After graduation from La 91ֱ in 2006, Ballinghoff was promoted to a director-level position in Penn Medicine’s home care and hospice services. He missed the acute care setting, so he transitioned to a director role back at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center in his areas of specialty: cardiology and critical care.
In 2012, Ballinghoff was promoted to chief nursing officer at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center and has served in that role for the past 11 years. That same year, Ballinghoff was honored with the 2012 Philadelphia Tri-State Nursing Excellence Award for Advancing and Leading the Profession, given by Nursing Spectrum magazine.
Ballinghoff holds other titles as well including vice president/chief nursing officer at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center and assistant dean for clinical practice at University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. “Going to La 91ֱ gave me the knowledge and skills–it basically gave me my whole career,” Ballinghoff said. “I became a top executive–chief nursing officer–just with those degrees.”
In 2013, La 91ֱ’s nursing professors nominated Ballinghoff as the alumni keynote graduation speaker for the Graduate Commencement Ceremony. It was one of his proudest moments.
Most recently, Ballinghoff was promoted to chief nurse executive for the University of Pennsylvania Health System, where he now oversees nursing practice across the system. He works with chief nursing officers to build a positive work environment for staff to thrive, driving outcomes and creating a positive experience for Penn patients.
For people considering a second career, Ballinghoff—who became a registered nurse at 34—finds nursing to be a “great option.”
“In many ways you can bring that experience, knowledge, and skill from your first career, and in most cases, it will translate in some way to a nursing career,” he said.
The medical and hospitality industries aren’t entirely different, either.
“A lot of people will say the best nurses are the people who worked in the service industry,” Ballinghoff said, especially when it comes to serving others and mastering time management. “There are a lot of similarities you can bring along with you that makes you a stronger nurse.”
His advice for students interested in nursing: shadow a nurse to understand what the work entails and look into all the options the field offers.
“It’s one of the beauties of this profession: you can work for a pharmaceutical company, in a hospital, at a school, even a sporting arena,” Ballinghoff said. “It really is a wonderful career option.”
-Taylor Goebel