As we celebrate National Perfusionist Appreciation Week 2010 and Trident Health Resources, Inc.’s 22nd birthday under the same ownership, I want to recognize and pay tribute to those who make Trident the leading provider of perfusion management services across the country in areas we serve: our employees.
Our chief perfusionists and staff are dedicated people who are committed to achieving excellence every day of the year, but it is during this first week in May each year that we take this time to pay homage. Trident has an upstanding reputation in the industry, a patient-first philosophy, and excellence in perfusion services performance to patients and the hospitals we serve. Every employee and perfusionist within Trident is essential to achieving Trident’s goals. Each of you represents the spark that ignites success and which fosters our position and longevity in the marketplace as a top choice perfusion management company for so many hospital accounts.
It is with pleasure and honor to know that the passion that lives within Trident’s organization starts with each of you individually and collectively and is shown daily in the work you do. I thank you for your commitment, your contributions of expertise in perfusion services, and your positive attitude. We also thank our hospital accounts for the great partnership that allows us to serve open heart patients.
We appreciate you!
Continued success as we enter our 23rd year in business!
Ralph E. Jordan
President & CEO
Trident Health Resources, Inc.
1 comment:
Here is something to ponder on, is the field of perfusion dying? I don't mean that we will not be needed but take a look at the post on perflist. Heparin resistance, really? This question is more than easily answered and really shows that there are no other interesting things to discuss amongst perfusionist. The field is stagnant and there are no real innovations coming from those that practice it. It is all but true, we have become nothing more than "bots" coming in and repeating the samething day in and day out. Where are the topics of making the circuit safer or does this matter? just as offpump made a reappearance and became successful will the "perfusion in a box" be the next great come back? In my experience it has been shown that most of us "perfusionist" have become complacent in the OR and with what we have to do. The once great push to expand the field is gone with the day of cross training or becoming a physician assistant. When will we wake up? When another stent invention starts to invade on the remaining case loads? It is sad to see at least in fl. how true everything that I am saying is with the last point I will make. "LICENSE" protect the career you love or at least make a living from.
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