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                                                                               Expansion 
         
         The hospital 
        board of trustees in September 1985 appointed a committee under the chairmanship 
        of Dr. Frank Longino to consider whether the hospitals organ transplant 
        program should be expanded to include heart, liver, and pancreas in addition 
        to the kidney transplants already being performed. Dr. Walter Pories, 
        chairman of the ECU Department of Surgery, described the accomplishments 
        of the kidney transplant program, which had transplanted 10 of the 12 
        kidneys that had been performed in the entire state during the month before. 
        The hospital and medical school had also led organ procurement efforts 
        over the entire country. Should the expansion of the program be approved, 
        heart transplants would be added next. 
         
         Dr. Longinos 
        committee reported back to the trustees a month later that the organ transplant 
        program could be cost effective, and that the medical school had guaranteed 
        to absorb any costs the hospital could not recover. The board approved 
        the expansion. 
         
         Dr. Jon 
        Tingelstad, chief of pediatrics, provided the trustees with information 
        about a possible Childrens Hospital within PCMH, to include the 
        pediatric department, the neonatal intensive care unit, and the newborn 
        nursery. The trustees took no action at the time, but accepted Dr. Tingelstads 
        request to study the proposal. At its monthly meeting in November, the 
        board approved a task force to study the concept of setting up a childrens 
        hospital within the hospital. The task force was to be made up of Dr. 
        Tingelstad, Marilyn Rhodes, vice president for nursing services, a pediatrician 
        in private practice in the community, to be chosen later, David Speir, 
        a trustee, and Fred Brown, hospital vice president. The study was completed, 
        and on its recommendation the Childrens Hospital was established 
        during the following year. It became one of the hospitals most important 
        centers for serving the region. 
         
         The growth 
        in childrens and womens healthcare continued. In February 
        1995 the medical center held a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new pediatric 
        intensive care unit and its new admissions lobbies for the Childrens 
        Hospital and Womens Health Services.  
      EastCare 
        Helicopter Crash 
        EastCare 
        Air Ambulance Service carried out 84 more emergency flights than expected 
        during its first six months of operation. Transporting patients to the 
        hospital who might have had to find facilities elsewhere or who would 
        have died was a major benefit to the region, in spite of the risk associated 
        with air transports. 
        The EastCare helicopter flew to the U.S. Naval Hospital at Camp Lejeune 
        at 8:59 p.m. on Thursday, January 8, 1987 to transport a 3-month-old child, 
        Xenia Lewis, daughter of Marine Cpl. and Mrs. David Lewis, who had been 
        suffering from epileptic seizures, to the PCMH pediatric intensive care 
        unit. At about 9:30 p.m., the helicopter crashed in Jones County, in the 
        Hoffman Forest near Pollocksville. The three members of the crew were 
        killed: the pilot, Perry L. Reynolds and flight nurses Mike McGinnis and 
        Pam Demaree. 
         
         Fourteen 
        minutes after the ambulance helicopter took off, Nurse Demaree made an 
        emergency broadcast on a medical frequency, Mayday! Mayday! Fire 
        on board. Then, Were going down. After a second 
        broadcast of the message, nothing more was heard. EastCare staffers and 
        others at PCMH listened to the calls, fearing the worst. They knew that 
        there had been three deaths just four months earlier in the crash of an 
        air ambulance helicopter in western North Carolina. 
         
         It appeared 
        at the crash scene that the pilot tried to land from the northeast among 
        pine trees 20 or more feet tall. The helicopter created a crater five 
        feet deep, and burned after crashing on a windrow from logging debris. 
        About 9:40 p.m., a Marine search and rescue team from the New River Marine 
        Corps Air Station located the burning wreckage about 20 miles north of 
        Jacksonville. 
         
         A long, 
        narrow trench between one of the sheared-off rotor blades and the ground 
        at the edge of the windrow suggested that the blades had been turning 
        when the aircraft hit the ground. Most of the cabin of the air ambulance 
        had been burned away. The last body was taken from the wreckage about 
        2 a.m., and all were taken to Jacksonville. 
         
         EastCare, 
        which before the crash had flown 858 missions without an accident over 
        its 21 months of operation, indefinitely suspended service after the crash. 
        Dr. Kathleen Cline, assistant medical director of EastCare, would not 
        speculate on the cause of the catastrophe, awaiting an investigation by 
        the Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety 
        Board. A preliminary investigation by the NTSB shortly after the crash 
        found that the helicopter was banking to the right with its nose down 
        when it crashed, but two months later, the causes for the catastrophe 
        were still under investigation by the two agencies. 
         
         Perry Reynolds 
        had flown 261 missions for EastCare. He was the lead pilot of the team 
        of three employed by OmniFlight Airways, from which EastCare leased its 
        helicopters. He was trained as a helicopter pilot by the military, had 
        flown in Vietnam, and had flown helicopters for most of the 20 years since 
        his training. 
        Mike McGinnis, the chief flight nurse for the EastCare program, had been 
        employed shortly after the helicopter service was planned. He had flown 
        133 missions for EastCare. Before coming to Greenville, he had been an 
        emergency care nurse in Chapel Hill and Durham. 
         
