Archive for the ‘Health News’ Category

Nurses for Africa bring health care to Zambia

July 25, 2011

Nurses for Africa bring health care to Zambia | garner, nurses, people – The Telegraph.

July 25, 2011 10:36 AM

ALTON – Three caring nurses plan to bring love, support and donations to the “poorest of the poor” in Zambia in September, while also feeding and attending to some of the Africans’ medical needs.

“We go to visit and treat medical issues; we provide care to people who want to get it,” said Valerie Garner, 38, of Greenfield, a registered nurse who made the trip last year. “We reach people who are not even on the ladder of help. They are the poorest of the poor. We provide health basics, but our most important aspect is our ‘touch.'” (more…)

Warm Weather Dangers

July 19, 2011

When the heat and humidity index reaches dangerously high levels,
everyone needs to know the dangers of overexposure to the sun and heat.

Many of you are probably well aware of concerns about dehydration
and heat-related illnesses, but a “refresher” may be helpful.

The link below is an advisory outlining the dangers of overexposure to the sun and heat, and proactive measures that can be taken to avoid heat related illnesses.

Stay cool and be safe!!

 

WARM WEATHER DANGERS!

Elderly Heart Failure Patients Who Need Skilled Nursing Care Often Sicker

May 31, 2011

Reposted from http://www.redorbit.com

Elderly patients with heart failure who need skilled nursing care after hospital discharge are often sicker, at higher risk for poor outcomes and are more likely than other patients to die or be rehospitalized within one year, according to research reported in Circulation: Heart Failure, an American Heart Association journal.

“Patients hospitalized with heart failure are high risk to start with,” said Larry A. Allen, M.D., M.H.S., lead author of the study and assistant professor of cardiology at the University of Colorado-Denver School of Medicine in Aurora. “If they have to go to a skilled nursing facility, patients, families and providers shouldn’t be under the impression that life will, necessarily, go back to normal. We should help patients and their families recognize this high risk and adjust their medical decision making appropriately.”

Heart failure affects nearly 6 million Americans, and is the primary cause of hospitalizations among Medicare patients. Although many of these patients are discharged to skilled nursing facilities, the type of treatment they receive often varies.

A skilled nursing facility is similar to a nursing home, but can also provide specialized care, such as physical therapy, for patients unable to resume independent living. Skilled nursing patients may by nature face extra challenges, including less mobility, cognitive impairment or poor in-home support ― all of which are determinants to outcomes.
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“We don’t have a lot of data about the quality of care given in these facilities,” Allen said. “This analysis highlights the need to better understand this unique group of patients and the care they receive.

Are they and their families getting information they need to make informed decisions on alternatives to care for short- and long-term prognosis?”

Allen and colleagues analyzed data on 15,459 Medicare patients ― enrolled in the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines®-Heart Failure program at 149 hospitals in 2005 and 2006 ― and discharged from the hospital after three or more days of heart failure treatment. Patients’ average age was 80, most were white and 55 percent were female. The researchers found that:

* About one-fourth of patients were discharged to a skilled nursing facility.
* Thirty days post-discharge, 14 percent of patients discharged to skilled nursing facilities had died of any cause, compared to 4 percent of those who returned home from the hospital.
* At one year, 54 percent of patients discharged to skilled nursing facilities had died of any cause, compared to 29 percent of patients discharged to home.

Furthermore, there was a higher rehospitalization rate among patients discharged to skilled nursing facilities. Thirty days after initial hospital discharge, 27 percent of patients discharged to skilled nursing facilities were rehospitalized for any cause, compared to 24 percent of patients discharged to home. One year after discharge, rehospitalizations were common in both groups, although the difference between them remained steady, with 76 percent of skilled nursing and 72 percent of home patients readmitted to the hospital.

Patients discharged to skilled nursing facilities were more likely than other patients to be older, female, hospitalized longer and to have other complications in addition to heart failure.

“Even after adjusting for patient differences, a strong predictor of mortality in the next year was discharge to a skilled nursing facility,” Allen said. “This has important implications for talking to patients and their families during the initial hospitalization for heart failure.

They need to have clear expectations for survival and rehospitalization. Options for advanced therapies and end-of-life care, including hospice and advanced directives, should be discussed for these high-risk patients.”

