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			 This week, beloved Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital ER nurse 
			Anne Sydney retires after 38 years of exemplary service to our 
			community, leaving a legacy of professionalism and outstanding 
			patient care. 
 In the Emergency Department there is little time for introductions, 
			but for Lincoln residents who meet Anne in the course of an ER 
			visit, her presence was welcome and memorable.
 
			 
 Speaking at Anne’s retirement reception on Wednesday, the President 
			of Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital, Dolan Dalpoas, referenced his 
			personal experiences as an ALMH ER patient many years ago, “I could 
			go on and on about all the things Anne has done for this hospital, 
			but I got to see it firsthand. I’ve been in the emergency department 
			with loved ones…and I always liked it when Anne came through the 
			curtains at that point and took care of my loved ones; I knew I was 
			in good hands. I knew from being in this community, everyone would 
			say, ‘Anne is great, Anne does a wonderful job, Anne goes out of her 
			way, Anne goes the extra mile,’ so whenever I came in with a loved 
			one, I would always try to see Anne.”
 
			
			 Always one to set others at ease, Anne graciously played hostess at 
			her reception, warmly greeting coworkers and old friends and former 
			patients, some of which she had not seen in many years, but who 
			dropped in to recognize her decades of proud service to Lincoln-area 
			residents young and old. 
 Nearing the end of the reception, in a lull Sydney spoke to LDN 
			about how the hospital, and indeed the nursing profession have 
			changed since she started at ALMH in 1977. The hospital moved to a 
			new building only a few years ago, but what Anne misses even more is 
			the pen-and-paper recordkeeping that has only recently been replaced 
			by integrated digital systems. “I prefer writing with a pen and 
			paper,” Anne says, “but it’s the way of the world.”
 
			
			 
			Speaking her last tearful goodbye to her assembled supporters, Anne 
			expressed her gratitude to her coworkers past and present, and to 
			her family, including her husband, and two daughters who 
			unexpectedly arrived for the retirement festivities as a surprise 
			for their mother. “This hospital,” Anne said, “has been my second 
			home for a very long time.” 
			
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 Anne was not alone in her tears. As Mr. Dalpoas put it, “It’s 
				really hard to summarize 38 years of service into a few words, 
				but if you could have been with me one week ago today, when we 
				were in the emergency department, you would have seen the impact 
				Anne has had not only on that department but this hospital. 
				There wasn’t a dry eye in the entire department.”
 When the vivacious and energetic retiree was asked what plans 
				she had for her retirement, she merely stated that she would be 
				staying in the local area and putting down roots, quite 
				literally. “I’m a major gardener,” Anne told LDN, “and I love 
				being outdoors.”
 
			 
 Friends in the Emergency Department got Anne a beautiful blue wooden 
			bench for her garden, as a parting gift that was presented to the 
			beloved RN at the reception, which also featured numerous other 
			gifts, refreshments and a congratulatory cake.
 
 ALMH President Dalpoas concluded his speech with unparalleled praise 
			for Anne Sydney’s abilities as a nurse, "She did it in a way that 
			was professional and compassionate and took the worry and anxiety 
			out of a very high anxiety emergency department visit. And it’s a 
			skill I wish she would pass on to others…it’s a unique talent that 
			not many people have, and she did it better than anybody I’ve ever 
			seen…”
 
 [Ben McBroom]
 
			
			 
			
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