         Pam Demaree, 
        the assistant chief flight nurse, had worked at PCMH since the early 1980s. 
        She joined EastCare at its beginning, and had flown 172 missions. 
         
         Dave McRae, 
        hospital senior vice president, said that many things would have to be 
        investigated before the hospital board could decide whether to continue 
        the EastCare program, and how it would be restructured after the death 
        of its key people. 
         
         The EastCare 
        staff, outfitted in their distinctive blue uniforms, had been a tremendous 
        source of pride throughout eastern North Carolina. Cards, letters, flowers, 
        and memorial donations poured in to offer homage to the lost crew. A crowd 
        of mourners estimated at more than 1,000 filled Jarvis United Methodist 
        Church in downtown Greenville and spilled out into Washington Street. 
        Many of them represented rescue squads from throughout the region, coming 
        to pay respects to McGinnis, Demaree, and Reynolds. 
      
      
      First 
        Pancreas Transplant 
       About 130 kidney 
        transplants had been performed at PCMH since the hospitals board 
        of trustees had authorized expanding the organ transplant program in 1985. 
         
         A 36-year-old 
        Martin County farmer received the first combined pancreas and kidney transplant 
        in North Carolina between Wednesday night July 16, 1986 and 4 a.m. Thursday. 
        Dr. Francis T. Thomas led the surgical transplant team that performed 
        the operation. There were three other ECU School of Medicine surgeons 
        participated in the operation: Drs. Paul. R. G. Cunningham, Larry S. Lewis, 
        and Beth Foil. The patients physician was Dr. Joseph Newman. Dr. 
        Jose Caro, a diabetes specialist, was a consultant in the case.  
         
         Dr. Walter 
        Pories, chief of surgery, said the patient had chronic juvenile onset 
        diabetes diagnosed when he was 17 years old. His pancreas was unable to 
        produce insulin, and as an effect of his diabetes, his kidneys had begun 
        to fail about three years before. Without the transplant he would have 
        required renal dialysis for the rest of his life, and the diabetes would 
        most likely have progressed, causing damage to other organs, possibly 
        blindness and circulatory problems including gangrene in his feet and 
        legs. Such kidney-pancreas transplants are rare in the U.S. 
      First 
        Heart Transplant 
        When 
        the medical school opened in Greenville in 1977, said Dr. Walter J. Pories, 
        medical care in the region did not meet national standards. Ten years 
        later, PCMH and the school had improved existing services and established 
        additional ones to where the most advanced of surgical procedures could 
        be performed. Pories also said, Just like people in eastern North 
        Carolina deserve roads, they deserve heart transplants. 
        About 130 kidney transplants had already been performed at the hospital. 
        The surgeons there had the capability to do heart transplants for several 
        months before the operation was performed for the first time. However, 
        an appropriate match between a heart donor and the recipient had not been 
        made until the day of the operation. 
         
         Open-heart 
        surgery had started in July 1984, and during its first six months, the 
        cardiac surgery team had performed operations on over 90 patients, mostly 
        coronary artery bypass grafts, and about a quarter of them heart valve 
        replacements or repair. By 1988, three heart surgeons were doing altogether 
        500 operations a year. 
         
         The first 
        heart transplant at PCMH was done on a 59-year-old Beaufort County man, 
        Malcolm Huffman, on February 17, 1987. Drs. Randolph Chitwood and Mark 
        Williams led the team that performed the procedure. The patient was listed 
        in critical but stable condition after the six-hour operation.  
         
         Dave McRae, 
        senior vice president of the hospital, said at a news conference that 
        the patient was formerly an auto mechanic, disabled since a heart attack 
        last summer. His doctors had recently listed him in critical condition 
        without hope of improvement, except through a heart transplant, 
        McRae added.  
         
         The heart 
        transplant was the first one done in North Carolina east of Durham, where 
        Duke University Medical Center had performed several. The operation was 
        also being done at Charlotte Memorial Hospital, Bowman-Gray School of 
        Medicine in Winston-Salem, and N.C. Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill. 
        The Carolina Organ Procurement Agency coordinated organ donations for 
        the area east of Greensboro, with offices in Greenville and Chapel Hill. 
         
         
         Surgery 
        Chief Pories felt that the expanded services and the attention that heart 
        transplants bring would encourage more people to donate organs. 
         
         PCMHs 
        first heart transplant patient went home on March 31, six weeks after 
        his operation. Huffman was taken through the hospital lobby in a wheelchair, 
        guided by Nurse Wendy Bridgers, and was met by reporters and well-wishers. 
        He responded to their attention, but as he left, he had turned away to 
        talk to his wife, Katie. She had earlier told reporters she was grateful 
        to be able to do something that she had never thought they would be able 
        to doreturn home with her husband. Huffmans daughter, Karol, 
        walked beside her fathers wheelchair, carrying a sheaf of lilies. 
        His son, Paul Huffman, drove the car that took him away from the hospital.  |