Nurse With A Heart
February 08, 2017
Memorial’s heart and soul depend on nurses like Sara Ahumada, ARNP.
As a newly graduated nurse practitioner for the Adult Heart Transplant Program at Memorial Cardiac and Vascular Institute, Sara specializes in cardiac care.
“I educate the patients who are newly diagnosed with heart failure. For patients who’ve been living with this disease for many years, I educate them on the advances we have,” says Sara, who has been with Memorial since 2006.
Sara loves her work, she’s good at it and she’s soared through the ranks like a winged lion. Yet if she had let either fear or hardship guide her, she might never have become part of the Memorial family.
She began her medical instruction at Barry University, but nearly dropped out because she had run out of money after the first semester. Fortune prevailed, however, when Sara received a Memorial Healthcare System scholarship. She went on to earn a bachelor’s degree and, in 2015, a master’s degree in nursing.
After graduating, Sara had several options for employment. Having grown up in Miami, she knew Memorial had a sterling reputation. And while she was drawn to the facility, she was also intimidated by the idea of working there.
“Funny thing is, I was petrified of Memorial, because I knew the system was huge,” says Sara.
Never one to back away from a challenge, she accepted a position at Memorial Regional’s telemetry unit. Less than two years later she transferred to the step down open-heart unit, where her potential and skills raised her to new heights in her career.
“At that time, there were a lot of changes at Memorial, and there were leadership positions that needed to be filled. They asked if I would be charge nurse,” Sara recalls. “I was the new girl that transferred over. Being petrified, they said, ‘Don’t worry, you’re never alone.’ And that’s true. Here at Memorial, you’re never alone and always have support.”
A few months later, she became Clinical Manager of the unit. In 2010, after her mother passed way, Sara stepped down from that position and went back to school to further her nursing education.
“[The program's medical director] called me one day and asked me if I was interested in being part of her team,” Sara recalls. “So I replied, ‘You do know that I’m new, right?’ And she said, ‘We’ve watched you as a nurse at the bedside. We like what we see. We’re more than willing to help train you.’”
As Sara’s career trajectory rises with Broward County’s first adult heart transplant program, cardiac care can only flourish.
“It feels good to be part of a group that I’m excited for what it is going to become. We work together phenomenally,” Sara says. “We are a hard-working team that lives and breathes the Memorial culture. We collaborate with other specialty groups to provide exceptional patient- and family-centered care.”