The Club at Lake Gibson

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The Club at Lake Gibson Lake Gibson Village Health and Rehabilitation Center is designed with a split floor plan to provide resident privacy.

The 77,000 square foot center includes 32 private and 44 semi-private well-appointed suites.

Congratulations to the team at The Club at Lake Gibson for 100% occupancy!
09/08/2024

Congratulations to the team at The Club at Lake Gibson for 100% occupancy!

The Big Red Bus visits The club at Lake Gibson!
27/06/2024

The Big Red Bus visits The club at Lake Gibson!

19/06/2024
Celebrating CNA Week!
18/06/2024

Celebrating CNA Week!

Congratulations to the team at The Club at Lake Gibson for being full!
28/05/2024

Congratulations to the team at The Club at Lake Gibson for being full!

Carrie Risher, DNP, Clinical Educator at The Club at Lake Gibson was awarded the She Knows Where She's Going Award for h...
17/05/2024

Carrie Risher, DNP, Clinical Educator at The Club at Lake Gibson was awarded the She Knows Where She's Going Award for her selfless work in the Lakeland community including her establishment of the Able Hearts Academy for CNA's in Lakeland. She was one of 18 women nominated in and around Polk County. We are very proud of Carrie and her accomplishments. Congratulations and we wish her all the best.

Today we celebrate all the mothers! Thank you for all the kissed knees, sage advice, shoulders to cry on, and bent ears....
12/05/2024

Today we celebrate all the mothers! Thank you for all the kissed knees, sage advice, shoulders to cry on, and bent ears. Your years of love and dedication have not gone unnoticed. Thank you! Happy Mother’s Day!

Dear Nurses,As we embark on Nurses Week, May 6th-12th 2024, it is with immense gratitude and admiration that I extend my...
11/05/2024

Dear Nurses,

As we embark on Nurses Week, May 6th-12th 2024, it is with immense gratitude and admiration that I extend my deepest appreciation to each and every one of our nurses here at AbleHearts. Your unwavering dedication, compassion, and expertise truly make a difference in the lives of our residents and their families every single day.

Florence Nightingale once said, "I attribute my success to this: I never gave or took an excuse." Your commitment to providing exceptional care, even in the face of challenges, is a testament to the incredible impact you have on those around you.

This week, we come together in celebration and recognition of the incredible work you do. Your light shines brightly, illuminating the lives of those in our care and lighting up the sky with your compassion and skill. You are the heart and soul of AbleHearts, and your dedication does not go unnoticed.

Alongside the national American Nurses Association (ANA) campaign, we encourage our nurses to use social media to share their gratitude for their peers. Use or , to share a story of a time they made a difference in your life. Give them a social media shoutout or share the story of your journey to become a nurse.

May this Nurses Week be a time of reflection on your amazing contributions, a time of celebration for all that you do, and a time of recognition for the difference you make each day. Thank you for your tireless efforts and for embodying the ANA’s Nurses Week theme: "Nurses Make the Difference."

With heartfelt gratitude,

Antonio Costa, MBA, BSN, RN
Chief Clinical Officer
AbleHearts

Celebrating our nurses at The Club of Lake Gibson!  Thank you for everything you do every day!
10/05/2024

Celebrating our nurses at The Club of Lake Gibson! Thank you for everything you do every day!

Mary Seacole was born in Jamaica more than 200 years ago.  Mary’s mother ran a lodging house, called Blundell Hall, whic...
10/05/2024

Mary Seacole was born in Jamaica more than 200 years ago. Mary’s mother ran a lodging house, called Blundell Hall, which was much respected by local people in Kingston, Jamaica’s capital city. But she was also a healer and taught Mary many of her skills using traditional Jamaican medicines.
A keen student from early childhood, Mary practised medicine on her doll, dogs and cats, and on herself. By 1818, aged 12, Mary helped run the boarding house, where many of the guests were sick or injured soldiers. Three years later, she travelled to England with relatives and stayed for about a year. It was an opportunity to acquire knowledge about modern European medicine which supplemented her training in traditional Caribbean techniques. In 1823, Mary went to London on her own, remaining there for 2 years. In 1850, she nursed victims of the Kingston cholera epidemic. Travelling to Panama in 1851 only to find that her skills were needed once again because the town of Cruces was suffering its own outbreak of the disease. In 1853, Mary returned to Kingston, caring for victims of a yellow fever epidemic. She was invited by the medical authorities to supervise nursing services at Up-Park in Kingston, the British Army’s headquarters, and she re-organised New Blundell Hall, her mother’s former lodging house rebuilt after a fire, to function as a hospital. Mary had no children of her own, but the strong maternal attachments she formed with these soldiers, and her feelings for them, would later drive Mary to the Crimea. Mary travelled to England and approached the British War Office, asking to be sent as an army nurse to the Crimea where she had heard there were poor medical facilities for wounded soldiers. She was refused. Undaunted, she funded her own trip to Crimea, now part of Ukraine, where she established the British Hotel with Thomas Day, a relative of her husband, Edwin. The hotel provided a place of respite for sick and recovering soldiers. At the time, Mary was as well-known in Britain as Florence Nightingale. Ms Nightingale’s famous military hospital was situated hundreds of miles from the frontline in Scutari (now called Üsküdar, just outside the Turkish city of Istanbul). But Mary’s hotel near Balaclava was much closer to the fighting. Mary was able to visit the battlefield, sometimes under fire, to nurse the wounded. Indeed, she nursed sick soldiers so kindly that they called her ‘Mother Seacole’. When the war ended, Mary went back to Britain with very little money. Soldiers wrote letters to newspapers, praising what she had done. The Times War Correspondent, Sir William H Russell, wrote of Mary in 1857: “I trust that England will not forget one who nursed her sick, who sought out her wounded to aid and succour them, and who performed the last offices for some of her illustrious dead”. All those who admired her came to her aid, whether soldiers, generals or members of the Royal family. In 1857 a fund-raising gala was held for her over four nights on the banks of the River Thames. Over 80,000 people attended. The same year she published her autobiography, The Wonderful Adventures of Mrs Seacole in Many Lands, which became an instant bestseller. Mary died in London in 1881. Unfortunately, she was then lost to history for around 100 years until nurses from the Caribbean visited her grave in North West London, where the local MP, now Lord Clive Soley, promised to raise money for a statue for Mary. In 2004, Mary was voted the Greatest Black Briton. Lord Soley launched the campaign for a statue after leaving the House of Commons. In 2016, the statue was finally unveiled in the grounds of St Thomas’ Hospital on London’s Southbank.

Cora Elm was born in 1891 on the Oneida reservation in Wisconsin. Her grandmother was a midwife, which may have influenc...
09/05/2024

Cora Elm was born in 1891 on the Oneida reservation in Wisconsin. Her grandmother was a midwife, which may have influenced her choice to become a nurse. She entered the United States Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in late 1906 and graduated in September 1914.
After graduation, she began training in Philadelphia. She graduated from nursing school in 1916 and was appointed a supervisor at the Episcopal Hospital the following year. When World War I began, she volunteered for the Nurse Corps and served at a base hospital in Nantes in Brittany, caring for over 9,000 patients from 1917 to 1918. She later recalled the psychological toll she faced caring for so many injured soldiers. In 1920, she was sent to Russia, Latvia, and Lithuania for nursing service with the Red Cross. After the war, she served as an Army nurse in the Baltic States. She married in 1922 after returning to the U.S. and had a son in 1926. She died in 1949 and was buried with military honors.

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