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Who
we are
Welcome
to King's Daughters Medical
Center, Brookhaven MS
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King's
Daughters Medical Center
"Providing quality health
and wellness
in a Christian environment"
Service
comes about in unique ways.
On an otherwise nondescript trip
to New York in 1886 aboard a ship
leaving Europe, a young seminary
student died. His death could
have easily been forgotten - a
nameless face on an endless sea
- had it not been for Mrs. Margaret
Bottome.
Having just met the young man,
the aloneness of his death without
a mother beside him stirred her
soul. Greatly moved, Mrs. Bottome
began the process that would ultimately
result in the formation of the
International Order of the King's
Daughters and sons. Its headquarters
are now located in Chautauqua,
NY.

Mrs.
Bottome poignantly described the
effect of the young man in the
Ladies Home Journal. "As
I paced the deck in the days that
followed {his death} and looked
up at the boat that swung day
after day with his body in it,
as if he was being rocked to sleep,
the thought came to me, oh, if
I had only been in a sisterhood
wearing a badge that would have
denoted service to humanity...
At that hour I wished for a sisterhood
that should not be known by any
distinct dress but by some kind
of badge."
On January 13, 1886, ten founding
members chose the silver Maltese
cross as their badge. They selected
the watchword In His Name and
the text Not to be ministered
unto, but to minister.In 1894,
The Willing Hearts Circle was
organized in Brookhaven. Immediately,
the ladies began nursing and visiting
the sick while providing food
and clothing and medicine for
the needy.
Twenty years later, the Circle
purchased the furnishings of the
Brookhaven Sanitarium, a hospital
established by Dr. Harvey F. Johnson
and Dr. D.W. Jones at 156 West
Chickasaw Street.
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KDMC
AWARDS
Top 100 in US
Best Places to
Work
KDMC
was awarded the
prestigious Best
Places to Work
by Modern Healthcare
Magazine in 2012.
Modern Healthcare's
Best Places to
Work in Healthcare
recognizes outstanding
employers in the
healthcare industry
on a national
level. From economic
development to
employee retention,
this program will
benefit individuals,
organizations
and the healthcare
industry. -
more -
HealthGrades
Outstanding Patient
Experience Award
2010/2011/2012
5 Stars - Specialty
Excellence Award
for Prostatectomy
2010/2011/2012
5 Stars - Recognition
of Stroke Survival
2011
HealthGrades
consider all 5,000
non-federal hospitals,
and are procedure-,
diagnosis-, and
service-line specific.
T-System
Awards
Client Excellence
Awards
Patient Service
- 2010
Performance Improvement
- 2010
Quorum
Health Resources
QHR Award for
Best Net Operating
Margin
- 2011
American
Baptist Health
Trust
5 Top Healing
Hospital
- 2009
AVATAR
Employee Opinion
Survey - Most
Improved
- 2012
CareChex
Quality Measures
CareChex incorporates
seven (7) peer-reviewed
methodologies
which specifically
address key components
of the quality
of inpatient care.
These include:
Core Process
Measures:
Patient Safety
Indicators
Inpatient Quality
Indicators
Mortality Rates
Complication Rates
Readmission Rates
Patient Satisfaction
Measures
Overall
Hospital Care,
Medical Care,
Surgical Care
#1
in MS
- 2010
Top 10% in MS
2011
KDMC Overall Medical
Care
Top 10% in MS-
2012
KDMC Patient Satisfaction
#1 in MS
- 2010
Top 10% in Nation
- 2010
#1 in MS
- 2011
Top 100 in Nation
- 2011
Top 10% in MS
and Nation -
2012
KDMC Patient Safety
Top 10% in Nation
-
2010
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In 1922, the Circle, with the
assistance of a bond issue passed
by the city and bricks donated
by the Brookhaven Pressed Brick
Company, opened a new facility,
King's Daughters Hospital, on
the corner of N. Jackson and W.
Congress Streets. A nursing school
was also operated there between
1924 and 1944.
In 1964, the hospital moved to
its present location on Highway
51 North into a building leased
from the Lincoln County Board
of Supervisors. The name was changed
to King's Daughters Medical Center
in 1999. The city deeded the old
location to Silver Cross Home.
In 1977, a hospital auxiliary
was organized to provide volunteers
for the hospital. In 2004, the
Auxiliary opened a gift shop in
the lobby. Profits are put back
into projects
benefiting KDMC.
In 1982, HUD made funds available
for a project to provide low-income
housing for the elderly and handicapped.
The Willing Hearts Circle established
a nonprofit corporation to build
and operate Kingsborough Apartments.
After raising $10,000 from private
donations and obtaining a 40-year
loan from HUD, 64 one- and two-bedroom
apartments for low-income tenants
were built behind the hospital.
In 1996, Silver Cross Home constructed
a 60-bed nursing home behind KDMC.
In 2010, a modern therapy center
was added.
All of these facilities are governed
by boards selected by the members
of The Willing Hearts Circle.
The Silver Cross and Kingsborough
Boards have seven and five members,
respectively, all of whom are
members of The Willing Hearts
Circle.
The King's Daughters Medical Center
Board is comprised of six members
of The Willing Hearts Circle (one
of whom serves as chairman), three
community leaders, two members
of the KDMC medical staff, and
the Circle Chairman as ex-officio.
In 1998, the King's Daughters
Foundation was reactivated to
increase community education about
KDMC and to encourage financial
support. The Foundation is governed
by a board comprised of members
of the Circle, the community,
and the hospital and medical staffs.
Look
up and not down,
Look forward and not back,
Look out and not in,
And lend a hand.
We
live our motto daily through the
tireless devotion and compassion
of The Willing Hearts Circle,
the Medical Staff, the Management
Team, the Auxiliary, the Foundation,
and the community and its leaders.
Serving is our goal, our mission,
and our reason for being. The
vision of Mrs. Margaret Bottome
is just as alive today as it was
in 1886 when her heart went out
to the young seminary student.
We are a team that believes that
service comes through Christ and
that every patient and every person
we serve is a gift.