HEARTH: Offering a Hand, Not a Hand Out

Another great organization we were made aware of  recently: HEARTH is a nonprofit organization for homeless mothers and their children serving the greater Pittsburgh area.

At Benedictine Place, we provide transitional housing for women with as many as four children. Here, women learn to become independent and economically self-sufficient with many supportive services. We provide many different resources, case management and other support services needed by the women in our residences.

PRIDE is a permanent housing program for homeless women with children leaving Benedictine Place, who have a mental health or physical disability.

Benet Woods is a new ambitious development that will provide attractive, permanent, affordable rental housing below market rates for working individuals and families. There will be 6 new duplexes in Ross Township.

For more information, visit http://www.hearth-bp.org/contact.htm.

The TELI Difference

Check out the video below as caregivers whose children are enrolled in one of The Early Learning Institute’s (TELI) programs and services share their experiences and stories.

Be a 6th Grade Mentor

Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC Earns Magnet Designation for Nursing Excellence

Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC has earned prestigious Magnet® recognition, granted by the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) to only 6 percent of hospitals nationwide.

ANCC’s Magnet Recognition Program® recognizes health care organizations for quality patient care, nursing excellence, and innovations in professional nursing practice. Of more than 6,000 health care organizations nationwide, only 395 have achieved Magnet status.i Children’s joins UPMC St. Margaret and UPMC Shadyside as the only UPMC hospitals with the coveted designation.

“We’re proud to be recognized as a Magnet hospital and join a short list of truly outstanding health care organizations,” said Christopher Gessner, president, Children’s Hospital. “Magnet recognition is the highest honor we can achieve for nursing excellence, and it really speaks to the highly professional and team-focused culture that we strive for at Children’s.”

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The Children’s Home Celebrates the Passage of House Bill 1960 Extending its Medical Day Care Services to Age 21

House Bill 1960 Vulakovich – (PN 2674) amends the Prescribed Pediatric Extended Care Centers Act changing the age limit of service from eight years to age 21, allowing medically fragile children to continue receiving the quality care they deserve.

Parents of medically fragile children need options. As the first Pediatric Extended Care Center (PECC) in Pennsylvania, Child’s Way®, a program of The Children’s Home of Pittsburgh & Lemieux Family Center, gives families an alternative and supplement to home nursing and therapeutic care, which medically fragile children require. Child’s Way is dually licensed by the Department of Health as a PECC and by the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare as a day care center.

The former law restricted the care of children in PECCs to the age of eight; leaving no options for parents whose children aged-out of the program —children like A.J.

On December 16, 2011, A.J., who has attended Child’s Way since he was just five-months-old, turned nine, which aged him out of the program according to the former law. A.J. has Congenital Muscular Dystrophy, chronic lung disease, scoliosis and seizures. He is ventilator dependent, requires a feeding tube, and receives special liquid feedings to allow him to thrive and control seizure activity. A.J. is administered four medications for seizures, aerosol treatments for his lung disease, and several other life-sustaining medications and treatments every day. While at Child’s Way, A.J. has consistent nursing care, which has aided in evaluating and preventing many healthcare complications.

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Developmental Therapists—Gatekeepers for Pediatric Care

In medicine, general practitioners are known as the gatekeepers to the health care system. They look at the overall health of a patient before directing them to other specialists if needed.

Developmental therapists serve in much of the same role in children, especially in children ages birth to five who may need Early Intervention services due to a pending diagnosis of Autism and/or other neurodevelopment disorders.

“Developmental therapists look at the big picture of a child’s life and specifically HOW that child is developing during what we feel are the most significant period a youngster’s life which is birth through five years,” said Susan Taylor, a developmental specialist for The Early Learning Institute (TELI) for the past twenty years. “We like to say we tie things together which in many cases involves other types of therapies such as physical, speech and occupational therapy.”

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Maternal/Infant Health in Guatemala

From the GlobalLinksPGH YouTube Channel: In Guatemala, the rate of maternal death is eleven times that in the US. Infants die at a rate six times that in the US. Global Links is working to help change that.

Pediatric Extended Care Center Calls for Change in Age Restrictions to Aide Parents of Medically Fragile Children

House Bill 1960 Vulakovich – (PN 2674) Amends the Prescribed Pediatric Extended Care Centers Act changing the age limit from eight years to 21 years of age effective immediately. HB 1960 moves to the PA Senate Committee on Appropriations in January 2012.

Parents of medically fragile children need options. As the first Pediatric Extended Care Center (PECC) in Pennsylvania, Child’s Way®, a program of The Children’s Home of Pittsburgh & Lemieux Family Center, gives families an alternative and supplement to home nursing and therapeutic care, which medically fragile children require. Child’s Way is dually licensed by the Department of Health as a PECC and by the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare as a day care center.

