Dykstra plans to retire as Promise's executive director at end of year


SIOUX CENTER � Promise Community Health Center executive director Nancy Dykstra has announced her plan to retire at the end of the year.

As one of Promise�s founders, Dykstra has been the guiding hand of the health center since it opened nine years ago in Sioux Center.

Nancy Dykstra, executive director for
Promise Community Health Center,
has announced her plan to retire at
the end of 2017. She has directed the
health center since it opened in 2008.


She thinks the timing is right to pass on that leadership.

�I feel that Promise is in a strong position for me to step aside and turn over the reins to new leadership,� Dykstra said. �I believe Promise will continue to grow and prosper and will continue to serve persons in ways that help them lead healthier and more productive lives.�

Dykstra dedicated her career to community health.

Like many nurses, she began her nursing career in a hospital setting at University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City, 1974-77. After returning to northwest Iowa, the area where she grew up, she worked as a nursing instructor at Iowa Lakes Community College in Emmetsburg, 1977-80, and as a nurse at Hope Haven, 1981-82.

In 1982, Dykstra was instrumental in establishing the first Medicare-certified home care and hospice in Sioux County, called CHEARS, for Sioux Center Hospital. She directed the program until 1995 when she helped to establish Community Health Partners of Sioux County, a reorganized public health delivery system and an expanded hospital home care delivery model. She served as CHP�s director until 2008.

During her tenure at CHP, Dykstra and her staff became aware of the shifting demographics in Sioux County and the growing number of families without health insurance and access to affordable primary care. Partnerships were forged with key leaders in health, education and human services fields in 2003. The steering committee�s dreams became reality when state incubator funding was awarded to establish a community health center. Promise � then known as Greater Sioux Community Health Center � opened to serve patients in July 2008.

As executive director, Dykstra navigated Promise through an arduous four-year campaign to obtain its designation as a Federally Qualified Health Center in 2012. She oversaw the health center�s growth of services from preventative and primary medical and prenatal care to a comprehensive range of core services that now includes dental, vision/eye, family planning behavioral health and outreach assistance. She guided the health center through a continuous expansion of facilities that now encompass all of the available space in Sioux Center�s former bowling alley building, which Promise first leased and now owns.

Nancy Dykstra, executive director for
Promise Community Health Center,
leads Hull Kiwanis members on a tour
of the health center recently. She
plans to retire at the end of 2017.



Mark Juhl, board president for Promise, is thankful for Dykstra�s dedicated service to Promise throughout the years. He said she recognized the need for a high-quality health center that focuses on meeting the health needs of underserved individuals and families and ensuring good health for the entire community.

�Besides recognizing the need, Nancy became the driving force with the vision and the passion and the skills and the enthusiasm to establish and build the program that we have today,� he said, noting Promise�s wide-ranging services. �Promise didn�t just happen. It took the leadership skills of a visionary with the compassion and drive, the dedication, and the resolve to make it happen.�

Before she retires, Dykstra will be actively involved in the transition phase as Promise embarks on the search for her successor. She has informed the board that she is open to being flexible about adjusting her retirement date either direction if that will benefit the process.

�I want to ensure a smooth transition,� she said.

Dykstra and her husband, Richard, live in Hull. They sold their business, Hull Pharmacy, last fall. They have three adult children and seven grandchildren.

Promise Community Health Center of Sioux Center is the only Federally Qualified Health Center serving the far northwest corner of Iowa. Promise provides medical, prenatal, dental, vision and behavioral health services. To learn more, visit www.promisechc.org and watch this video. To read more Promise news, visit promisechcnews.blogspot.com.


THE SEARCH PROCESS:
Promise Community Health Center has begun the search process for its next executive director.

Promise�s Board of Directors has appointed a search committee. A job description has been drafted, and a time line has been established. The position has been posted, and advertising will begin in mid-July. Review of resumes will begin in August and continue until the position is filled. Interviews will begin in September.

To see the job description, visit www.promisechc.org/careers.

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