Farah Dosani
Feds Give $1.3 Million to FL Community Health Centers
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Community health centers in Florida are set to receive more than 1 million dollars through the 2010 health care reform law. The aim of the funding is to help improve quality and access to primary care for those who need it most.
The federal government awarded money to more than 900 community health centers nationwide – including thirty-seven in Florida. Each received $35,000.
The funding is part of a larger push from the Affordable Care Act to strengthen centers such as Family Health Centers of Southwest Florida.
Spokesperson Bob Johns says their funding will go towards creating an Internet portal for patients to see their medical records and to contact physicians.
“The main reason is that we think it will result in better care,” said Johns. “Secondly, we think it will make us more responsive as health care providers. It will help us listen better and it will help us have better information from our patients.”
The Sarasota County Health Department and Collier Health Services also received the federal grant money. The three community health centers collectively served more than 145 thousand Floridians in 2010.
Mental Health Advocate to Speak in Fort Myers
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Author and mental health advocate Pete Earley will speak in Fort Myers Friday. For his 2007 Pulitzer Prize-nominated book “Crazy,” he followed mentally ill inmates for a year through the Miami-Dade prison system.
Earley, a former Washington Post reporter, began advocating for mental health issues after struggling to get help for his then college-age son with bi-polar disorder. His son had been arrested and put in jail.
Earley realized that this was not unique to his son. He says people who are mentally ill are almost four times more likely to be in the prison system than in treatment.
“If you have a mental illness in Florida, you shouldn’t have to get arrested to get help,” said Earley.
“We’ve kind of turned the mental health system into a criminal justice one – and that is wrong.”
Earley will be speaking at the Broadway Palm Dinner Theater on Friday, October 7th. It is a fundraiser to benefit Hope Clubhouse, a local center for people living with mental illness.
Floridians Seeing Greater Access to Palliative Care
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Florida is becoming a friendlier state for patients facing serious illness, according to a new report on palliative care.
The Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC) graded each state on access to palliative care in its hospitals. According to the new report, almost two-thirds of Florida hospitals with 50 or more beds have a program in place – an increase from less than half in 2008. The same goes for hospitals nationwide.
“The good news is that over the last ten years palliative care teams have more than doubled,” said Dr. Diane E. Meier, director of the Center and co-author of the study.
“The bad news is that despite its enormous benefits to patients and caregivers, millions of seriously ill Americans still do not have access.”
According to CAPC, approximately 90 million Americans are living with serious and chronic illnesses. These include cancer, heart disease, diabetes, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s.
The report finds Vermont and Washington DC to offer palliative care in all of its hospitals. Delaware and Mississippi were graded the lowest with only 1 in 5 hospitals having a program.
“I think there is a growing awareness of what palliative care is and how it can be integrated in acute care hospitals,” said Karen Washburn, Director of Lee Memorial Health System’s palliative care program.
She says more people are seeing it beyond the notion that it’s just “end-of-life care” and limited to hospice.
Palliative care teams focus on easing pain and symptoms. It emphasizes quality of life, rather than cure.
Studies show that palliative care improves patient satisfaction and saves the health care system money.
Still, a recent poll found that a majority of Americans don’t know what palliative care actually is.
Everyone Pushed to Get Flu Vaccine
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Fall ushers in the beginning of flu season – which is also known as the ‘flu shot season.’
It’s hard to tell whether an easy or difficult flu season lies ahead. Most people get sick in December and January. However, public health officials are urging everyone to take protective action now.
Director of the Lee County Health Department Dr. Judith Hartner says the most effective way people can protect themselves from the flu by getting an annual flu shot.
“In years past, we just talked about people who were older than 65 or people with chronic disease,” said Hartner.
“But children can be very susceptible to influenza, pregnant woman… So if you’re six months or older, we recommend getting a flu shot.”
Less than half of Americans get the vaccine. Some believe getting the shot will give them the flu. Hartner says that’s a common misconception, because the viruses in the vaccine are not living.
Lee County Has High Number of Deaths from Falls
According to Florida’s Department of Health, Lee and Collier Counties have the highest rate of deaths from falls in the state.
More than 130 people in Lee and 87 people in Collier died from falls in 2009, the most recent numbers available.
According to Lee Memorial Health System, falls are the number one cause of trauma death in Lee County – especially among seniors.
Trauma Prevention Educator at Lee Memorial Mark Tesoro says it’s hard to pinpoint why those number are so high in the area.
“Most people primarily think falls are a balance and strength issue, but there are a number of different factors when it comes to falls,” said Tesoro.
“There are vision issues, medication issues, footwear issues, lighting issues – all kinds of environmental issues…. That’s why it’s been difficult in trying to figure out why it’s occurring.”
Tesoro says falls are not a normal, natural part of aging and can be prevented.
He recommends clearing walkways and hallways, getting vision checked, and exercising regularly.
Lee County Injury Prevention Coalition will host free fall-risk assessments and health screenings on September 23 at Lake Kennedy Senior Center in Cape Coral.
The Emotional Cost of Caregiving
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A new report from the AARP assigned an economic value to family caregivers in the U.S. The study estimated their unpaid contributions to be approximately 450 billion dollars a year.
But there is no way to quantify the physical and emotional costs of their care. The burden of caregivers can apparently be so stressful at times it can cost them their lives.
Bonnie Dominguez became family caregiver in 2006 when she got “that dreaded phone call at work.” Her eldest son was injured in Iraq.
He survived an IED blast, but was burned on 85 percent of his body. Dominguez and her youngest daughter Maline had to move to Texas for a year to care for him while he recovered in an army hospital.
