O’Connell is new director of Geer Nursing & Rehab

NORTH CANAAN — New Geer Nursing and Rehabilitation Center Administrator Kevin O’Connell, 51, brings a unique perspective to his job. When he was in junior high school, he watched his father suffer three heart attacks and a stroke.His father recovered. That he is still around today O’Connell credits in large part to good rehabilitative care.“I got a real introduction into health care,” he said. Wanting to be part of making that difference in the lives of other people, he got a degree in physical therapy at the University of Connecticut (1998), a master’s in Business Administration for Healthcare Professionals at the University of Hartford (2000) and his Nursing Administrators Certification from the University of Connecticut (2002).“I was working at a nursing home in the late 1990s. My dad started volunteering there. Even though he is 75 now and is partially paralyzed on one side and I haven’t been there since about 2005, he still volunteers.”It is that unique spirit that lured him back to Connecticut and Geer.O’Connell’s career took him to Ohio and Indiana nursing homes, as well as to jobs on the corporate side of the business. “I’ve seen all sorts of rehabilitative care, and I can tell you the quality of care in this building is the best. The staff is so engaged with their patients. They treat them with such caring and respect. There is an amazing employee longevity. I can’t believe how many people have been here for 20 years or more, in all aspects of the business. That says something about the quality of the commitment. It’s not just about a paycheck.”On top of that, there is the community involvement, O’Connell said. “That’s probably the most important thing.”Among his goals for Geer is to continue investing in regular facility upgrades, and assure that the recently expanded physical therapy department remains the best it can be. Everything will be viewed with an eye toward the financial and regulatory challenges of health care.Longtime Geer Administrator John Horstman retired in November after 16 years.

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