Monday, 21 April 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andBerea students' second health fair tackles touchy topics.Princessiccia

Della Walters tries to walk straight while wearing "drunk goggles" at
the Berea health fair. (Richmond Register photo by Crystal Wylie)
Student-run health fairs are becoming more popular across Kentucky, and some of them are touching on touchy topics. At their second health fair recently, for middle- and high-school students, Berea Community High School health students "handled more mature issues" than at their first, for elementary-school students. reports Crystal Wylie of The Richmond Register.

"Although students had their pick of topics ranging from sexually transmitted diseases, drunk driving, smoking, mental health, sugary drinks, learning disabilities and fitness," health teacher Cathy Jones said some students wanted to include 'sexting,' sexually oriented text messages. She allowed their presentation to pair the topic with cyber-bullying; students asked their classmates to sign a pledge against doing both.

�It�s a hot topic and something teenagers encounter,� Jones told Wylie. �They thought it was important to cover.� Jones said she plans to hold a fair twice a year. Meanwhile, Eastern Kentucky University professor Laurie Larkin and her public-health students conducted a health fair at Clark-Moores Middle School, Wylie reports. (Read more)
Princess Health and Princess Health andGeneral Assembly's failure to pass heroin bill incites wrath, calls for local action and a special session.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Princess Health andGeneral Assembly's failure to pass heroin bill incites wrath, calls for local action and a special session.Princessiccia

In the final hours of the 2014 legislative session, the House failed to pass Senate Bill 5, which would have helped combat heroin abuse. Some heroin-recovery advocates and community leaders are outraged, and now people are searching for local solutions to the problem while waiting for the General Assembly to act.

Senate Bill 5 would have allowed prosecutors to charge drug traffickers with homicide if someone died from an overdose of drugs sold by a trafficker, and allocated savings from a 2011 prison reform to fund drug-treatment programs. It would have permitted first responders and addicts' family members to give naloxone, a life-saving drug, to someone who overdosed. Amendments to the bill would have begun an program for addicts to exchange used needles for new ones, decreasing the prevalence of hepatitis C and HIV, and making Zohydro, a powerful painkiller, illegal�until it is changed into a tamper-resistant variety, Scott Wartman and Terry DeMio write for The Kentucky Enquirer.

"During a meeting in Campbell County Thursday night, many who are involved in heroin treatments predicted that a delay in passing the bill will result in more deaths and heartache throughout the commonwealth�and specifically in Northern Kentucky, which has been the most affected area by the deadly drug," Don Weber reports for cn|2's "Pure Politics." 

Charlotte Wethington, who works as a recovery advocate at the residential treatment center the Grateful Life Center, lost her son Chad 12 years ago because of an overdose. "I've been fighting this battle for well over a decade, and it is long overdue, past overdue, that we address the heroin epidemic," Wethington said, Weber writes. Dr. Mike Kalfas, a Northern Kentucky physician who treats heroin addicts, says Senate Bill 5 could have stopped what he says might be HIV or Hepatitis C epidemics in the near future. "Everywhere else there's been an IV drug problem, over time, the drug problem builds, then the Hepatitis C problem builds, and not far behind them is HIV," he said.

Because the bill didn't pass, communities are looking for local solutions, even if resources are limited. Dr. Bonnie Hedrick of the Northern Kentucky Agency for Drug Abuse reported that her organization is not only working on needle cleanup projects but also encouraging local doctors to prescribe the antidote to those who are addicted, Rae Hodge of The Associated Press reports. "Northern Kentucky Drug Strike Force director Bill Mark said that unless Gov. Steve Beshear calls the legislature into a special session to consider the bill, his organization has few tools to fight the state's growing heroin problem."

Beshear hasn't decided whether to call a session. "He argued that every session produces worthy bills that die, and 'it's too early to determine if a special session on any topic is prudent or needed,'" Beshear said, Mike Wynn writes for The Courier-Journal. Republican Senate President Robert Stivers has urged Beshear to call a session. He said, "This isn't political. This is about real people; this is about real problems; this is about real people losing their lives."

Sunday, 20 April 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andCEO of Somerset hospital, rated by Consumer Reports as clearly the least safe in Kentucky, is resigning.Princessiccia

Mark Brenzel (Photo via Somerset Commonwealth Journal)
The CEO of the Kentucky hospital with by far the lowest safety rating from Consumer Reports magazine is resigning. Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital is one of 61 owned in 20 states by LifePoint Hospitals of Brentwood, Tenn.

