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Minimally Invasive Heart Surgery

Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center is one of the first hospitals in Palm Beach County offering minimally invasive heart surgery as a treatment option for patients suffering from heart valve disease. Unlike traditional open heart surgery where the breast bone needs to be surgically separated, minimally invasive valve surgery is performed through a small incision between the ribs.

About Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center

We would like to take this time to welcome you and thank you for choosing Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center.

Since opening our doors in 1968, to performing the first open-heart surgery in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast in 1983, our 199-bed, advanced tertiary medical center has expanded over the years to offer a full spectrum of healthcare services. Some of our most notable services include our Heart and Vascular Institute, emergency services, orthopedics and joint replacement, Certified Primary Stroke Center, neurosurgery, urology, general and robotic surgery, diagnostic imaging and rehabilitation services.

Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center places a strong emphasis on patient centered care and we are dedicated to optimal health through clinical excellence and unparalleled compassion.

As Palm Beach County grows, Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center is committed to introducing new services and programs to better serve the community’s needs. We are proud to continue achieving excellence nearly 55 years later. Thank you for entrusting us with your care.

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News & Announcements

Coronavirus Florida: Hospitals emphasizing safety as elective medical procedures return

May 18, 2020

palm-beach-500-x-300Coronavirus updates: At Tenet Healthcare’s five Palm Beach County hospitals, safety protocols for elective procedures include pre-admission screening, COVID-19 screening, masks and sanitizers.

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Elective medical procedures are back at Florida’s hospitals and outpatient centers after a nearly two-month pause amid the novel coronavirus pandemic, and area doctors are lauding the decision to restart them.

As of May 4, a variety of procedures including knee replacement surgeries, hernia repairs and cardiac catheterization are being performed at Palm Beach County medical facilities.

Delray Medical Center, Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center, Good Samaritan Medical Center, St. Mary’s Medical Center and West Boca Medical Center, all operated by Tenet Healthcare, welcomed patients who had been forced to postpone their procedures as the coronavirus crisis deepened.

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“We feel that people were staying home when they actually needed care,” said Maggie Gill, CEO of Tenet Palm Beach Health Network. “We’re back up, and the restrictions that were put in place were lifted. We’re ready.”

Delaying these procedures for some patients has had a devastating effect on their health, said Dr. Eric Lieberman, the medical director of cardiac services for Tenet Palm Beach Health Network.

“COVID is a horrible virus, but there are other medical issues like coronary artery disease that are equally lethal and really affect a larger group of the population,” he said. “It causes more overall mortality. It is a life-threatening disease.”

Now that the ban on elective medical procedures has been lifted, some patients are returning to the hospital for treatment.

“We’re seeing an increase overall in surgery,” Gill said. “A lot of orthopedic surgery was deferred, and general surgery. There was a significant backlog of that.”

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Hospitals also are seeing patients who require cardiac procedures, cardiopulmonary rehab, cardiac rehab and physical therapy, Gill said.

 

“When you take a break from it for a period of weeks and months, there is a definite need to get people back into their recovery process,” she said.

Not all patients are eager to return, however.

The number of elective procedures performed at area hospitals over the past week remain lower than they were prior to the coronavirus pandemic, Gill said, because many patients continue to worry about being exposed to the virus.

Tenet hospitals have instituted numerous safety protocols to keep patients and health care professionals safe, said Dr. Mimi Metcalf, an internist and physician adviser at Good Samaritan Medical Center.

Those protocols include a pre-admission screening over the phone for all patients, pre-admission testing that includes a COVID-19 screening, masks and hand sanitizers upon arrival, and segregating COVID-19 patients from non-COVID patients.

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“We have a separate dedicated (operating room) for any COVID patients,” Metcalf said. “That would not include any of these elective procedures. We also have dedicated, separated wings for COVID patients. All of those wings and the OR are negative pressurized and undergo a thorough disinfection and cleaning regularly, and that includes all ORs.”

“I’ve told people that until we have a treatment or vaccine that prevents it, COVID is part of our lives as citizens,” she said. “So what we have to do is understand that we have to go on with our lives with COVID in it. We have made sure that we have different avenues of care for COVID and non-COVID. Non-COVID is the majority of patients.”

Source: https://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/20200512/coronavirus-florida-hospitals-emphasizing-safety-as-elective-medical-procedures-return