Skilled nursing use varied by region. The highest rate was in the northeastern United States, where nearly one-third of heart-failure patients left the hospital for skilled nursing facilities. The lowest was in the west, where about one-fourth required this type of care.

Reposted from www.redorbit.com

http://ow.ly/56CmC

Quick Stress Relief

April 20, 2011

Acknowledging stress is the first step in lessening its impact. Many of us spend so much time in a stressed state, we have forgotten what it feels like to be fully relaxed and alert. Being stressed out feels normal.

What does it feel like to be calm and stress-free? You can see that “just right” inner balance in the smile of a happy baby—a face so full of joy it reminds adults of the balanced emotional state that most of us have misplaced. In adulthood, being balanced means maintaining a calm state of energy, alertness, and focus. Calmness is more than just feeling relaxed; being alert is an equally important aspect of finding the balance needed to withstand stress.

If you don’t feel calm, alert, productive, and focused most of the time in your daily life, then too much stress may be a problem for you.

Tips for recognizing when you’re stressed

Hush the voice that’s telling you, ‘Oh, I’m fine.” Notice how you’re breathing has changed. Are your muscles tense? Awareness of your physical response to stress will help regulate the tension when it occurs.

When you’re tired, your eyes feel heavy and you might rest your head on your hand. When you’re happy, you laugh easily. And when you are stressed, your body lets you know that too. Try to get in the habit of paying attention to your body’s clues….

 

Read the rest of this article here:   http://www.helpguide.org/mental/quick_stress_relief.htm

Reprinted with permission from Helpguide.org © 2001-2010. All rights reserved. For more information, visit www.Helpguide.org.

March 30th is National Doctor’s Day!

March 30, 2011

National Doctor's Day

March 30th is National Doctor's Day

We at ACCESS Healthcare (formerly ACCESS Nursing) would like to honor all our physicians today as it is National Doctor’s Day!    Below is a brief history of how the day came to be.

The first Doctors Day observance was March 30, 1933 in Winder, Georgia.  Eudora Brown Almond, wife of Dr. Charles B. Almond, decided to set aside a day to honor physicians. This first observance included the mailing greeting cards and placing flowers on graves of deceased doctors. The red carnation is commonly used as the symbolic flower for National Doctors Day.

On March 30, 1958, a Resolution Commemorating Doctors Day was adopted by the United States House of Representatives. In 1990, legislation was introduced in the House and Senate to establish a national Doctors Day. Following overwhelming approval by the United States Senate and the House of Representatives, on October 30, 1990, President George Bush signed S.J. RES. #366 (which became Public Law 101-473) designating March 30 as “National Doctors Day.”

Doctors Day marks the date that Crawford W. Long, M.D., of Jefferson, GA, administered the first ether anesthetic for surgery on March 30, 1842. On that day, Dr. Long administered ether anesthesia to a patient and then operated to remove a tumor from the man’s neck. Later, the patient would swear that he felt nothing during the surgery and wasn’t aware the surgery was over until he awoke.

That’s the history behind the day.. Now go thank your doctor today!

www.accessnursing.com

www.accesshealthcareservices.com

Medicare Cuts… Looking for Solutions For Seniors

September 22, 2009

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The push for Medicare cuts is no secret, and certainly a controversial political problem, but we’re not looking for a debate on what’s going on in Washington right now. We’re looking for solutions for seniors.

Our only  concern, of course, is the welfare of our aging citizens and the quality of their health care.  Beyond the practical aspects of this problem is the inevitable emotional and psychological fallout that would make seniors think twice about using medical services, certainly to the point of foregoing treatments and avoiding doctors as they will likely  be concerned about the costs.

 Unfortunately, as the current strategy to expand healthcare to all Americans now looms ahead, there is the painfully frightening reality that seniors could very easily be hardest hit, compromising their own health care in order to support younger uninsured or underinsured Americans.  The plan seeks to fund this change by chopping $316 billion from Medicare and Medicaid.  

 With great opposition to many of the budget reforms that will soon reach Congress.

Douglas Elmendorf, Director of the Congressional Budget Office, gave testimony on other ways that Congress could lessen the sacrifice seniors would have to suffer at such a tender and vulnerable time in their lives.  Elmendorf was particularly sensitive to the fact that these cuts would occur at a time when a disproportionate amount of their income is dedicated to health care.