“The year after that, I came home and I encountered a different kind of situation here,” said Dominguez. “The caregiving continued, just in a different way.”
Dominguez sits at the dining table in her Lehigh Acres home beside her 81-year-old mom, Marie Bem. It’s her day off from work, but it hardly feels like a day off.
She takes away the half-eaten plate of food when her mom signals she’s done.
“Mom always said, ‘I don’t care if I have a heart attack and die, I don’t care if I have this, I just don’t want to get Alzheimer’s.’ And that’s the one thing she got blessed with,” said Dominguez.
When Bem was diagnosed in 2007, Dominguez became her full-time caregiver. The single mom juggles her job at the local airport, running the house, and caring for her mother.
She is one of the 62 million Americans each year caring for a family member. While their work is unpaid, it does come at a price – not to their loved ones or the health care system, but to the caregivers themselves.
Gary Barg is Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Today’s Caregiver based in Fort Lauderdale.
“The most frightening statistic is, according to Stanford University, 40% of caregivers dealing with cognitive disorders in their loved ones will die before their loved ones do –solely due to the stress of family caregiving,” said Barg.
He was inspired to start the magazine after an experience helping his mom care for his grandparents.
“And those were the most intense, painful, life-and-death experiences, around-the-clock, never-sleeping two weeks that I lived as a helper to a family caregiver.”
Studies show that caring for an ill family member or friend can be harmful to the person’s own health. The job is stressful and it takes a mental, physical, and emotional toll.
Bonnie Dominguez says she knows that very well.
“Sometimes I would just start crying, I was at my wits end,” she said.
Mae Greenberg is a mental health counselor based in Miami who runs a caregiver support group.
“As much as somebody really loves the person that is ill, just the constant demands can bring them to the point of exhaustion,” she said.
“There is that grieving of the loss for what their life was before their time was filled with all of that.”
A lack of support is not only detrimental for caregivers, but also the country.
The AARP report finds family caregivers to be vital for the health care system and the economy. The value of their work is approaching the amount the government spends on Medicare.
Without them, the economic costs of health care would skyrocket.
“So it’s very important that these caregivers have an outlet so they can continue to care for their loved one, “ said Nancy Green-Irwin, executive director for Senior Friendship Centers of Lee County.
Senior Friendship Centers provides services to seniors and caregivers alike. The AARP report calls for more resources for caregivers to lessen the strain of the job.
Before heading to work, Bonnie Dominguez drops her mother Marie off at the Centers’ adult day care.
It gives her peace of mind that her mom will be safe and around other people while she’s at her job. It also removes some of the pressure.
“It’s hard sometimes, [but] we make it work,” said Dominguez.
“I have to be there—which is OK. When I was little she had to be there for me.”
Dominguez worries about herself, but said it’s tough not to worry about others first. She relieves some her stress by getting a massage from her chiropractor and playing scrabble on the phone with a friend.
Dominguez said she’s glad to spend time with her mom, but is thankful for the resources that give her respite.
Doctor Training Program coming to SWFL
Southwest Florida will soon be training doctors in its local hospitals.
Lee Memorial Health System and Florida State University College of Medicine unveiled plans for a medical residency program in Fort Myers. It will be the first of its kind in Southwest Florida and the only one between Tampa and Miami.
The program will be for medical graduates who are specializing in family medicine.
The announcement comes at a time when the state and country are experiencing a shortage of physicians – especially in primary care.
Although more medical schools are starting up in Florida, there are not enough residency programs to keep these new doctors in the state. Florida ranks 43rd nationally in the number of medical residents trained.
Lee Memorial Health System President Jim Nathan says the aim of this program is to bring more physicians to the area.
“By being able to have a training program here, we will be able to not only develop physicians that are trained in our community, but hopefully will want to stay in our community,” said Nathan.
Medical school graduates must complete residency training in their chosen specialty before they can practice medicine independently.
The FSU-Lee Memorial Health System program plans to bring in six residents starting in July 2013.
Florida Blood Donor to Break World Record
A Fort Myers man is on his way to being the world record holder for most blood donations when he gave two more pints Thursday at the Lee Memorial Hospital Blood Center. Friends, family, and officials spoke with and congratulated John Sheppard as he was getting his blood drawn.
Sheppard has been donating blood for 60 years. He wasn’t aware of how much blood he has donated, until staff at the Blood Center brought it to his attention.
The current world record for most blood donations is approximately 220 pints by an Australian man. Sheppard just donated his 315th pint of blood.
The 79-year-old is completing the documentation needed to get his number in the Guinness Book of World Records.
But Sheppard says this record is not about him.
“It’s first of all about a good friend of mine who was severely wounded in Korea in 1951 – and I began giving in honor of him,” he said.
“It’s also about encouraging people when they’re young to begin donating – that you can give the rest of your life as long as your veins and health holds up.”
Sheppard’s blood donations have impacted almost 950 people to date.
Corey Kent
Hundreds of family, friends and strangers greeted Corey Kent at Southwest Florida International Airport. The 22 year-old Army private flew in from Washington D.C. where he has been rehabilitating at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.
Wearing prosthetic legs, Kent maneuvered his wheelchair through the crowd of supporters and announced his plans.
“I’m probably just going to take a day to relax, catch up with friends and family that I haven’t seen too much, and take it from there,” said Kent.
Kent will be home for one month before returning to Walter Reed to continue his physical therapy. President Obama awarded him the Purple Heart last summer. This week a local nonprofit begins an addition on his family’s Cape Coral house so that Kent can live independently when he returns home for good next year.