In an April 14 message to the hospital staff, Mark Brenzel wrote, �A few weeks ago, I informed Scott Raplee, President of LifePoint�s Central Group, about my decision to step down  . . . I have struggled managing some health problems since last year that have required me to limit some activities including work hours. While these lifestyle changes have been helpful, they have made it difficult for me to keep up with the demands of this job.�

Brenzel concluded, �I have greatly enjoyed the last four years and am glad to be ending my hospital management career where it began in 1976 when I first visited LCRH [soon after it opened]. We have made great progress in improving patient care and implementing new strategies that will help LCRH be successful in the new healthcare reform environment. My wife and I are planning to stay in the community for the long term and look forward to supporting LCRH in any way that we can.�

Raplee told the Somerset Commonwealth Journal that LifePoint is doing national search to find a replacement for Brenzel, who will remain as CEO during the search. �We are discussing the possibility of Mark taking a new role with LCRH once the new CEO is hired,� Raplee said in a press release.

Thursday, 17 April 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andHigh school students in Bourbon County campaign for indoor smoking ban, also against teenagers' use of e-cigarettes.Princessiccia

From left: LaShana Harney, Tyler Boyle
and Jessica Jones
(
Cori� Bowen photo)
By Cori� Bowen
Kentucky Health News

A group of young people in a Bluegrass county with a strong tobacco tradition is trying to make the county's indoors smoke-free.

Students Making a Change in our Community started at Bourbon County High School in the late 1990s and was revamped in 2013 by several students and Cyndi Steele of the Bourbon County Health Department. SMACC members said they felt it was time for the voices of youth to be heard again on smoking issues.

�Our main idea is to try to establish a smoke-free ordinance in Bourbon County,� senior Lashana Harney said.

The group has been busy this year collaborating with other youth in Paris at events such as the 2013 National Kick Butts Day � a youth rally against tobacco use and secondhand smoke � as well as attending a recent Kentucky Supreme Court hearing on an anti-smoking ordinance enacted by the Bullitt County Board of Health.

�It was interesting to be at an actual case,� Harney said. �It could go either way with this case.�

Jessica Jones, a junior, said that while SMACC targets adults, it also educates and trains elementary students on how to say no to tobacco, and about the harms of smoking. �We�ve been traveling and training fifth-graders,� she said.

SMACC members are working towards a school regulation against electronic cigarettes, which they think are deceptive. They don�t believe their peers realize the harmful effects associated with them.

�E-cigarettes are becoming more popular than traditional cigarettes,� junior Tyler Boyle said. ��The best way to get to youth is other youth.�

The Kentucky Tobacco Policy Research Program lists chemicals in e-cigarettes that can have negative effects on health including acetone (nail polish remover) and formaldehyde. The legislature recently banned sales of e-cigarettes to people under 18.

Harney, Jones and Boyle say they have seen a decrease in their parents� smoking since each student has become an anti-smoking advocate.

With Steele�s guidance, SMACC plans to keep educating and making its presence known in the community. Members will launch a group-written and directed YouTube video at the end of April that addresses secondhand smoke, titled, �It Could Be You.�

Steele said the road to banning smoking in public places for Bourbon County has been a work in progress for a long time: �I knew 20 years ago that when I chose to do this � it would be my career.� Now she has more help.

Wednesday, 16 April 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andPoll: most Kentuckians support tobacco-free campuses, school nutrition standards and student physical activity requirements.Princessiccia

Kentuckians overwhelmingly support several school policies than can influence student health but are not all embraced by Kentucky schools, according to the latest Kentucky Health Issues Poll, taken in October and November.

The poll showed that 84 percent of Kentuckians�and 72 percent of smokers�support tobacco-free campus policies, which have been adopted by only about a third of Kentucky school districts. The survey also found that 72 percent strongly favor the tobacco-free policies, while 12 percent said they favored it somewhat.

The survey found that 57 percent of Kentucky adults strongly supported, and 21 percent somewhat supported, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's new standards for school nutrition, which reduced salt and saturated fat, increased offerings of whole-grain foods, fruit and vegetables, and put stricter controls on calories and portion size.

Because the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recommends that young people exercise for 60 minutes per day, KHIP's survey asked Kentucky adults if they think Kentucky schools should offer 30 minutes of physical activity per day for students. It found that 88 percent strongly agreed and 9 percent somewhat agreed with the policy. Physical activity is an important topic for Kentucky because 18 percent of Kentucky children are obese, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Democrats were more likely to be supportive of tobacco-free campuses and the new school menus, but there was no partisan difference on physical activity. "Poll findings show that support for the health of our children cuts across party lines," said Susan Zepeda, President/CEO of the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky, which sponsors the poll with Interact for Health of Cincinnati. It is conducted by researchers at the University of Cincinnati.
Princess Health and Princess Health andUK's advanced ventricular-assist device program for heart patients saves and improves lives.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Princess Health andUK's advanced ventricular-assist device program for heart patients saves and improves lives.Princessiccia

Two years ago, John Doty was diagnosed with walking pneumonia, and though antibiotics originally helped, the pneumonia came back with a vengeance, and he went to see a cardiologist. He found out his heart was severely weakened with an ejection fraction of less than 10 percent. "The ejection fraction is a measure of how effectively the heart can pump blood volume into the body, and in a healthy heart, that number falls between 50-65 percent," Allison Perry writes for the University of Kentucky, where Doty received a left ventricular assist device (LVAD) because his heart was so weak.

UK Chandler Hospital is Lexington's only hospital, and one of two in the state, that can perform emergency VAD procedures. "When Mr. Doty was transferred to UK, he was very sick, on a ventilator and requiring two medications to support his blood pressure," said Dr. Navin Rajagopala, a heart failure cardiologist at the UK Gill Heart Institute. "He was going into kidney and liver failure. It was clear that he needed an assist device as soon as possible before the damage to his body was irreversible."

VADs partially take the place of the function of a failing heart. They're more often used for the left ventricle, but some patients need the device for the right ventricle or even two devices to help both ventricles (BiVAD). Because VADs can help the heart rest and heal, some patients receive them after a heart attack or a surgery. People suffering from congestive heart failure might need a VAD for the rest of their lives.

A viral infection damaged Andy Baker's heart, and though he originally resisted the idea of a VAD, now he says he's "happy to keep the device and has no interest in getting a heart transplant," Perry writes. "I had mixed feelings about it," Baker said about getting the VAD, "but it's given me life again."

VAD treatment can save money for the both the patient and the hospital and allow at-home recovery. VADs can allow people to return to their normal lives, participating in many of the same activities they did previously. in about 5 to 10 percent of cases, the VAD even helps the heart to heal to the point that the device can be removed. That was the situation for Doty, whose device was removed 16 weeks after he got it. "I almost feel like I never had it," Doty said. "It wasn't that great of an imposition, considering that it was keeping you alive."

UK performs about 20 to 30 VAD procedures per year, and recently received its third straight biannual Certificate of Distinction from The Joint Commission, the leading accreditor of U.S. health-care organizations. That "shows just what an outstanding job our physicians, nurses and support staff are doing when it comes to treating patients who require these assist devices," said Dr. Maya Guglin, director of UK's Mechanical Assisted Circulation Program. (Read more)

Tuesday, 15 April 2014

Princess Health and2014 TYS10K.Princessiccia

For the 2014 Toronto Yonge Street 10K, H+P decided to put some of our faster runners together to see how quick we could go as a team.

If you didn't check it out before, here is our full team roster.

We were treated with great racing conditions, and without a doubt, a very fast course.  Here is how we did.

Men's Team


The men's team had an amazing experience!  The top 5 runners finished with an average time of 34:53, good enough to come in 1st out of 17 men's team.  CLICK HERE for the full results.

Individual Results CLICK


Coach Sean came in with a time of 33:17.
Runner Rob had an AMAZING H+P debut, coming home with a massive new PB of 33:37.

Coming back from a stress fracture, Brendan Hancock showed that his fitness is coming along nicely, putting in a very solid 35:35.


Ahmed Ahmed had an amazing performance.  He hammered a new personal best of 35:53!

Coming off a winter of volunteering and ultimate frisbee, Jordan Schmidt still managed a massive personal best, coming in at 36:04!


Pat, the best looking runner on the team, also hammered a huge personal best, coming in at 37:26!


Women's Team

Gill had an AMAZING performance.  Despite just coming back form a knee injury, she still managed to crush a new personal best of 40:38!  She also placed 3rd in her AG which included 324 runners!












Jessica (right) also had quite the race!  Just coming back from injury, she still managed a massive PB of 42:01, placing 5th in a very competitive AG!