OU Medicine, OU Health Sciences Center to Use CompSource Mutual Donation to Assist Healthcare Providers
    
  
  
  Published: Thursday, April 23, 2020
  
  
		
		
		 
      
      
      
      
        
     
	  OKLAHOMA
 CITY – OU Medicine and its academic partner, the University of Oklahoma
 Health Sciences Center, recently received $100,000 from CompSource 
Mutual Insurance Company to assist healthcare providers on the front 
line of treating patients during the COVID-19 pandemic.
      To 
avoid potentially exposing their families to the virus, many healthcare 
providers are not going home at the end of a long workday, but are 
staying away from home for everyone’s safety. The donation from 
CompSource Mutual will be used to provide meals and a place to stay for 
those physicians, nurses and other healthcare providers.
      
“We’re grateful to CompSource Mutual for their generous support of our 
healthcare team to combat this pandemic,” said Dr. Dale Bratzler, 
Enterprise Chief Quality Officer of OU Medicine. “This donation will 
fund temporary housing and food for OU Medicine and OU Health Sciences 
Center team members living away from home to protect their families from
 potential exposure to COVID-19.”
      CompSource Mutual 
Insurance Company, an Oklahoma-based business that provides workers’ 
compensation coverage, donated a total of $250,000 in Oklahoma to assist
 medical personnel and families coping with lost wages and other 
hardships because of the pandemic. Other recipients include the Tulsa 
Area COVID-19 Response Fund formed by the Tulsa Area United Way and the 
Tulsa Community Foundation, as well as the United Way of Central 
Oklahoma’s COVID-19 Response Fund.
      “Our policyholders include 
many Oklahoma businesses that are currently experiencing the emotional, 
physical and financial tolls of this pandemic,” said CompSource Mutual 
President and CEO Jason Clark. “We are committed to being a reliable 
partner in our communities’ responses, which we first demonstrated 
earlier this month by implementing measures to help CompSource 
policyholders who are struggling financially to pay their premiums. This
 donation is the next step and supports our guiding principle to improve
 the communities in which we live and work. I am grateful to our 
leadership team for approving this vitally important assistance for 
three organizations who are working directly in support of first 
responders, medical professionals and affected families in our state.”
###
OU MEDICINE
OU
 Medicine — along with its academic partner, the University of Oklahoma 
Health Sciences Center — is the state’s only comprehensive academic 
health system of hospitals, clinics and centers of excellence. With 
11,000 employees and more than 1,300 physicians and advanced practice 
providers, OU Medicine is home to Oklahoma’s largest physician network 
with a complete range of specialty care. OU Medicine serves Oklahoma and
 the region with the state’s only freestanding children’s hospital, the 
only National Cancer Institute-Designated Stephenson Cancer Center and 
Oklahoma’s flagship hospital, which serves as the state’s only Level 1 
trauma center. OU Medicine is the No. 1 ranked hospital system in 
Oklahoma, and its oncology program at Stephenson Cancer Center and OU 
Medical Center ranked in the Top 50 in the nation, in the 2019-2020 
rankings released by U.S. News & World Report. OU Medicine was also 
ranked by U.S. News & World Report as high performing in four 
specialties: Ophthalmology in partnership with Dean McGee Eye Institute,
 Colon Surgery, COPD and Congestive Heart Failure. OU Medicine’s mission
 is to lead healthcare in patient care, education and research. To learn
 more, visit oumedicine.com<http://www.oumedicine.com>.
OU HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER
One
 of nation’s few academic health centers with seven professional 
colleges — Allied Health, Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, Public
 Health and Graduate Studies — the University of Oklahoma Health 
Sciences Center serves approximately 4,000 students in more than 70 
undergraduate and graduate degree programs on campuses in Oklahoma City 
and Tulsa. For more information, visit ouhsc.edu
OKLAHOMA CITY – OU Medicine and its academic partner, the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, recently received $100,000 from CompSource Mutual Insurance Company to assist healthcare providers on the front line of treating patients during the COVID-19 pandemic.
To avoid potentially exposing their families to the virus, many healthcare providers are not going home at the end of a long workday, but are staying away from home for everyone’s safety. The donation from CompSource Mutual will be used to provide meals and a place to stay for those physicians, nurses and other healthcare providers.
“We’re grateful to CompSource Mutual for their generous support of our healthcare team to combat this pandemic,” said Dr. Dale Bratzler, Enterprise Chief Quality Officer of OU Medicine. “This donation will fund temporary housing and food for OU Medicine and OU Health Sciences Center team members living away from home to protect their families from potential exposure to COVID-19.”
CompSource Mutual Insurance Company, an Oklahoma-based business that provides workers’ compensation coverage, donated a total of $250,000 in Oklahoma to assist medical personnel and families coping with lost wages and other hardships because of the pandemic. Other recipients include the Tulsa Area COVID-19 Response Fund formed by the Tulsa Area United Way and the Tulsa Community Foundation, as well as the United Way of Central Oklahoma’s COVID-19 Response Fund.
“Our policyholders include many Oklahoma businesses that are currently experiencing the emotional, physical and financial tolls of this pandemic,” said CompSource Mutual President and CEO Jason Clark. “We are committed to being a reliable partner in our communities’ responses, which we first demonstrated earlier this month by implementing measures to help CompSource policyholders who are struggling financially to pay their premiums. This donation is the next step and supports our guiding principle to improve the communities in which we live and work. I am grateful to our leadership team for approving this vitally important assistance for three organizations who are working directly in support of first responders, medical professionals and affected families in our state.”
###
OU MEDICINE
OU Medicine — along with its academic partner, the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center — is the state’s only comprehensive academic health system of hospitals, clinics and centers of excellence. With 11,000 employees and more than 1,300 physicians and advanced practice providers, OU Medicine is home to Oklahoma’s largest physician network with a complete range of specialty care. OU Medicine serves Oklahoma and the region with the state’s only freestanding children’s hospital, the only National Cancer Institute-Designated Stephenson Cancer Center and Oklahoma’s flagship hospital, which serves as the state’s only Level 1 trauma center. OU Medicine is the No. 1 ranked hospital system in Oklahoma, and its oncology program at Stephenson Cancer Center and OU Medical Center ranked in the Top 50 in the nation, in the 2019-2020 rankings released by U.S. News & World Report. OU Medicine was also ranked by U.S. News & World Report as high performing in four specialties: Ophthalmology in partnership with Dean McGee Eye Institute, Colon Surgery, COPD and Congestive Heart Failure. OU Medicine’s mission is to lead healthcare in patient care, education and research. To learn more, visit oumedicine.com.
OU HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER
One of nation’s few academic health centers with seven professional colleges — Allied Health, Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, Public Health and Graduate Studies — the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center serves approximately 4,000 students in more than 70 undergraduate and graduate degree programs on campuses in Oklahoma City and Tulsa. For more information, visit ouhsc.edu.