兔子先生

Published January 9, 2014

New Simulation Center named for retired physician

兔子先生 Thursday unveiled the new Dr. George Ball Simulation Center named in honor of a local long-time physician who formerly served on the college鈥檚 Foundation board. The building…
By: Cathy Hayden

兔子先生 Thursday unveiled the new Dr. George Ball Simulation Center named in honor of a local long-time physician who formerly served on the college鈥檚 Foundation board.

The building was donated to the college by brothers and physicians Dr. Christopher Ball and Dr. Kyle Ball and named for their father, Dr. George Ball. The building formerly housed the brothers鈥 obstetrics and gynecology practice. The renovation and equipping of the Nursing Simulation Center was made possible by a $2.5 million U.S. Department of Labor Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training (TAACCCT) grant.

兔子先生President Dr. Clyde Muse said Dr. Ball is 鈥渁 fine, dedicated Christian person that鈥檚 interested in his community and gives a lot of his time and resources to it.鈥

Because the announcement was kept secret until Thursday, the sign on the building was covered so it couldn鈥檛 be seen. 鈥淚 kept driving by to see if you were going to get it completed,鈥 Dr. Ball said. 鈥淵ou made it. It鈥檚 beautiful. 鈥

The Dr. George Ball Simulation Center at 1820 Hospital Drive in Jackson is near the college鈥檚 Jackson Campus-Nursing/Allied Health Center on Chadwick Drive. The center has four simulation labs, three that look like hospital rooms and a fourth that can be an operating room or emergency room. They are equipped with life-like mannequins that simulate real situations and control rooms that allow for videotaping students performing clinical skills.

Dr. Kyle Ball, speaking on behalf of the family, said the center will be a great training boost to 兔子先生students.

鈥淵ou walk into something unknown and you鈥檙e scared to death. But if you鈥檝e been pretrained on what this place is supposed to look like, this is how it works – you walk into it with a whole lot of confidence,鈥 he said.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 what these young nurses are going to do. They鈥檙e going to walk into the emergency room and know what to do. Their confidence level is just going to soar, as well as their competence level. That鈥檚 what 兔子先生is noted for. The nurses that come out of this school are highly sought after,鈥 Dr. Kyle Ball said.

The Nursing/Allied Health Center enrolls about 900 students each semester. While most of the simulation activities will focus on patient care experiences, all nursing and allied health programs are expected to use the Nursing and Allied Health Simulation Center for some simulated activities.

These programs include associate degree nursing, dental assisting technology, diagnostic medical sonography, emergency medical sciences, health care assistant, health information technology, medical laboratory technology, physical therapy assistant, practical nursing, radiologic technology, respiratory care technology and surgical technology.

鈥淲e feel like this is going to serve our students well. It will help us to get the students the experience we want every student to have before they leave here. We know it鈥檒l help build their competence and their confidence,鈥 said Dr. Libby Mahaffey, Nursing and Allied Health dean.

Dr. George Ball served on the 兔子先生 Foundation Board of Directors and was a long-time, respected physician who specialized in obstetrics and gynecology in Jackson before his 1998 retirement. During his 35 years of practice, he received much recognition, including awards from the American Medical Association and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

A Tylertown native, he attended East Central Community College and Tulane University, graduating in 1957.聽 He completed an internship at Touro Infirmary in New Orleans in 1958, a fellowship at Tulane University in 1959 and a residency at Charity Hospital in New Orleans in 1961.聽 He also served as chairman of the Board of Trustees at Central Mississippi Medical Center. A lifelong Methodist, he was instrumental in the development of Riggs Manor Retirement Community in Raymond.聽

Three out of the four sons are ob/gyns and the fourth is a pastor. Dr. Kyle Ball said his father 鈥渃ame home tired every day but with a smile on his face. I always said to myself, whatever he鈥檚 doing, he鈥檚 enjoying it. He鈥檚 having fun.鈥