 Certainly this is a “necessary evil” notion, thoroughly sketched out, and one that must be turned around by concerned citizens and our lawmakers, many of whom recognize the inequity of the budget cut proposals as well as the disrespect and disservice that is being visited upon the ever-growing senior population.  Elmendorf also explored the repercussions of many current medigap restrictions that would further erode the Medicare and Medicaid support for which seniors are now being put in the untenable position of having to fight.

 Ask Daniel O’Connell, Chairman of The Senior Citizens League, about how these proposals would prevent seniors from receiving the full supplemental coverage for their Medicare co-insurance.   His response?  Short but not very sweet. “People rely on their Medicare supplements to protect their retirement incomes from being obliterated by healthcare costs.” 

 The Senior Citizens League is urging Medicare beneficiaries and their loved ones to remain informed about the proposals to expand healthcare that could strongly negatively impact their Medicare costs.

 The very best way for seniors to do that is the simple, grass-roots method.  You and the seniors in your life must contact your Congressmen and Congresswomen and tell them exactly how much you (and those seniors you love) are obligated to spend on healthcare and how crucial supplemental coverage is to keeping you covered and protected. The Senior Citizens League offers a free online newsletter that will keep everyone up-to-date on Medicare and Social Security: To receive it, go to www.SeniorsLeague.org.

 North Carolina’s Congressman Larry Kissell wrote a compelling letter to Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.  His words are  insightful and resonant to all of us,  and  here are a few excerpts: “I believe it is crucial that comprehensive health care reform not include cuts in home health care services…instead it must use Medicare and Medicaid funding wisely to allow more access to home health care with a focus on wellness and independent living. If we seek true reform, we should apply common sense and compassion by letting home health care providers continue to offer vital services to senior citizens while remaining an important part of the economy of countless communities. There is no accomplishment in health care reform which punishes the competent while ignoring the needs of the sick and aging. ” 

 As Kissell understands, add to the most crucial aspect of the crisis – preserving optimal care for the chronically ill and elderly—the financial damage that will be suffered by the ultimate loss of income for the caregivers and those who employ them.  Of course, it is a circular problem, as the quality of patient care will be terribly affected.  To extract and reexamine another point in Kissell’s letter to Pelosi, if the cuts are not prevented, the lack of compassion will be as devastating as the loss of a practical, cost effective way to care for our aging citizens.

 Kissell also writes: “In treating patients with chronic diseases, an estimated $30 billion can be saved by expanding access to home health care. Home health care professionals keep senior citizens healthier while allowing them to stay in their homes; and they do it for far cheaper than do the alternative treatments. Again, it makes no sense to force out of business through government meddling, people who do good work, save the overall health care system billions of dollars and create jobs.”

 You can help stop Congress from drastically reducing Medicare reimbursement for home health services to the chronically sick and elderly. Your signature can truly help make a difference!  Please sign the petition online to stop the cuts to Medicare today.  Just visit this link and let your voice be heard to preserve the quality of life and healthcare our seniors so greatly deserve.  Click over to: www.Wecansavehomehealth.com .

National Effort to Reduce Home Care Cuts for Medicare Services

August 28, 2009

nurses1Congress is proposing to drastically reduce Medicare reimbursement for home health services to the chronically sick and elderly. They plan on cutting $57 billion out of the Medicare home health benefit over 10 years. Home health represents only 4.5% of the total Medicare budget, but 11% of the proposed total cuts.

Home health is a key solution for lowering the cost of health care. It is the most cost effective way to care for the sick and elderly. More importantly, the sick and elderly want to stay in their home. They recover more quickly at home with family and friends. Without home health care, seniors will be readmitted into hospitals and transferred to nursing homes, both of which will put a greater financial burden on our Medicare system.

Many of you contract with Medicare Certified agencies or have family members on Medicare services. If you use this link below, you can send an automatic email signature to a national petition to stop cuts to home care. If you put in the comment section “HHSSANJ” they will know we participated. Medicare cuts today, who knows where they will cut tomorrow!

www.Wecansavehomehealth.com

Thank you and have a good day!