Sunflower Pediatric Team

All members of Hospice & Community Care’s Sunflower team have specialized training in addressing the unique needs of children and teens living with serious illness. In addition to the primary care team listed below, pediatric patients and families have access to a Hospice & Community Care chaplain, pharmacist, music and massage therapists, aides and bereavement counselor.

Primary Care Team

Kristen Moyer, Physician and Pediatric Medical Director

Education and Specialty:

Education:
o BS, Biology and Psychology, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill
o Master of Theological Studies, Duke Divinity School
o MD, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Medical Training:
o Internal Medicine-Pediatrics Residency, Yale-New Haven Hospital
o Internal Medicine Chief Residency, Yale-New Haven Hospital (Internal Medicine-Primary Care Program)
o Hospice and Palliative Medicine Fellowship, The Ohio State University (Adult/Pediatric Track; completed in partnership with Nationwide Children’s Hospital)

Pediatric Experience: Clinical Faculty, Advanced Illness Management (AIM) Team, Nationwide Children’s Hospital (2018-2020): Provided inpatient and outpatient consultative pediatric palliative care as well as clinical oversight for home-based pediatric palliative and hospice programs

Favorite Quote: “Hope is both the earliest and the most indispensable virtue inherent in the state of being alive. If life is to be sustained hope must remain, even where confidence is wounded, trust impaired.” –Erik H. Erikson

Brief Bio: I grew up along the East coast and have loved every place I’ve had the opportunity to live – from Massachusetts, to North Carolina, to Connecticut; a brief stent in Ohio, and now Lancaster. Along the way, I’ve developed a love of exploring the local outdoors and cultural flavors of each place. My husband and I enjoy traveling and kayaking and hope to introduce our young daughters to these experiences.

Why Pediatrics? I love working with children and their families. Children are authentic, creative, expressive, resilient, and hopeful, and their families are unmatched in their ability to hope alongside them while providing powerful, generative, self-giving love. To be able to walk alongside children and their families in the most vulnerable times, witness and support their strengths, and attempt to lighten some of the burdens of serious illness, is one of the greatest honors of my lifetime.

Steve Sensenich, Director of Specialty Services

Education and Specialty:

Education: RN training from St. Joseph Hospital School of Nursing and Millersville University

Why Pediatrics? I have worked in palliative care for many years with Hospice & Community Care, mainly working with adults. As a parent, I have always admired those who care for children and support their parents and siblings. Seeing an opportunity for growth in our ability to care for our community with palliative care, not only in adults but also for children, is why I chose to be part of the Sunflower team. My hope is that I can administratively help to facilitate our team to be able to provide the finest care and support possible to those trusted to our care.

Favorite Quote: "Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much" –Helen Keller

Terri Lee, Pediatric Coordinator

Education and Specialty:

Education: LGH School of Nursing and Franklin and Marshall College

Pediatric Experience: 15 years in-patient pediatric rehabilitation providing care to children with a variety of disabilities and medical needs including post traumatic brain injuries, spinabifida, and cerebral palsy. In my final years in rehabilitation I was apart of the home ventilator program with the goal of teaching families to care for this fragile population and to be able to take their child home. 18 years of pediatric home care as a case manager for children receiving in home care from RNs, LPNs and Aides. Also provided education to staff wishing to progress skills.

Why pediatrics? I say I fell into caring for children. Out of nursing school I did not see myself choosing this career path. In my second job I found myself working on a pediatric and adult mixed unit and I fell in love with the children that I was providing care to. I have found over the years that most children I have encountered with special needs are truly the happiest people I know. They don't care about material things, they are just happy to see familiar faces and to be loved.

Ann Pilarte, Social Worker

Education and Specialty:

Education: Master of Social Work from West Virginia University; Bachelor of Art in Sociology from Susquehanna University

Pediatric Experience: Special Education Teacher; Parenting Class Teacher; Acute In-Patient Care in Pediatric Mental Health Facility

Why Pediatrics? I have some experience working with children and I am a parent. At first, when working with pediatric patients, I did it because there was a need and I was willing. In time, I found that working with our pediatric patients and their families was a "brutiful" experience -- brutal and beautiful at the same time. Whether they are with us for a moment or a lifetime, a child's decline and death impacts those who love them in profound ways. It is my hope to be able to provide support to families who are likely going through the worst time of their lives. I am continually astounded by the strength, bravery and grace I witness in our pediatric patients and their families.

Favorite Quote: "Today, if we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other-that man, that woman, that child is my brother or my sister." -Mother Teresa

Rose Baer, Chaplain

Education and Specialty:

Education:
Board Certified through Association of Professional Chaplains
Lancaster Theological Seminary, M.Div.
Eastern Mennonite University, BSN

Pediatric Experience:
Offered pediatric spiritual care while working as the Supportive Care Chaplain at Hospice & Community Care
Neonatal Intensive Care Chaplain at Hershey Medical Center
Chaplain for Mothers with Addiction and their children

Why Pediatrics:
More than anything else, I understand each child to be precious. They are filled with the capacity to both give and receive love beyond measure. As a parent of adult children and a grandparent of little ones as well as a teenager, I am caught up in the immensity of each child’s vulnerability, bravery, hope, and ability to be present to possibility. As a palliative chaplain, I recognize that serious illness alters this sense of possibility. It is an honor to journey with each child and family to hold their reality of illness and—together—to create new pathways of hope and possibility. It is sacred work and I am humbled by the journey that unfolds.

Favorite Quote:
"Children are born with rainbows in their hearts and you’ll never reach them unless you reckon with rainbows." -By Carl Sandburg