08-29-94 Aladdin charity donates to Child Care Center 8-29-94 ALADDIN CRIPPLED CHILDRENS HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION DONATES $5,000 FOR EQUIPMENT FOR MEDICALLY FRAGILE CHILDREN COLUMBUS -- Medically fragile children at The Ohio State University will benefit from $5,000 donated Friday (8/26) by the Aladdin Crippled Childrens Hospital Association, Inc. The donation will be used to purchase equipment for the planned addition to Ohio State's Child Care Center. The addition, for which construction will begin this fall, will make Ohio State's facility one of the first in the nation to integrate medically fragile children into a child care center for typically developing children. Presenting the $5,000 check on behalf of ACCHA were Owen E. Johnson, M.D., president of ACCHA, and Russell F. Miller, secretary of ACCHA. Accepting the donation were Linda Tom, vice president for human resources at Ohio State, and Rebecca A. Wilkins, director of Ohio State's Child Care Center. Paul E. Kaplan, the Bert C. Wiley, M.D., Endowed Professor of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Medicine, and Jeanne C. Huba, program director in Ohio State's Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, were instrumental in seeking the support of ACCHA. Kaplan also is a trustee of the ACCHA. "We really appreciate your generosity," Vice President Tom told the ACCHA representatives. "The addition to the Child Care Center is an exciting project for us." The 4,500-square-foot addition to the Child Care Center, 725 Ackerman Road, will allow 15 medically fragile children and 18 mentally retarded/developmentally delayed children to be enrolled at the center. The addition also will increase the center's capacity of typically developing children from the present 300 to 316. Support for construction of the addition has come from the Ohio Department of Health under Gov. George V. Voinovich's Family and Children First Initiative. Medically fragile children rely on prolonged use of medical devices to compensate for the loss of vital bodily functions and require substantial daily skilled nursing care to avert death or further disability. They may be dependent, for example, on tube feeding by pump for all their nutrition or they may be able to breathe only with the assistance of a mechanical device. This new service for medically fragile children is expected to be a cost-effective solution to a growing national problem. Tom, vice president of human resources, pointed out that in analyzing the heath care needs of these children, the university expects to realize significant cost savings by providing this alternative form of care, rather than the one-on-one home health care covered by the university's health insurance plan. The Aladdin Crippled Childrens Hospital Association was founded as a charitable organization in 1925 by the Aladdin Temple Shrine in Columbus. ACCHA supports health care for crippled children and indigent children in the district served by Aladdin Temple Shrine, as well as charitable programs sponsored nationally by Shriners. # Contact: Judy Fountain, director of work and family programs, at 292-0393; Rebecca Wilkins, director of the Child Care Center, at 292-4453; or Jeanne Huba, program coordinator in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, at 293-3802. [Submitted by: STERRETT (sterrett@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Mon, 29 Aug 1994 10:52:45 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.