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December 19, 2019, Vatican City – Sister Mary Ellen Leciejewski, OP, System Vice President of Environmental Sustainability for CommonSpirit Health, was one of 70 leaders to participate in the 2019 Laudato Si’ Challenge. 

The event, which was December 3-5, 2019, in Rome, takes its inspiration from the 2015 encyclical by Pope Francis on the environmental dangers the world is facing and the devastation that climate change is causing to all, especially vulnerable people. The challenge is sponsored by Cardinal Peter Kodwo Turkson of Ghana, Prefect of the Holy See Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development. 

Cardinal Peter Kodwo Turkson, back right, presides over the meeting of the 2019 Laudato Si’ Challenge. Photo by Sister Mary Ellen Leciejewski, OP

The 2019 Challenge “seeks to address forced displacement by empowering one million families by 2021 – supporting the vision of the [United Nations’] Sustainable Development Goals,” Sister Mary Ellen explained. “What the participants of the challenge are trying to do is help people stay in their homes and to find ways to empower them if they are forced to migrate."

Sister Mary Ellen was invited to the conference by Eric Harr, Co-Founder and CEO of The Laudato Si’ Challenge, because of her long-time involvement in environmental sustainability, first with Dignity Health and now with CommonSpirit Health.

Sister Mary Ellen explained that the event brings together leaders from the public, private, and faith sectors to make specific commitments to empower one million vulnerable families facing forced migration to “be the protagonists in their own solutions” by 2021 – supporting the vision of the Sustainable Development Goals “as a human dignity narrative, that leaves no one behind.” 

About 20 organizations made commitments during the Challenge, she said. Commitments included opening schools in Jordan for the children of Syrian refugees and providing migrants and refugees with simple but livable homes made from 3D printing. The Challenge provides an opportunity for organizations to make specific commitments with partners. 

CommonSpirit Health's Sustainability Efforts and Human Trafficking Prevention

Sister Mary Ellen said she was invited to the event, in part, to give a presentation on the sustainability efforts of CommonSpirit Health. Along with helping people to deal with the effects of climate change, she said, “we are moving upstream to mitigate its effects. This includes reducing our own climate footprint, empowering our health care leaders to speak out about the connection between our health and climate change, and working to ensure that not only are our buildings strong and resilient in the face of extreme weather events, but that our communities and the populations we serve are strong and resilient as well. 

She also announced CommonSpirit Health’s own commitment “to expand our Violence and Human Trafficking Prevention Response Program to an additional 10 to 15 families in the next one to three years,” she said. CommonSpirit’s program trains doctors, nurses, and staff members to recognize the signs of human traffickers and their victims and to make sure that the victims receive “trauma-informed care” in a safe environment.

Human trafficking incidents tend to increase during disasters caused by climate change and environmental degradation, Sister Mary Ellen said. Climate change can also result in conflict, poverty, droughts, and forced migration – all of which make people more vulnerable to human trafficking, she said. 

CommonSpirit hopes to add another component to the program, Sister Mary Ellen said. “We want to expand our community-based, community-owned program focused on preventing vulnerable populations from being victims in the first place,” she said. Ideally, the program would draw people from law enforcement, health care, and schools, as well as local politicians and concerned citizens and survivors, who would work together to address an area of concern to the community: human trafficking, domestic abuse, or child abuse, she said.

While organizations have already been working on helping people who are displaced, Sister Mary Ellen believes that the 2019 Challenge’s connection to Pope Francis and to Cardinal Turkson brings these efforts to a new level. Cardinal Turkson will send out a challenge to the Catholic community including parishes, schools, universities, and hospitals to become involved in these efforts. 

Sister Mary Ellen said attending the Laudato Si’ Challenge and watching the development of partnerships brings her hope. “If we work together, our communities will be healthier and more resilient,” she said. “We’re going to be a much stronger community because of the relationships we’ve built up, more respectful of one another. Everyone will be at the table so everyone’s voice will be heard.”


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December 12, 2019, Watsonville, California – Sister Michaella Siplak, OP, has been involved in a variety of ministries and outreach programs during her 50 years of service to Dignity Health Dominican Hospital in Santa Cruz, California. These include nursing service with neurological patients and with newborn children and youth, diabetes prevention, tattoo removal, and work with a mobile wellness health clinic to people in underserved areas.

Yet, while Sister Michaella was recognized for these many ministries, she received the Lifetime Achievement Community Hero Award November 25, 2019, for her initiation of – and 25 years of ministry in – the Community Assessment Project (CAP). 

In collaboration with the local United Way and Applied Survey Research, a data collection agency, Sister Michaella began CAP. Through this process, the community studies 10 areas that hinder or enhance the health of the community and offers an assessment of the community’s needs. The data is shared with agencies that serve the people in the community. 

“She brought the concept to Dominican [Hospital], to the United Way, and other partners to commit to single-source data,” said Susan Brutschy, President of Applied Survey Research, who bestowed the honor on Sister Michaella during the ceremony at the Watsonville, California, government offices. Sister Michaella “has been a strong supporter and user of the CAP data and the continuous improvement process embedded in CAP,” Susan said. She added that Sister Michaella helped to design CAP “from data and questions, to an eye towards community benefit and linking resources, and finally with production of the focus on health document.”

In an interview, Sister Michaella recalled asking to quit her ministry as administrator of nursing units because of her desire for more hands-on ministry. That’s when she began CAP. “We started outreach [to the community],” she said. “I asked if we could do a survey and find out the needs of the community,” and then respond to those needs with specific programs. 

Sister Michaella explained that the CAP process involves asking a particular set of questions of 900 people, including residents of homeless camps. “We get the results in November every year,” she said. “I look at them and see how they relate to the services offered at Dominican Hospital.” The process begins again every year in January. 

The results of the project have been so positive that the supervisor has traveled to Canada, Europe, and Africa to teach local communities about the process, Sister Michaella explained. 

Read more about CAP and Sister Michaella’s Lifetime Achievement Award.

Sister Michaella also continues direct service as a nurse. Every Tuesday night, she serves in a clinic, providing free health care to underserved people. “These are people who have nothing,” she said. “They walk into the clinic, we look at them, and they get a doctor. … We follow up on them like a doctor’s office. It’s rewarding [to serve them].”

Sister Michaella said she is the only Dominican Hospital staff member who has served at the hospital for 50 years out of the 57 years since the Adrian Dominican Congregation began sponsoring the hospital. 

A pioneer in health care, Sister Michaella served Sisters in St. Clement Infirmary in Adrian while she was a postulant. She helped to start Maria Health Care Center, the successor to St. Clement, in 1965. Maria is now part of the Dominican Life Center, a continuum of care residence for retired Adrian Dominican Sisters. She is also grateful for her ministry for the past 50 years. “I enjoyed my time at Dominican, too, my 50 years of doing a variety of things.”


 

 

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