitals in rural areas nationwide, UM Shore Medical Center at Chestertown has struggled to provide the wide ranging medical services our community needs as costs skyrocket. Now, instead of justifying closing our hospital or severely limiting the services it offers, this plan re-envisions it, proposing a new model for rural health care.

The Walsh Center Report analyzes the hospital’s problems in detail, based on the demographics of the Upper Shore.  Many challenges facing our schools, businesses and the hospital result from the fact that Kent is the smallest of Maryland’s counties.  In addition, the populations of Kent County and northern Queen Anne’s skew older and poorer. If the hospital and other vital community resources continue to shrink, people will move away, exacerbating these problems.

However, the proposal for a Maryland Rural Hospital redefines the growing number of older people in our community as an asset rather than a liability. If we are, as the demographics suggest, the oldest of Maryland’s counties, why not have a medical center which recognizes that and actively seeks to provide appropriate services to that population?

The report proposes specialties including behavioral health, pulmonology, nephrology, neurology, orthopedics, and palliative care – medical care that many of us, of any age, need.  In addition it recommends other services: social work, transportation, and care coordination as well as active lifestyle and wellness programs like massage therapy, skin care, acupuncture, nutrition.

For the past few years, people in Kent and Northern Queen Anne’s Counties have had to travel to Easton, Annapolis, Christiana or Baltimore for health care.  If fully implemented, this proposal should offer our community many medical services closer to home.  Those services as well as a good wellness program should continue to make Chestertown a desirable place to retire and attract younger people to Chestertown too.

We all owe a debt of gratitude to Save the Hospital and to our representatives in Annapolis who have worked hard to keep our hospital functioning.  We should also thank state health care officials who were willing to rethink what health care in a rural area could be.

There is still a lot of work ahead to bring this new vision for the hospital to fruition.  However, the community has every reason for optimism and an incentive to keep things moving forward now that the people who oversee health care in Maryland are working with us.

Linda Cades
[email protected]

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Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor, Archives, Point of View Tagged With: Aging, Shore Health

Chestertown Auxiliary Members Serve Treats to Staff

December 17, 2019 by Shore Regional Health System

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Holly Bramble, hospitality chair of the Chester River Hospital Auxiliary, and Kathy Ruge, Auxiliary trustee, helped assemble almost 47 trays of holiday treats for staff at UM Shore Medical Center at Chestertown. The trays of homemade cookies, candy, nuts and fruit prepared and delivered to each staff member have been a holiday tradition of the Auxiliary for more than 20 years.

As part of the University of Maryland Medical System (UMMS), University of Maryland Shore Regional Health is the principal provider of comprehensive health care services for more than 170,000 residents of Caroline, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne’s and Talbot counties on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. UM Shore Regional Health’s team of more than 2,200 employees, medical staff, board members and volunteers works with various community partners to fulfill the organization’s mission of Creating Healthier Communities Together.

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The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Health Notes Tagged With: Chestertown Spy, local news, Shore Health

Former Shore Health Chair Violated Volunteer Bylaws, UMMS Report Says

December 16, 2019 by Daniel Menefee

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The University of Maryland Medical System Board of Directors, the parent board of UM Shore Regional Health, has established new governance guidelines to protect the system from conflicts of interest that forced the resignation of former Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh and other board members this spring, according to an UMMS Special Committee Investigative Report released Friday.

The special committee appointed the law firm of Latham & Watkins LLP to conduct the investigation.

“There is no question the past conduct undertaken by certain former corporate officers and board members was extremely problematic and damaged the reputation of the system,” said a statement from UMMS Communication Director Michael Schwartzberg that was released with the report. “Undoubtedly, there were structural, governance and operational flaws at the System’s Board and executive level.”

The 34-page report identified “self-interested transactions” between nine board members and executive management–where board members and/or their family members benefitted financially.  

“Ineffective” and “incomplete” conflict-of-interest policies enabled board members to solicit executive management for contracts, the report said.

John Dillon, former chair of University of Maryland Shore Regional Health, received a contract in 2012 to provide fundraising and public relations services to UMMS at a rate of $13,000 per month. The contract was approved by letter of agreement, with then UMMS CEO Robert Chrencik, and renewed every year through 2019 without using the system’s competitive bidding process–and without proper approval of the board. 

There was also “no evidence of any discussion of, review of, vote on, or approval of the arrangement by the Board,” the report said.

Although Dillon had disclosed his earnings from the agreement every year, many board members and some senior executives “insisted” they were unaware of the existence of the agreement.

The report questioned whether Dillon had received compensation for duties that were consistent with board membership that is normally on a volunteer basis.

Dillon’s duties, based on the 2018 renewal of his contract, were to raise money for a new medical center, perform community outreach and advise on “hospital acquisitions and the expansion of the Medical System.”

But some in senior management vouched for Dillon that his duties were “far above” that of a volunteer board member. Dillon disclosed that he spent 25 hours a week on his contractual obligations, but the committee concluded that there was little difference between Dillion’s contractual duties and that expected of a volunteer board member.

The committee also determined that Dillon’s agreement violated UMMS’ volunteer services bylaws because it was not properly approved by the board.

Don’t miss the latest! You can subscribe to The Chestertown Spy‘s free Daily Intelligence Report here. 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Archives, News Tagged With: Chestertown Spy, hospital, local news, Shore Health

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