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Linda Leggett, Meredith Inglis and Jacque Ussery

When Beaufort Memorial Hospital (BMH) dedicated its newly renovated pediatrics waiting room this week, standing front and center was former patient Meredith Inglis (photographed at right with Linda Leggett, with McWaters, and Jacque Ussery, with Steelcase), the force of nature who spearheaded a fundraising campaign to pay for the improvements.

Meredith Inglis with her parentsNow a sophomore at Emory University, the 20-year-old Bluffton native was 17 when she took it upon herself to transform the third-floor space into a fun, kid-friendly room. She started out collecting money at her church and then recruited two hospital vendors in her fundraising efforts.

“It’s wild,” Inglis said. “I had no idea it would come to fruition.”

A Type 1 diabetic suffering from a rare liver disease, Inglis has been in and out of hospitals most of her teenage years. Her first hospital admission was at Beaufort Memorial where she underwent gallbladder surgery at age 15.

“I remember feeling scared,” she said. “Everything was white.”

Meredith with members of her churchThe Mayo Clinic facilities were much the same. She eventually ended up at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, where she was diagnosed with the chronic degenerative disease that causes severe intestinal pain, fatigue and bone density issues.

“Cincinnati is a huge hospital with a lot of cool, interactive features oriented to kids,” Inglis said. “It’s colorful and welcoming. Beaufort Memorial is so much smaller, but I thought we could do a lot for pediatric patients here.”

To kick off her fundraising venture, she made a public appeal to the congregation at Bluffton United Methodist Church and created “Miracle Jars” where her fellow church members could drop donations.

Meredith Inglis and Marla Slock, RN, director of pediatricsOver the course of a year she collected $1,200 to purchase Pillow Pets for hospitalized children. She also enlisted art students at her school, Hilton Head Christian Academy, to paint ceiling tiles with a sea life motif to replace the standard white ones over pediatric hospital room beds.

Even as she was battling her own health issues, Inglis set her sights on the renovation of the pediatric waiting room. With $1,500 in hand from her church congregation, she approached Beaufort Memorial Hospital Foundation Associate Vice President and Chief Development Officer Deborah Schuchmann with her plan.

“Meredith is a very sweet and bright young lady,” Schuchmann said. “She deals with a considerable amount of pain but meeting her you would never know it.”

Inglis returned from college last spring with an additional $1,500 to put toward the project. Impressed by her unwavering determination, Schuchmann put her in touch with a couple of hospital vendors she could tap for funding. McWaters donated new flooring, paint, furniture, art and labor valued at $23,500; Steelcase gave her eight times the $3,000 she had collected for a total of $24,000.

Jacque Ussery (Steelcase), Linda Leggett (McWaters), Debbie Schuchmann, Meredith Inglis, Marla Slock, Russell Baxley“It is so gratifying to see philanthropy at work,” Schuchmann said. “When our community and business partners come together to support our hospital, important and positive changes happen.”

After meeting Inglis in person, the representative from Steelcase decided to increase his initial donation. He was so taken with her spunk, he offered to provide the same match if the hospital Foundation would provide an additional $3,000.

“He was excited to see a young person wanting to help other young people,” Inglis said of the vendor.

With donations from McWaters, Steelcase, Meredith’s church and the Foundation, there was sufficient funding to renovate not only the pediatric waiting room but a first-floor reception area and two waiting rooms in the Keyserling Cancer Center.

“We appreciate Meredith’s vision and how it inspired others to make these projects possible,” Schuchmann said. “It’s just amazing what she accomplished!”

Make a donation to the Beaufort Memorial Hospital Foundation online or call 843-522-5774.

Meredith's story and photo displayed in the waiting room

Visit the waiting room on the 3rd floor of the hospital and you can read Meredith's story.