Stockton
Event

TODAY, heart disease is STILL the No. 1 killer of women, causing 1 in 3 deaths each year. But it can be prevented. TODAY, Make It Your Mission to learn how to stop this killer, and then tell 5 women you love you want them to live. TODAY, you can help us stop heart disease in our lifetime.

Join Us & Get Directions

April 26, 2013 
10:30am - 12:00pm Vendor Expo
12:00pm - 1:30pm  Luncheon
University of the Pacific
 3601 Pacific Ave.
Stockton, CA 95211


                         

    Keynote Speaker

 

                             Mary P. Nejedly, RN, MS, NP-BC                    
        Nurse Practitioner, Women’s Heart Health at Stanford

Mary P. Nejedly graduated from California State University, Sacramento with a BSN in nursing and completed her MS as an Adult Nurse Practitioner from the University of California, San Francisco. She has over 30 years of nursing experience including the coronary care unit, heart failure, general cardiology and primary care.  She has played an integral role in the development of the Women’s Heart Health Program at Stanford over the last 6 years and currently works  as a provider in the clinic and as a liaison between the community and the clinic. Mary’s primary interest is in cardiovascular risk assessment and management for primary and secondary prevention. She is a specialist in lipid and hypertension evaluation and treatment, stressing the importance of lifestyle modification in conjunction with pharmacologic interventions.

  

Mary was born and raised in Stockton, California and graduated from Saint Mary’s High School.  One of her first jobs prior to nursing school was as a ward clerk at Saint Joseph’s Hospital.

 

 

 

 

                                                                                          

 


Survivor Speaker
Ruth Alexander
 

Our Survivor: Renee

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Renee Ticknor

When Renee awoke one morning nauseous and sweaty, she assumed she had the flu, but called 911 when her symptoms escalated. EMS told her it was just anxiety, but after a visit to the doctor later that day, tests confirmed her suspicion: Renee had experienced a heart attack.

In route to another hospital, Renee passed out. After six separate defibrillations, she was finally revived and woke up in the ICU. Realizing the gravity of her situation, she asked the nurse, "Am I out of the woods?" The nurse's face said it all.

Despite a slow and challenging recovery, Renee is thankful for her experience. "I got a wake-up call in my 30s that most people don't get until their 60s."

Like most women, before her heart attack, finding balance was hard. As a new mom, Renee put the needs of her family before hers, followed by career and housework. There was simply no time for herself or her health.

Today Renee is taking care of herself through exercises and a heart-healthy diet. Looking back, she feels intense gratitude that she listened to her body and fought to make her heart heard.

"The best thing to do is follow your intuition. If you're tired or don't feel well, go to your doctor and insist that you know your body and that something is wrong."

Renee's story has inspired women to put their health first. As a result, many friends and family have visited their own doctors and gotten their cholesterol and blood pressure checked. Nothing warms Renee's heart more than that.

"I Go Red for all the women out there trying to find balance in their life."


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