MedAssets, Inc. : MedAssets Recognizes Montanti and Day for Humanitarian and Heroic Efforts
05/04/2012| 08:35am US/Eastern

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MedAssets (NASDAQ: MDAS) today announced the recipients of the 2011
Norman Borlaug Humanitarian Award and the 2011 George Herbert Walker
(H.W.) Bush Pacesetter Award, recognized during the 2012 MedAssets
Healthcare Business Summit held April 10-12.
Corporate
charitable giving is engrained in the MedAssets culture and core
values. Each year the company bestows these two awards to reflect a
strong belief that everyone is entitled to treatment that is dignified
and loving.
The honorees are:
Elissa
Montanti--2011 Norman Borlaug Humanitarian Award. Elissa Montanti
founded the non-profit, non-partisan Global Medical Relief Fund (GMRF)
for Children in 1997. Its mission is to aid children who are missing or
have lost the use of limbs or eyes, have been severely burned, or have
been injured due to war, natural disaster or illness. A 501c3
organization, GMRF is supported entirely by private donations and grants.
Colonel George Everette "Bud" Day--2011 George H.W. Bush Pacesetter
Award. Col. Day is a retired U.S. Air Force colonel and command
pilot who served during World War II, the Korean War and Vietnam War,
including five years and seven months as a prisoner of war in North
Vietnam. While imprisoned, Day was beaten, starved and tortured, but
refused to give any valuable information to his captors. He is often
cited as being the most decorated U.S. service member since Gen. Douglas
MacArthur, having received some seventy decorations, a majority for
actions in combat. Day is a recipient of the Medal of Honor and the Air
Force Cross.
"Elissa and Bud have shown tremendous selflessness, bravery and
dedication. It is our hope this recognition will raise awareness of
their important contributions," said John Bardis, chairman, president
and chief executive officer, MedAssets. "Their efforts and leadership
are inspiring and it is our honor to recognize both of them. On behalf
of MedAssets, we believe that it is our corporate responsibility to
share our organizational success in ways that empower and enrich those
in need."
Elissa
Montanti's Story:
"God and all merciful people to help me getting prosthetics." Those were
the words that started Elissa Montanti's journey to found GMRF. The year
was 1996, and Elissa had lost her mother and grandparents over a short
amount of time. She sought solace from her grief by helping the children
of war-torn Bosnia, part of the former Yugoslavia. International
organizations estimated that 100,000 people were killed during a
three-year civil war conflict. Elissa had reached out to the United
Nations ambassador of Bosnia to send toys and school supplies. Instead,
he shared a letter written by a Bosnian boy, Kenan Malkic, who had lost
both arms and a leg after stepping on a land mine while playing soccer.
The plan for school supplies and toys was put aside and Elissa instead
called airlines, hospitals and any organization she could think of to
assist in bringing Kenan to the United States for treatment. Soon after,
Kenan and his mother arrived for a four-month stay at Elissa's house in
New York to be fitted with prosthetic limbs.
Since its founding GMRF has brought more than 150 children to the United
States from Europe, Africa, the Middle East and Asia for treatment,
surgery and prosthetic limb and eye fittings.
Colonel
Bud Day's story:
Born in Sioux City, Iowa on Feb. 24, 1925, Colonel Day dropped out of
high school in 1942 in order to enlist in the Marine Corps. He served in
the North Pacific theatre during World War II and after the war joined
the Iowa Army Reserve where he was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant.
He was called to active duty in 1951 for pilot training in the U.S. Air
Force after its formation in 1947. He served two tours in the Korean
War, surviving a "no-chute" ejection in 1955. As a fighter pilot during
the Vietnam War, Colonel Day was flying a mission in 1967 when his
aircraft was struck by a missile. Colonel Day and Captain Corwin M.
"Kipp" Kippenhan were forced to eject over enemy territory. Colonel Day
was seriously injured during the ejection. He was captured by the enemy,
but escaped, only to be recaptured 15 days later with additional gunshot
wounds to his leg and hand.
Colonel Day retired from active duty in 1977 to resume his law practice.
He had more than 8,000 flying hours to his credit. Years after his
retirement, Colonel Day emerged to fight again--this time against the
U.S. government for attempting to cut benefits for retired veterans. Due
to his advocacy, the planned benefit changes were rolled back by
Congress. Colonel Day is the author of two autobiographies focusing on
his experience as a prisoner of war, Return with Honor, followed
by Duty, Honor, Country.
As part of MedAssets' commitment to support our nation's heroes
overseas, the company also hosted the assembly of more than 1,800 care
packages. Over 1,600 event attendees helped assemble and ship the
individual packages to 23 soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan to
distribute among their respective units.
About GMRF
Today, a great part of the GMRF's success is owed to Elissa's passion
and abilities to bring together great organizations with similar
missions, including, Shriners Hospitals for Children, Long Island Jewish
Hospital, Johns Hopkins University Hospital, the Long Island Plastic
Surgery Group, Winthrop University Hospital, Columbia Presbyterian
Hospital and Ocular Prosthetics, Inc. The maimed and injured children
that benefit from GMRF come from countries or regions that can offer
only minimal medical care, poorly fitted prostheses, or none at all. The
list of countries includes: Bosnia, China, El Salvador, Haiti,
Indonesia, Iraq, Kosovo, Liberia, Mexico, Nepal, Niger, Pakistan and
Sierra Leone.
In addition to monetary donations, the organization also accepts airline
frequent flyer miles to help bring injured children to the United States
for care. To learn more about Elissa's work and how to donate to help
the Global Medical Relief Fund's mission, please visit the
organization's Website at www.gmrfchildren.org.
About MedAssets
MedAssets (NASDAQ: MDAS) helps healthcare organizations to improve
financial strength through innovative revenue cycle, spend and clinical
resource management solutions that enable improved margins, cash flow,
quality of care and patient satisfaction. More than 4,200 hospitals and
100,000 non-acute healthcare providers currently use the company's
Web-based technologies and evidence-based solutions to help capture
revenue, control cost, increase regulatory compliance and optimize
operational efficiency to improve the care delivery process. As a
result, the company manages annually $48 billion in healthcare supply
spend and touches over $340 billion in gross patient revenues. For more
information, please visit www.medassets.com.
For a full list of charities MedAssets supports, please click
here.
MDAS/B

Media Contact:
Robin Wrinn, 678-624-7420
rwrinn@medassets.com
or
Investor
Contact:
Robert Borchert, 678-248-8194
rborchert@medassets.com
© Business Wire 2012
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