Unfortunately, current law restricts the care of children in PECCs to the age of eight; leaving no options for parents whose children age-out—children like A.J.

On December 16, 2011, A.J., who has attended Child’s Way since he was just five-months-old, turned nine. A.J. has Congenital Muscular Dystrophy, chronic lung disease, scoliosis and seizures. He is ventilator dependent, requires a feeding tube, and receives special liquid feedings to allow him to thrive and control seizure activity. A.J. is administered four medications for seizures, aerosol treatments for his lung disease, and several other life-sustaining medications and treatments every day. While at Child’s Way, A.J. has consistent nursing care, which has aided in evaluating and preventing many healthcare complications.

[Read more...]

Spotlight on eKidzCare

For those of you who may know someone who needs special pediatric services, you may want to give eKidzCare a call.

To learn more about this wonderful organization, please visit http://ekidzcare.com/. eKidzCare is a Pediatric Home Health Care provider and is the newest member of the EPeople Health Care, Inc. Family of Care. They offer a wide range of Pediatric services and are looking forward to becoming a leader in the pediatric home care industry.

Physician’s Practice Management—A Wellness Program for Your IT Infrastructure

James Troup

By James Troup

Much like a Wellness Program is key to maintaining physical health and longevity, a proactive approach to protecting data integrity and managing your primary IT infrastructure can make all the difference to your business and bottom line. Equally important is a prescription for a Disaster Recovery Plan. This secondary level of preventative maintenance provides peace of mind and could prove to be the lifeline that will rehabilitate your Practice in the event of a disaster.

As CEO of Pediatric Alliance, one of the largest physicians’ practices in Pittsburgh, I recently went through the process of evaluating our IT infrastructure. When Pediatric Alliance moved patient records to an Electronic Health Records (EHR) system about 2 years ago, we rolled out each of our 14 practice locations one at a time, making adjustments along the way.  During this implementation, it became readily apparent how much time I was spending worrying about our physical IT infrastructure, and how little time I had to focus on customizing the new EHR system and teaching our docs how to use it.

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Hanging Out In The Widdahood

By Catherine Tidd

This may sound a little strange…but I’ve had two lives.

My first life was pretty typical:  House in the ‘burbs, nice husband who was pretty easy on the eyes, three kids I was sometimes tempted to put out on the driveway with a sign that said “free to a good home” but who were overall pretty good.

My second life started in July of 2007 when I suddenly became the “it could be worse” person of my social circle.  You know…that girl who, when you’re having a bad day, you think, “At least I’m not her!”

Not really who I wanted to be in my early 30s.

I became that person because my husband was in an accident on his way to work and died a few days later, leaving me to raise three small children on my own.

That’s right.  At the ripe old age of 31, I became a widow and the most “single” single mother I know.

The year that followed was a complete blur of what I now like to call “manic confusion.”  I seemed determined to prove all of the experts wrong when they said “time would heal.”  I didn’t have time for time to heal.  I wanted to get my life back on track, find a new career, go back to school, sell a house, buy a new one, get my body in decathlon shape, and get my 3 kids under 5 into Harvard.  And it all needed to happen yesterday.

I’m not wild about the word “denial” but that’s the closest thing I can think of to describing it.

When I finally came up for air and slowed down enough to digest that this was really my life, I started looking for someone like me who might understand my brand of crazy.  And you know what I found?

A big, fat NOTHING.

In my quest to find people who might understand what it’s like to date when you’re an emotional wreck and why it’s perfectly normal to let loose on unsuspecting strangers at Wal-Mart…I became that person for everyone else.  I started writing a blog under the name “Widow Chick” on subjects like “are you’re still ‘in-lawed’ with your in-laws” and “becoming your own superhero when you learn how to start your snow blower and mow your own lawn since there’s no one else around to do it.”

The next thing I knew, Widow Chick had almost 1000 people following her on Facebook.  And after awhile I realized:  They’re not following her because of her Cindy Crawford looks (I know…it was a surprise to me too).  They’re following her because they’re looking for each other.

So, in January of 2011, I launched the first free peer support network dedicated to anyone who has lost a significant other called www.theWiddahood.com.  The best way I can describe it is that it’s kind of like a Facebook for widows.  They can instant message, blog, form discussion groups and all kinds of stuff.  But the best part about it is that they can do a location search, look at someone’s profile to see what they have in common…and finally find each other.

And now, three months later…that’s exactly what almost 1000 widows worldwide are doing.

Four years ago, I would have said there was no way I could be the kind of person who could pick up a life that had been so completely broken and glue it back together again.  But you know what?  We’re all a lot stronger than we think we are.  If you get nothing else from this story, just remember this:  You never know where life is going to take you and it can change any second.  How you deal with it is completely within your control.

And you should always have enough wine on hand to do a little soul-searching when you need it.