The Illinois Catholic Health Association announced last week that Kathy McGowan, executive director of Catholic Charities of the Catholic Diocese of Joliet, has assumed the position of board president and Patrick Cacchione has been named the organization’s new executive director.
 
Cacchione comes to ICHA with 20 years of senior health-care executive experience in the area of public affairs and public policy. In 2001, Cacchione started Advocacy Strategies, a firm that works primarily with not-for-profit, health and social services organizations. Prior to starting Advocacy Strategies, he served as vice president of advocacy and public policy for two Catholic health-care systems, the Daughters of Charity National Health System (currently Ascension Health) and the Carondelet Health System, sponsored by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet. While working in Catholic health care, Cacchione helped form and chaired two national health-care coalitions, Supportive Care of the Dying and Children’s Health Matters.

McGowan replaces Bill Kessler, who served as board president for the past three years. Cacchione replaces Philip Karst, who is retiring after nine years at ICHA and over 28 years in Catholic health care.

"Catholic non-profit hospitals, nursing homes, and social-service agencies provide community benefits that have significant social and financial impact on all of Illinois’ citizens," Cacchione said. "Illinois Catholic hospitals alone provide more than $1 billion in community benefits annually, including charity care, education, research and subsidies in support of government-sponsored indigent care. There are 46 Catholic hospitals and more than 100 Catholic, long-term-care and housing facilities in Illinois. More than 100,000 people are employed by the Catholic Church in Illinois. I look forward to helping the Catholic health-care institutions of Illinois fulfill their vital mission."

"Illinois Catholic hospitals’ standards for offering charity care to those in need are both liberal and compassionate, and applied to meet the need on an individual or personalized basis," McGowan said. "We’re proud that Illinois Catholic health and social-service agencies serve the needs of the people who need help the most. The religious orders that founded these organizations and now oversee how these organizations are serving their communities, view their mission as a moral obligation beyond the demands generated by an individual’s ability to pay, or any state or federal regulation or mandate."


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