Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 5 | Page 22

FEATURE DR. GERALD TEMES KentuckyOne Health Excellence in Leadership Award D r. Gerald Temes says he’s always taken an “arms around” approach to patients: “You hug ‘em,” he explains, “if not physically, then emo- tionally.” His chief of service during residency at the State University of New York (Upstate Medical University) in Syracuse would stand at the foot of the bed and gently hold a patient’s toes as he spoke with patient and family. “It was the greatest technique,” Dr. Temes recalls, which he adopted himself and then modeled for young doctors over a decades-long career as a thoracic surgeon at the University of Louisville. Dr. Temes has extended a similar passion for connection to the medical and Jewish communities of Louisville. “He’s a listener,” says former Louisville Mayor Jerry Abramson, who has known Dr. Temes for more than 40 years. “He seeks facts,” Abramson said. “He constantly asks questions of people with different perspectives.” Abramson says Temes’ confidence and compassion enable him to lead organizations to the next level. Dr. Temes’ portfolio of community leadership is extensive, including spear- heading the development and then serving as founding chair of the Rudd Heart and Lung Center, two terms on the Louisville Metro Board of Health, and decades of service to the Jewish Community of Louisville. But, he is most proud of the creation of the Jewish Heritage Fund for Ex- cellence (JHFE) in 2012, as board chair of what was then Jewish Hospital HealthCare Services. To help ensure the more than century-old legacy of Jewish Hospital as it merged with Catholic Health Initiatives to form KentuckyOne Health, Dr. Temes negotiated a plan to set aside funds for a foundation that would support local medical research and education, and the Louisville Jewish community. The fund that began with $70 million five years ago has now grown to $100 million. In 2016 alone, with input from health care professionals, Jewish and other community stakeholders, the JHFE provided almost $4 million in grants to support University of Louisville School of Medicine research initiatives, the Jewish Hospital & St. Mary’s Foundation, local health clinics, neighborhood and domestic violence prevention and services, and heroin addiction treatment. In the Jewish community, Holocaust and preschool education, senior nutrition, cultural and artistic endeavors open to the Louisville community as a whole have all been supported. When Dr. Temes chaired the Jewish Hospital HealthCare Services board and the current chair, Richard Schultz, was vice chair, the two called themselves Batman and Robin, working to secure the organization’s role in creating a healthier Commonwealth of Kentucky. “Jerry taught me a lot about what the attributes are of a good leader,” he says, like encouraging people to speak up and a willingness to broach difficult subjects. Dr. Temes, Shultz says, “has the moral compass to do the right things for the right reasons.” 20 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE