Sunday, 10 April 2016

Princess Health and In Pineville, a new administrator from a Texas management firm is shaking up the local hospital in an effort to save it. Princessiccia

Kentucky Health News

The crisis in rural hospitals is driven not only by changes in federal reimbursement and patients' increasing preference for larger hospitals, but in some towns by managerial shortcomings that may follow local tradition but hurt the bottom line. Changing those practices can be difficult, but the new administrator of the Pineville Community Hospital appears to be having success as he grabs the bull by the horns.

Stace Holland (Modern Healthcare photo by Harris Meyer)
Longtime rural hospital administrator Stace Holland has put PCH "on the road to recovery by cutting costs, bringing in more federal funds and getting staffers to change their ways," Modern Healthcare reports in a long story than delves into the details, from specific expense cuts to clashes with physicians.

The 120-bed hospital is staffed for only 30 (not counting a 26-bed nursing unit) and was losing $6 million a year. Eight months after taking over as CEO, "Holland is well on the way to turning around a struggling not-for-profit facility that still expects to lose $3 million this year. With support from the Plano, Texas-based Community Hospital Corp., which took over management of the hospital in October 2014, Holland already has made significant progress toward stabilizing its finances," Harris Meyer reports.

"Holland faced a challenge that is all too familiar to rural hospital leaders around the country: declining patient volumes; a preponderance of low-paying Medicare, Medicaid and uninsured patients; public and private rate squeezes; high incidence of chronic disease and drug abuse; difficulty in recruiting physicians; and a shortage of funds to invest in new equipment and services. . . .  To save the hospital, whose previous CEO served nearly 40 years, Holland, Chief Nursing Officer Dinah Jarvis, and CHC knew they had to take tough steps that would unsettle physicians, staffers and local residents accustomed to the old comfortable ways."

The new ways included a partnership with the Baptist Health hospital in Corbin to help PCH compete with the Appalachian Regional Hospital in nearby Middlesboro, partly with a 12-bed geriatric psychiatry unit; a federal rural health facility license that significantly boosted Medicare and Medicaid payments," and "clinical protocols to improve quality of care and reduce readmissions," which were so frequent in 2013 and 2014 that they drew Medicare's maximum penalty, Meyer reports. But the new protocols, such as "pre-discharge education of congestive-heart-failure patients about medication use and weight monitoring," riled some physicians.

Dr. Steven Morgan told Meyer, �They want to pound square pegs into round holes.� Dr. Shawn Fugate said he had to fight with CHC for "what he thought were adequate nurse staffing levels, and that CHC is making too many important decisions from afar," Meyer reports. As an employee of CHC rather than the hospital, Holland can "speak frankly," Meyer writes. "He recently told an older surgeon who serves on the board that it was time for him to retire."

Pineville is on the old Wilderness Road (in red) and US 25-E.
Pineville Mayor Scott Madon told Meyer, �Stace has an unbelievable task in what he's dealing with. He's trying to reinvent the rural hospital. He has to change the whole thinking, and people don't like it.� But longtime hospital board member David Gambrell, a real-estate agent whose son will start as a family physician there soon, said Holland's approach has been �refreshing. . . . We need that kind of honesty. It's taken Stace coming here to see we needed a new vision.�

Meyer reports, "Local leaders see the Pineville hospital's survival as pivotal to the future of the town and Bell County, which has no other hospital and has lost many coal-mining jobs. They say the hospital, the city's largest employer, is key to their economic redevelopment efforts. . . . The Pineville hospital has strong customer loyalty. Its staff�most of whom are local residents who have worked there for many years�have deep ties to the patient population." Wilma Sizemore, a 70-year-old disabled woman who was admitted in mid-February for bronchitis and dizziness, told him, �I wouldn't doctor nowhere else but this hospital. They treat me like family here.�

Princess Health and Is pervasive pornography the newest public-health crisis?. Princessiccia

Gail Dines, a professor of sociology at Wheelock College in Boston and author of Pornland: How Porn has Hijacked our Sexuality, argues in an essay for The Washington Post that "porn is a public health crisis rather than a private matter."

The internet has made pornography generally accessible, to the point that porn sites get more visitors than Netflix, Amazon and Twitter combined" (a Huffington Post headline from 2013), some researchers estimate the average age of first viewing porn at 11, and "free and widely available pornography is often violent, degrading and extreme."

Gail Dines
Dines notes studies that have found correlations between porn viewing and sexual harassment and toleration of sexual assault, and that college-age women whose partners use porn "suffered diminished self-esteem, relationship quality and sexual satisfaction."

"As the evidence piles up, a coalition of academics, health professionals, educators, feminist activists and caregivers has decided that they can no longer allow the porn industry to hijack the physical and emotional well-being of our culture," Dines writes. "Culture Reframed, an organization I founded and currently chair, is pioneering a strategy to address porn as the public health crisis of the digital age. We are developing educational programs for parents, youth and a range of professionals that aim to help shift the culture from one that normalizes a pornographic, oppression-based sexuality to one that values and promotes a sexuality rooted in healthy intimacy, mutual care and respect."

Dines concludes, "Parents and educators at every level need to know that if porn is not discussed in a research-based, age-appropriate sexual health curriculum, its effects will surely show up as sexual harassment, dating violence and inadvertent �child pornography� on students� phones. Pornography can cause lifelong problems if young people are not taught to distinguish between exploitative porn sex and healthy, safe sex. As the research shows, porn is not merely a moral nuisance and subject for culture-war debates. It�s a threat to our public health."

Saturday, 9 April 2016

Princess Health and  April 9th, 2016 NBC, Here I Come. Princessiccia

Princess Health and April 9th, 2016 NBC, Here I Come. Princessiccia

April 9th, 2016 NBC, Here I Come

Today has been crazy busy--even for a regular Saturday, add to it getting ready for my trip to NYC, and yeah-- it's no wonder...

I must drop in bed right now. I'll be at the airport by 4am. I'm looking forward to the Live-Tweet Stream tomorrow! I'll take you along. You don't need a Twitter account to see my Twitter feed. Just visit www.twitter.com/seanaanderson

If you have Twitter, I'm @SeanAAnderson

See you in New York!! Today on NBC, here I come!

Today's Live-Tweet Stream:




























Thank you for reading and your continued support,
Strength,
Sean

Friday, 8 April 2016

Princess Health and  April 8th, 2016 I'll Keep Checking On That Status. Princessiccia

Princess Health and April 8th, 2016 I'll Keep Checking On That Status. Princessiccia

April 8th, 2016 I'll Keep Checking On That Status

Blessings are all around for me this week. I'm full of enormous gratitude. And these blessings come right in the middle of some of the busiest days I've experienced in a long time. I think that's good, actually. The busy schedule challenges me to be extra aware and reminds me to embrace the fundamental elements of my continued maintenance, tightly. 

Stability can be easily sacrificed in the middle of high stress and emotions. I mean, seriously--you're reading the blog of a professional stress/emotional eater! It really wasn't that long ago when my solution to almost everything was more food. The key to refraining from that sacrifice, for me, starts with acknowledging that food isn't a fixer. Food isn't a therapist. Food's only job is to nourish my body. And this acknowledgment pushes me in the direction of facing feelings--instead of stuffing them, and handling stress with action instead of retreat. Staying centered spiritually through my private/personal prayer and meditative time is imperative--and staying in regular contact with good one on one and group support connections is critically important for me in this process.

One of the big differences between my initial weight loss and my turnaround from relapse/regain is an awareness and appreciation of how the slip and slide can start. The humbling experience of regain cemented the fact that I'm never beyond relapse. My continued maintenance isn't guaranteed. I don't "got this," I only have the rails of support I've installed within my plan.

Taking what I do seriously, each and every day--while doing it in a way that makes it easy to laugh, smile and enjoy life along the way, and always remembering that I'm only as stable as my next good choice--keeps me well.

The outpouring of support surrounding Monday's Today Show appearance has been like having a birthday on Facebook every day, all week long. You know what I mean? Your birthday hits and suddenly your Facebook page lights up like the 4th of July and Christmas rolled into one! I'm immensely grateful for this level of support. At the same time, I struggle with the fact that sometimes, and especially of late, I can't keep up--because I want to personally say, "thank you" to each and every post--and every comment.

Today was long. I finished my morning radio show a few minutes early in order to travel twenty-five minutes away to a rare early-morning location broadcast. I grabbed some almonds and water immediately after because I knew lunch would come a little later than normal. I made my eye brow waxing appointment (omgoodness--my uni-brow is relentless. My eye brows grow at pace rivaling the late-great Andy Rooney from 60 Minutes), grabbed coffee and headed to the station for production work. I didn't leave the studio until after four pm. Kristin gave me a ride to the repair shop for my car--then it was home for a fast one on one support call--and a much needed nap. 

My head hit the pillow not too long after News Channel 4 in Oklahoma City presented a feature story on my weight loss and upcoming trip to New York. My phone immediately lit up with loved ones and friends congratulating me on the segment and also with Facebook notifications. I spent some time conversing with a few friends before setting a couple of nap alarms, insuring a well rested and productive Friday night. I prepared a good dinner and enjoyed a fabulous workout, too.

It's been a well rounded day!  

A big thank you to Lance West, the anchor in the following segment--and much gratitude to Lacey Lett and photojournalist Kevin Josefy for a superior job and a tremendous honor:

What a cool coincidence that this story started at precisely 5:05pm? 505 was my starting weight in September 2008.

Tomorrow starts early with a location broadcast from a big grocery store followed by packing and preparing for the 6am Sunday flight from Oklahoma City.

These are exciting times on the DDWL! I feel like I'm navigating it well. I'll keep checking on that status!

Today's Live-Tweet Stream:






































Thank you for reading and watching! And thank you for your continued support,
Strength,
Sean
Princess Health and  Feds find security flaws in Kynect; state says no data breaches; problems also found in federal exchange. Princessiccia

Princess Health and Feds find security flaws in Kynect; state says no data breaches; problems also found in federal exchange. Princessiccia

State health-insurance exchanges in Kentucky, Vermont and California had "significant weaknesses" in protecting their electronic information from hackers, the Government Accountability Office said in a report last month.

"These included insufficient encryption and inadequately configured firewalls, among others," said the report from the investigating arm of Congress. "In September 2015, GAO reported these results to the three states, which generally agreed and have plans in place to address the weaknesses."

Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar and Frankfort-based Adam Beam of The Associated Press report, "Vermont authorities would not discuss the findings, but officials in California and Kentucky said this week that there was no evidence hackers succeeded in stealing anything."

The report said the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which oversees the exchanges, had not fully implemented its oversight of their security and privacy protections.

"The GAO report examined the three states' systems from October 2013 to March 2015 and released an abbreviated, public version of its findings last month without identifying the states," AP reports. "Thursday, the GAO revealed the states' names in response to a Freedom of Information [Act] request from the AP. According to the GAO, one state did not encrypt passwords, potentially making it easy for hackers to gain access to individual accounts. One state did not properly use a filter to block hostile attempts to visit the website. And one state did not use the proper encryption on its servers, making it easier for hackers to get in. The report did not say which state had what problem."

Steve Beshear, who was governor until early December, told AP through a spokeswoman that "because of the time required to fix the technical issues, not all those issues had been addressed" when Republican Gov. Matt Bevin took over. "It is important to note that there were never any security breaches of any kind, and no one's information was ever compromised."

Doug Hogan, spokesman for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, told AP the fixes "are in various stages of completion and implementation" and security is "of the utmost importance" to the Bevin administration.

Bevin is dismantling Kentucky's exchange, which Beshear branded as Kynect, and planning to transfer the 93,000-plus people who used it to buy federally subsidized policies to the federal exchange, Healthcare.gov.

"But Kentuckians' information might not be any safer on the federal exchange," AP reports. "According to the GAO report, Healthcare.gov had 316 security incidents between October 2013 and March 2015. Such incidents can include unauthorized access, disclosure of data or violations of security practices. None resulted in lost or stolen data, but the GAO said technical weaknesses with the federal system 'will likely continue to jeopardize the confidentiality, integrity and availability of Healthcare.gov.'"

Princess Health and Dr. Nikki Stone and mobile dental team in Hazard have helped cut tooth decay in the region 20 percent in a decade of operation. Princessiccia

By Ann Blackford
University of Kentucky

When Dr. Daria "Nikki" Stone, associate professor at the University of Kentucky College of Dentistry, became the director of the Ronald McDonald Care Mobile program in Hazard, she realized she was finally in the right place at the right time, where her piece of the puzzle fit in the big picture.

Growing up in Blackey, in Letcher County about 30 minutes from Hazard, she didn't know she wanted to be a dentist. She was always a good student and loved science classes in school but her passion had always been art. At her father's coaxing, she entered college as a pre-med major, and discovered through the UK Health Careers Opportunities Program that dentistry was a profession that merged her love of art and science.

Dr. Daria "Nikki" Stone (University of Kentucky photos)
"Now, I have a passion and love for what I do, preventing tooth decay in children in elementary schools, preschools and Head Start centers in Eastern Kentucky and advocating for underserved children," Stone said.

Stone married her high school sweetheart, Mark, and they have two children; Ana and Ian, 16 and 13. Her early career included part-time teaching and covering clinics in Prestonsburg and Hazard as a stay-at-home mom and working in New Mexico for the National Health Service Corps to retire a school loan. She got a transfer to be closer to family, and her last year with NHSC was just across the Kentucky border in Virginia.

She had been practicing dentistry for 10 years when UK hired her to head the Mobile Care program, coming full circle to the place she holds most dear.

"I love that I've been able to come home to Appalachia, there is no more beautiful place or more wonderful culture," she said. "I love the way my people talk and hug and laugh, and I love that we are a deeply spiritual people who are deeply connected to one another. My children are 10th generation Appalachians and I wouldn't want to raise them anywhere else."

UK's North Fork Valley Community Health Center's mobile dental outreach program celebrated 10 years of serving children in 2015. Stone has directed the program since its inception. She and several dental hygienists and assistants provide preventive dental care twice a year to 2,400 Head Start children in Perry, Knott, Letcher and Leslie counties and once a year to all public elementary schools in Perry and Knott counties. Children receive dental exams, cleanings, fluoride treatments, sealants and both classroom-based and individualized educational sessions. Dental education is also available to parents and teachers at various community events.

"Teaching is actually one of my favorite parts of my job," Stone said. "I also love the practical, day-to-day side of being with children, and I also love the philosophical aspect of why we're doing what we're doing. . . . Children are truly a blessing to work with; they are so very honest and keep us laughing all day. I love that we are preventing tooth decay before it starts and lowering the tooth decay rates in Eastern Kentucky, which has some of the highest rates of tooth decay in the nation."

Stone and patient Wyatt "Bebo" Goins at
Roy G. Eversole Preschool in Hazard
Tooth-decay rates in the center's service area have decreased nearly 20 percentage points, urgent dental needs have been cut in half, and treatment-completion rates for Head Start children with urgent dental needs have increased dramatically, from 8 percent to more than 60 percent.

"When the UK dental outreach team started seeing children in local schools and Head Start centers in 2006, over half the children in Perry County had untreated cavities and 20 percent had painful abscessed teeth," Stone recalled.

Stone said she has found her place in the world. "I once had a very spunky little girl come on the mobile unit and she was very excited to be there," she recalled. "She couldn�t stop talking and she spoke really fast, going from one topic to another without transition. She jumped up in the dental chair and asked me this question, 'Did you wish upon a star to be a dentist?' It really caught me off guard and I had to stop and think about it for a couple of seconds. I realized I probably had not ever wished upon a star to be a dentist, but for some reason God chose to bless me with the opportunity to be a dentist to this beautiful little girl anyway, and to provide preventive dental care services to over 10,000 children just like her who have come on the mobile unit in the past 10 years. And maybe some of them will wish upon a star to become dentists someday."
Princess Health and  Nominations are being sought for award recognizing lifetime contribution to rural health in Kentucky; deadline is June 17. Princessiccia

Princess Health and Nominations are being sought for award recognizing lifetime contribution to rural health in Kentucky; deadline is June 17. Princessiccia

In June of 2003, the Kentucky Rural Health Association began an award honoring a lifetime contribution to rural health in Kentucky. The first recipient was Dr. Dan Martin of the Trover Foundation in Madisonville. The annual award now bears his name and is given each year to an individual who has provided many years of service to rural Kentuckians. Last year�s recipient was Joseph E. Smith of the Kentucky Primary Care Association.

KRHA is seeking nominations for this year's award. The nominee�s contributions might be in direct patient care, health professions education, health administration, health promotion or public advocacy. To nominate someone, please download the nomination form here and e-mail it directly to linda.asher@uky.edu or to her at the Office of Rural and Community Health, 2195 Harrodsburg Rd., Suite 125, Room 1213, Lexington KY 40504-3504, or fax to (859)323-1043. The deadline for nominations is Friday, June 17.

The award committee ranks the candidates using established criteria and makes a recommendation to the KRHA Executive Committee, which selects the honoree, if someone is deemed appropriate. The award will be presented at the KRHA annual conference Aug. 25-26 in Bowling Green. Any KRHA member who would like to serve on the Dan Martin Award Committee should email linda.asher@uky.edu. "There are many dedicated, compassionate people at work in rural health in Kentucky and we look forward to being able to give them some well-deserved recognition," Asher says. "Now is your chance to help us thank someone that you think deserves recognition. We need and appreciate your input."