Newswise — LOS ANGELES (April 16, 2015) – Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (CHLA) announced Thursday the grand opening and dedication of the Margie and Robert E. Petersen Foundation Rehabilitation Center honoring the couple’s two late sons, Bobby and Richie Petersen, who died in a 1975 plane crash. Late last month patients and staff moved in to the new 22,000-square-foot, safari-themed facility.

“Our rehabilitation unit serves approximately 200 patients each year. This tremendous state-of-the-art facility will not only allow us to serve more patients, but we can now care for our patients with the healing environment they deserve and provide our staff with the therapeutic amenities to match the excellent level of the care they provide,” says Richard D. Cordova, FACHE, president and CEO of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

"The opening of the Margie and Robert E. Petersen Foundation Rehabilitation Center is the realization of Margie and Robert’s desire to help children overcome devastating illnesses and accidents so they can get back to their families and do the things they love to do," says GiGi Carleton, president of the Margie and Robert E. Petersen Foundation, which made a transformative gift of $5 million to support the hospital’s mission of delivering innovative patient care at CHLA. To advance the hospital’s efforts to secure community funds to complete construction of the new rehabilitation center, the Foundation also pledged a dollar-for-dollar match—up to $3.5 million—on all donations made to support the center’s completion through Dec. 31, 2016.

Significant donations were also received from The Associates; Fundación TeletónUSA; The Weingart Foundation; Walt Disney Company; Mr. and Mrs. William Shatner and the Hollywood Charity Horse Show; The Elias, Genevieve, and Georgianna Atol Charitable Trust; Vika Azarenka and Vika for the Cause; Rhett D. Beavers; Looking Beyond; Erling Richard West, Jr.; and Philip A. Turner.

The Division of Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine at CHLA is a major referral center for challenging cases that cannot be treated at other Southern California hospitals. The Division provides coordinated care through its work with specialists in medicine, nursing, physical and occupational therapy, hearing and speech therapy, social work, Child Life and other professional specialties. This team treats children with some of the most complex and diverse diagnoses, including stroke, brain and spinal cord injuries, brain tumors, bone tumors, seizures, spinal disorders and rheumatologic disorders. After a child’s mobility has been affected by trauma or illness, rehabilitative care helps develop function as quickly as possible while supporting patients’ sense of independence and well-being.

“The sooner a child begins the coordinated, specialized rehabilitative care offered at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, the better his or her chances are for recovery and a return to a happy and healthy life. The Margie and Robert E. Petersen Foundation Rehabilitation Center will give a patient access to the latest in rehabilitative equipment and care, as well as a family-friendly space that allows the child’s mind and soul to thrive,” says Kevan Craig, D.O., chief of the Division of Rehabilitative Medicine.

The Petersen Rehabilitation Center is one of the largest acute pediatric rehabilitation centers in the country. It has 22 patient beds and features 16 private rooms, three semiprivate rooms, and two medical isolation rooms for patients with fragile immune systems. Patients admitted to CHLA’s rehabilitation unit stay anywhere from one to five months while they receive intensive therapy. Families often drive long distances to be with their child during care, so the new facility will honor a family’s needs for privacy while helping them maximize their interaction as a family during patients’ recoveries. Every patient room will include family sleep areas, a bathroom and shower, free wireless internet and the GetWellNetwork®, an interactive patient care system developed for pediatric patients and their families that lets them learn and play while in the hospital.

In addition, the new 22,000 square-foot Petersen Rehabilitation Center features:

• The Fundación TeletónUSA Rehabilitation gym with 1,750 square feet of physical and occupational therapy space

• An Occupational therapy craft room, a speech therapy room, a recreation therapy room and a Child Life playroom

• A ceiling-mounted transportation system to help safely move patients

• A kitchen for therapeutic training purposes with patients and a large common dining area that will encourage communal dining

The late Margie Petersen, a former CHLA regent and board of trustee member, and her late husband Robert, founder and chairman of Petersen Publishing Co., maintained a longstanding relationship with the hospital. In addition, their foundation benefited other community institutions, including the Petersen Automotive Museum, which was co-founded by the couple, as well as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Saint John’s Health Center and the John Wayne Cancer Institute.

About Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

Founded in 1901, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles is the oldest freestanding pediatric hospital in California. Ranked fifth on U.S. News & World Report’s Honor Roll of children’s hospitals, it is the only hospital on the West Coast to make the list. Our mission: to create hope and build healthier futures. For more information, visit www.CHLA.org. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and LinkedIn, or visit our blog: WeTreatKidsBetter.org.

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