Samaritan Health is looking for people to fill many open positions.
Two hiring events are being held in January. The first is from 3 to 6 p.m. on January 11, at Samaritan Medical Center in conference room 2A, and the second will occur from 1 to 3 p.m. on Monday, January 29, at Samaritan Summit Village.
The events are open-interview and applicants are encouraged to bring a resume and be prepared for an interview.
The classes will be back in person in 2024. Everyone needs help and support as a new breastfeeding parent. Learn about breastfeeding before your baby is born. The class is taught by a Registered Nurse and Internationally Board Certified Lactation Consultant.
Caring for New Families
You’ve been waiting for this day for months! Now you finally get to meet your new baby. Learn how to take care of yourself and your growing family. the class is taught by a Registered Nurse and Internationally Board Certified Lactation Consultant.
For more information, you can reach Samaritan Car-Freshner Center for Women and Children at (315) 785-4050.
The 2023 A North Country Festival of Trees theme is “Peace, Love & Joy.” Come see 92+ Christmas trees decorated by local organizations, businesses, and community members.
Vote for your favorite tree, and bid on our online auction.
The Festival is scheduled from November 24 to December 3rd, 2023. Gala and live Auction will be on December 1st, 2023.
At Samaritan, we are all caregivers. We work together to take care of our community. Candidates will be interviewed on the spot for the positions listed below.
For more information, please call our recruitment hot line at: 315-779-5236
Enjoy this traditional North Country event with your family. Our community members and local organizations and businesses decorate themed Christmas trees.
Enjoy this traditional North Country event with your family. Our community members and local organizations and businesses decorate themed Christmas trees. For the kids, “The Polar Express Story Time” is from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. See the details below, or go to samaritanhealth.com/festivaloftrees.
After more than a year of gardening work and memories resurfacing, the Baby Memorial Garden at Thompson Park has been renewed. It is now properly marked with a plaque identifying its purpose, which started over 30 years ago.
Samaritan Medical Center will be hosting an informal rededication of the memorial garden on Tuesday, October 24 at 1 p.m., which is open to the public. A special invitation is extended to those families who may be part of its origin, and the Samaritan Caregivers who have helped families through this journey. T
his rededication will take place at the memorial garden, which is located near the pavilion overlook at Thompson Park. October is a fitting time for the rededication, as it is Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month.
Background information:
Resolve Through Sharing: This is a special grief program to help healthcare facilities support families who experience loss. Samaritan uses these resources and had a formal program in the early 1990s within its maternity department. At the time, Samaritan also hosted a parent support group, called “Empty Arms,” to help these families. Caregivers at the Car-Freshner Center for Women and Children continue to use Resolve Through Sharing resources and provide support to grieving families. You can learn more about Resolve Through Sharing here: https://www.resolvethroughsharing.org/
Origins of the Memorial Garden: Samaritan maternity nurses in the 1990s wanted to make sure families had a way to honor children lost during pregnancy or soon after birth. They started a yearly event in Thompson Park called “A Walk to Remember” and built the memorial garden. Participants took part in a short memorial walk, an ecumenical service, and planted tulip bulbs in remembrance of children who had died.
The new plaque, which honors the memorial garden and its origin, reads:
“This memorial garden was created in 1992 by a team of caregivers from the Center for Women and Children at Samaritan Medical Center. During this time, the Resolve Through Sharing counselor and coordinator training program created a parent support group, Empty Arms, for families who lost babies during pregnancy or shortly after birth.
A memorial Walk to Remember event was held every fall and each family was given a flower bulb to plant in this special garden in memory of their child. After several years of careful tending, it unfortunately lay dormant. It was rediscovered and redesigned in 2021. It includes all the original bulbs that survived, in addition to several more, along with other perennials.
This garden is dedicated to all those who experience this loss. It is a place of solace and remembrance.”
Professionals from the Walker Center for Cancer Care and Samaritan Urology Center will be at the location. Due to limited space RSVP is necessary. Please call 315-785-4617 by September 8, 2023.
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