Suburban Hospital’s New Art Celebrates the Small Things Nurses Do

Published in Nursing Annual Report - 2020

Photo credit: Katie Giganti

Orange insulin syringe covers. The little blue clips that connect intravenous tubes. The green and yellow caps of medicine vials.

Each of those items represents an act of treatment, a moment of connection between nurse and patient, says LeighAnn Sidone, D.N.P., M.S.N., C.E.N.P., chief nursing officer and interim president at Suburban Hospital.

Now they’ve become the building blocks of mosaics at Suburban Hospital that serve as uplifting reminders that tiny acts of care add up to something hugely important.

The art, called Small Things, consists of three brightly colored panels representing water, wind and sun, made entirely of items nurses usually discard in the course of caring for patients.

The three 39-inch by 39-inch panels were unveiled in February in the hospital’s new 300,000-square-foot North Building.

Work on the art began in 2017, when Sidone and others at Suburban Hospital called on nurses to set aside the colorful plastic items. “We asked them, when collecting these small things, to be mindful of moments of time with patients and families,” says Kris Hakanson, the hospital’s director of patient and family experience.

The hospital collaborated with Artists Circle Fine Art to create a vision for the space. The group commissioned artist Billie Coursey-Lookingbill to create the mosaics. She wanted the items organized by size and color, so Artists Circle hosted a sorting party in October 2019 at its North Potomac barn. Nurses got together for smaller sorting parties after that.

Coursey-Lookingbill, who grew up in Montgomery County and now lives in Frederick County, says the assignment “came at a time when my father was in the last months of life.” When he passed away, she quietly pocketed the cap to one of his last medications, and added it to the corner of her creation.

Small Things represents the many small things we do, each and every day, that collectively make a big difference to our patients and families,” says Sidone. “We all do these small things for people individually, but when we bring it together as a team, it’s just so powerful.”

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Jacky Schultz Retires from Suburban Hospital

“After 15 years of outstanding service, Jacky Schultz retired as president of Suburban. It is with mixed emotions that I bid Jacky farewell. While I am excited for her to start a new chapter in her life with family and friends, her presence within Suburban will be missed.“

Jacky Schultz