ARMC announces gift to Wound Healing Center

ASHTABULA — David and Ann Hradsky have made a $100,000 donation to Ashtabula Regional Medical Center Foundation.

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ASHTABULA — David and Ann Hradsky have made a $100,000 donation to Ashtabula Regional Medical Center Foundation. The donation is part of the Advancing Healthcare Today and Tomorrow campaign, which supports the new Patient Care Tower, according to a press release. The Hradskys’ gift has been directed to the Wound Healing Center at ARMC.

In recognition of their gift, the center has been renamed the David and Ann Hradsky Wound Healing Center. “I am a ‘graduate’ of the Wound Healing Center and know firsthand the benefits of having this treatment in Ashtabula County,” David Hradsky said in the release. “We believe strongly in supporting ARMC and access to quality care in our community,” Ann Hradsky said in the release.



“As a volunteer, a patient, and a spouse, I have seen firsthand the knowledge, expertise and compassion ARMC caregivers provide to us all.” Growing up in Connecticut, she often spent summers in Ashtabula with family. The couple relocated to Ashtabula in 2005, following their retirement.

Both began volunteering with the ARMC Foundation in 2010, and Ann continues to volunteer with ARMC in central registration two days a week. “David and Ann have supported ARMC and our caregivers for many years by giving of their time and through their generous donations to ARMC Foundation,” ARMC Healthcare System President and CEO Leonard Stepp, Jr. said in the release.

“We are so grateful to them for their continuing generosity and commitment to ARMC. This gift supports continued wound care in a state-of-the-art facility for patients in the Ashtabula County region.” The center provides comprehensive care for chronic, non-healing wounds.

ARMC has provided wound healing services since 2008, according to the release. The new facility features two new hyperbaric oxygen therapy chambers, the only ones in the county..