Zayne Richard
Eleven-month-old Zayne Richard was among the first patients seen at the newly opened Novak Center for Children's Health. The new facility opened to patients this week.

Physicians and other providers at the began seeing patients this week, marking the facility鈥檚 official opening.

鈥淲e are thrilled that the years of careful planning and construction are behind us, and we have opened our doors,鈥 said Kimberly Boland, MD, interim chair of the University of Louisville Department of Pediatrics. 鈥淭his facility enables us to transform how we deliver care by having multidisciplinary teams located in one space so they can meet simultaneously with our patients and their families.

鈥淭his eliminates substantial inconvenient delays and obstacles for our patients to receive the very best care in the most efficient way possible.鈥

Among the first patients seen in the new facility was 11-month-old Zayne Richard, a patient of pediatric cardiologist Zayne was born with an atrioventricular canal defect, which occurs when there is a hole between the heart’s chambers and there are problems with the valves that regulate blood flow in the heart. He also has Down鈥檚 syndrome.

UofL doctors successfully treated Zayne for his heart condition with surgery in February, said his mother, Maranda Griffin, who brought him in Tuesday (June 26) for follow-up echocardiogram and electrocardiogram tests to monitor his heart.

Griffin praised the new Novak Center. 鈥淭his is so nice,鈥 she said, laughing before adding, 鈥渘icer than the old office we went to in the Children鈥檚 Hospital Foundation Building. It鈥檚 much bigger. There is so much more room for Zayne鈥檚 stroller, and parking is so convenient, just across the street in the (Chestnut Street) garage.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so much lighter and brighter too. I love it.鈥

The new 176,000-square-foot facility at 411 E. Chestnut St. enables providers with the UofL Department of Pediatrics and UofL Physicians to accommodate an anticipated 135,000 patient visits annually in the new center 鈥 now one of the largest and most technically advanced pediatric outpatient centers in the United States. The building鈥檚 namesakes are retired CEO of Louisville-based Yum! Brands David Novak, his family and their foundation, the Lift-A-Life Foundation.

Designed in kid-friendly colors, the facility features several public areas with soft seating and interactive screens to entertain children while they wait to see providers. But the waiting shouldn鈥檛 be long, Boland said: 鈥淲e have implemented the latest in technological advances, the Real Time Locator System (RTLS), to help move patients and providers to their appointments without lengthy wait times.鈥

Each floor in the eight-story building has a different predominant color and animal theme to help both children and grownups identify it. Because the Novak Center houses general, specialty and subspecialty pediatrics services in a single building, patients and their families have all their needs handled in one convenient location.

Among the features of the building鈥檚 design:

  • All pediatric providers are in a single building to ensure a multidisciplinary approach in providing care.
  • Innovative clinical and research programs not only provide the latest advances in treatments and cures but also create and develop them.
  • The environment enables staff to explore new initiatives, including holistic life style approaches to diseases and conditions that impact children.
  • Both basic and clinical research is carried out at the site and will help UofL attract new researchers as faculty.
  • 成人直播 and training provided to medical students, residents and fellows is enhanced, giving them first-hand experience with interdisciplinary learning they can take directly into the patient exam room.聽

Also included in the facility is the Wendy Novak Diabetes Center, created in 2015 with support from the Novaks to provide comprehensive diabetes care as well as access to clinical research trials that sometimes are patients鈥 only chance at diseases management and survival.

The services of the Wendy Novak Center are augmented with the facility鈥檚 up-to-date kitchen. 鈥淲e are going to invite the world-class chefs of Louisville to teach families how to prepare menus and foods that are diabetic-friendly and can actually improve lives,鈥 Boland said. 鈥淪ome of these chefs have diabetes themselves so they can speak and teach from first-hand experience.鈥