![]() As a Navy psychologist, he delivered psychological services for active duty service members from all branches in a variety of clinical settings, including traditional outpatient clinics and a partial hospitalization program. He completed his clinical internship and post-doctoral training at Navy Medical Center Portsmouth in Virginia. Navy’s Health Professions Scholarship Program, which paved a pathway for him to serve as an active duty clinician. As a doctoral student, he was awarded a scholarship through the U.S. Jon completed his doctoral training at Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, IL in 2018. ![]() Jon Murphy is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist board certified in Behavioral and Cognitive Psychology through the American Board of Professional Psychology. Sheila received her bachelor’s degrees in Biology from the University of Chicago and Physical Therapy from Northwestern University and her MD from the University of Illinois at Chicago. She did her internship at the University of Chicago in Internal Medicine and her residency at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago in PM&R. Prior to coming to Rush she was on faculty at the Harvard Medical School and worked at the Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the Massachusetts General Hospital. Her research interests include pelvic wellness health equity the health benefits of physical activity, in particular in underserved populations and pain, function and visceral fat in women at menopause. Sheila has published numerous scientific manuscripts, book chapters and articles, and lectures locally and nationally. She chairs the Rush Women’s Leadership Council and serves on the ADA Committee and Diversity Leadership Committee. ![]() She directs the Rush Program for Abdominal and Pelvic Health. She is the Medical Director of University Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation where she sees patients with pain and functional problems related to neurological and musculoskeletal disorders. Sheila Dugan, M.D., is an associate professor in the Rush departments of PM&R, Preventive Medicine and Neurological Surgery. The unseen wounds of military service need special care to heal.” The women and men who served in the military are all family. One of my goals in leading the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Rush University is to support the mission of The Road Home Program and work tirelessly to ensure its longevity and ability to provide care nonpareil to our returning veterans and their families. It is truly an honor to give back to our veterans, to care for those who have given us the freedoms we enjoy and that sadly, some may take for granted today. I spent many Saturdays in my youth with my father on the grounds of the VA hospital where he later consulted and taught Residents. My father, a psychiatrist and Army captain, started one of the first US Army on-post outpatient mental health clinics at Fort Belvoir in 1952. The arrangement can handle 100 additional incoming patients a day.“My relationship with veterans began at an early age. Those who don’t need hospitalization can be sent home to quarantine. Walk-ins are directed not to enter the hospital proper but to go into the sally port so that they do not mix with other people seeking emergency services. In the current COVID-19 crisis, tents have been erected in the sally port to test and assess incoming patients. An expansive covered sally port, where ambulances deliver patients, can be sealed by rolling-down doors at the vehicle entrance and exit to accommodate the decontamination of people and vehicles in case of a massive chemical accident or bio-terror attack. ![]() Rush’s emergency department takes up the entire ground floor below the hospital’s four-pronged curvy tower. In Chicago’s Rush University Medical tower, “butterfly” patient room wings rise atop the boxy structure that encloses a sally port entrance to the emergency department. It could be a model for hospitals that have not added surge capacity, with cities now needing to put beds in place immediately. McCormick Foundation, the Department of Defense, and the Department of Energy allowed Rush University “to reinvent the ER to address these multiple threats,” said Jerry Johnson, design principal in the Chicago office of Perkins and Will. Conceived after the 9/11 attacks and subsequent anthrax terrorism, the Center, completed in 2012 as the base of a new 1-million-square-foot hospital by Perkins and Will, is a pioneer in health care design, conceived to handle the surge of patients that could come from a large-scale industrial accident, bio-terror attack, or pandemic disease. McCormick Foundation Center for Advanced Emergency Response in Chicago to the test. The explosive growth of coronavirus cases is putting the Robert R. ![]()
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