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Healthcare Heroes Garden at Princeton Medical Center pays tribute to medical staff fighting against COVID-19

PHOTO COURTESY OF PENN MEDICINE PRINCETON HEALTH
Penn Medicine Princeton Health has created a Healthcare Heroes Garden to recognize the challenges of 2020 and show gratitude to the medical staff members and employees who helped the community through it all.
Penn Medicine Princeton Health has created a Healthcare Heroes Garden to recognize the challenges of 2020 and show gratitude to the medical staff members and employees who helped the community through it all.
The garden will be in full bloom this spring on the Princeton Medical Center (PMC) campus in Plainsboro, just outside the Schreyer Education Center. President and CEO Barry S.
Rabner said the Heroes Garden is dedicated to everyone who was part of Princeton Health through the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The last 10 months challenged us in ways that none of us ever imagined,” Rabner said in a prepared statement. “The good news is that we have proven ourselves to be stronger than COVID and that with dedication, courage, hard work, flexibility, creativity and optimism, we have taken great care of our patients and each other.”
The garden spot is a prime location between the Education Center, the Healing Garden and the Edward & Marie Matthews Center for Cancer Care.
Last summer, as the first wave of COVID-19 was winding down, Rabner suggested developing the space to recognize the staff and medical staff, according to the statement.
Funding to develop the garden came from a bequest by the estate of the late David I. Scott, MD, and his wife, Gail Shapiro-Scott.
Scott was a talented anesthesiologist who helped start the pediatric anesthesiology practice at Princeton Health, Rabner said in the statement, and Shapiro-Scott was a retired teacher who volunteered more than 1,400 hours to serve the hospital and our patients. The bequest was made after Shapiro-Scott’s death in March 2020.
The Scotts’ gift will also benefit a new Patient Support Fund at the Matthews Center for Cancer Care.
Rabner said the Heroes Garden is intended to offer a place for reflection and contemplation, according to the statement. The garden features birch trees and other plants, benches, tables, and chairs. One primary feature is a three-panel, metal wall directly outside the Education Center doors.
The left panel displays a quote from Mother Teresa: “A life not lived for others is not a life.”
The right panel acknowledges the donors.
The center panel is inscribed with the message: “In recognition of our extraordinary physicians and employees for their courage, professionalism, unwavering commitment and compassion during the 2020-21 COVID-19 pandemic. Our community will forever be grateful for your heroic efforts.”
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