Kids first, kids only at Urgi-Kids
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Lolita Harper
Young Connor Anastasion breathed in deeply while the doctor checked
to see if the Wiggles were in his tummy.
“The doctor has to listen to for the Wiggles to see if they are in
there dancing,” his father, Steve Anastasion told him, referring to
the popular children’s singing group that consists of five grown men
in colorful outfits wiggling their way through popular songs.
Connor breathed deeply, while looking at his father, then doctor
Andrew Blumberg, then back at his father, as if he were searching for
some answers.
He was fine, Blumberg said, and gave Connor a high-five, while
mother Tina sighed.
And so went the third Saturday morning in the history of the new
after-hours clinic Urgi-Kids, on the corner of Baker Street and
Fairview Road in Costa Mesa. Little faces with quizzical glances,
breathing deeply for pediatricians with stethoscopes, who were
diagnosed and treated while other medical offices were closed.
Blumberg, the founder and medical director of the clinic, said
Urgi-Kids was designed so children could get quality care from area
physicians without having to wait in an emergency room or compete
with adults for medical attention.
Urgi-Kids is for kids, just as the name indicates. It is run by a
collaboration of Hoag Hospital, Children’s Hospital of Orange County
and nearly 40 pediatricians with local practices, Blumberg said.
Zeke McCreight, a 17-month-old from Costa Mesa, was suffering from
a bad cough and a fever. His mother, Jennifer, said she brought him
to Urgi-Kids because of a referral from his regular doctor. It helped
that it happened to be right in the family’s hometown.
“It is totally convenient,” said the ultra-hip mother, who had the
full length of her right arm tattooed and wore bright pink hair.
“This place is so great. We got in and got right out. I don’t even
think we’ve been here an hour yet.”
Although Zeke was under the weather, the future football player --
who looks much bigger than 17 months -- wooed the nursing staff while
running up and down the halls.
“Oh, he is adorable,” nurse Susan McIntyre-Price said.
McIntyre-Price is what they call “the back nurse,” she said. She
handles patient care and treatments and assists the doctors.
“Whatever they request, I do,” she said. “Or sometimes, I suggest
and they do. But they are all great. Every one of them.”
The veteran nurse said that she loved her new job and that the fun
atmosphere explained why the interviewing process was so tough. The
doctors were picky and wanted only those with pediatric experience,
McIntyre-Price said.
“I have worked in geriatrics and pediatrics, nothing in between,”
she said. “I don’t know if I would like to deal with normal humans.”
She stopped talking. Dylan Grunbaum, in room four, needed some
Motrin.
“Good news,” McIntyre-Price told the little boy. “The doctor said
no shots. If you drink this all for me, no shots.”
Dylan took the medicine and drank it down, sucking every last drop
out of he bottom of the plastic cup. It would help his coughing and
fever, and the doctor would be back with a prescription for his
earache.
“I have a cold,” Dylan said.
Mother Mary Anne Grunbaum, from Westminster, said she preferred
Urgi-Kids to Hoag Hospital’s after-hours center in Huntington Beach
because the Costa Mesa clinic specializes in children.
“This place is so great,” Grunbaum said. “We came here because we
wanted to see a pediatrician.”
* LOLITA HARPER is the community forum editor. She also writes
columns Wednesdays and Fridays. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275
or by e-mail at [email protected].
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