Thursday, August 23, 2012

Our View: Desmarais did a lot for The Medical Center

The Daily News, originally published on 8/23/2012

There likely won’t be any hospital buildings or programs named for John Desmarais – he wanted it that way.

But that doesn’t mean the man who quietly guided Commonwealth Health Corp. and its affiliates, including The Medical Center, won’t have a long-lasting legacy on the medical industry here.

The Medical Center probably wouldn’t be where it is today without his guidance. When Desmarais started here in 1975, it was still a hospital on the hill called the Bowling Green-Warren County Community Hospital. The hospital moved from the hill in 1980 to where it is now and became known as The Medical Center.

Commonwealth Health was formed in 1984 to oversee the hospital’s operation, as well as other ancillary organizations. Commonwealth Health actually has Medical Center campuses in Scottsville and Franklin, is part owner in UrgentCare and is about to acquire Western Kentucky Diagnostic Imaging.

While Desmarais retired in 2010 as president and CEO, some recalled his contributions.

Anna Sue Heller recently wrote a letter to the editor about how Desmarais inspired her father through his grand vision.

“He wanted to elevate health care for Bowling Green, Warren County and surrounding areas. The man was not satisfied with just an adequate hospital, but saw a need for a medical center for the future,” Heller wrote. “Having a vision and making it happen are two different things, but John Desmarais made it happen and he let others in the community share the vision.”

Bowling Green physician Herbert N. Harkleroad recalled his time with Desmarais.

He was a remarkable man with great intellect and business astuteness, Harkleroad wrote.

Even those who took issue at times with Desmarais still admire the contributions he made to the organization, Harkleroad said.

Friend Jim Johnson attended Desmarais’ funeral and said he was struck by Desmarais’ devout faith.

Johnson said there were likely many people who knew little about Desmarais’ accomplishments and he liked it that way.

But his passing is one that should not go without comment.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Medical Center acquires WKDI: Terms of deal not disclosed; office has more than 30 employees

by Robyn Minor, The Daily News, originally published on 8/21/2012

After years of entertaining potential buyers, Western Kentucky Diagnostic Imaging owners have reached an agreement with The Medical Center for the clinic’s sale.

“The medical environment has some uncertainties now ... and that affected our decision to approach several different buyers,” partner physician Rodney Veitschegger said. “After a lengthy process, we narrowed down the field ... and The Medical Center was the winner.”

Veitschegger said he and his partner, physician Sean Willgruber, aren’t part of the deal. But the office’s 37 employees will be able to apply for jobs with Commonwealth Health Corp., The Medical Center’s parent company.

“I don’t know if they will be doing the exact same jobs, but they will most likely need all of the employees to continue operating the services here,” Veitschegger said.

Employees were informed of the sale in meetings Friday.

Veitschegger said he’s aware that rumors of the impending sale had been flying for months. “But we had to keep this thing under wraps while all the details were worked out because nothing is really final until it’s signed,” he said.

The details included having the physician-owned practice apply with the state for a certificate of need to become a licensed medical facility. That licensure was required before it could be acquired by a hospital.

Willgruber said it’s not the first time that the facility has been in talks for a potential sale. But for whatever reasons, earlier efforts dating back to 2001 weren’t finalized.

Clerk Allison Thomas, who has been in the office for two years, said she thinks the move to CHC will be a good thing for her. Thomas said she’s not sure if she will be doing the same job or not.

“They said they would let us know,” she said.

Eddie Scott, director of radiological services at The Medical Center, said the operation of WKDI will pretty much remain the same, with the exception of the physicians.

“Our goal is to employ all of their staff members and maintain status quo as far as operations,” Scott said. “We don’t anticipate any shuffling of staff. They have done a good job at operating this facility, and we want them to continue doing so in this acquisition.”

The Medical Center’s radiological group – Imaging Consultants of Kentucky, directed by physician Jeffrey Brannick – will have one physician in the facility during all operating hours.

Willgruber said he thinks the acquisition will be good for both the community and The Medical Center.

Western Kentucky Diagnostic Imaging performs about 38,000 diagnostic imaging procedures a year, Willgruber said. Those services include high field MRI, open MRI, digital mammography, stereotactic breast biopsy, ultrasound, bone density evaluation, fluoroscopy, CT scan, nuclear medicine and X-ray services.

A comprehensive number of services will be maintained, Scott said.

“The Medical Center had been looking to enhance our outpatient imaging services, so when the owners (of WKDI) approached us several months ago, we began the negotiations,” he said.

The terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Details of any cost changes for patients are still to be worked out, Scott said.

“This is still in its early stages,” he said.

The transfer of ownership is scheduled to take place Oct. 1. Veitschegger said WKDI first opened its doors in March 1996, after more than a year of planning.

“So it’s really hard to let go of something that has been your baby for that long,” he said.

Veitschegger and Willgruber will continue the relationship they have had for several years with Graves-Gilbert Clinic.

“We are already down there pretty regularly,” Willgruber said.

No longer owning a facility will free Veitschegger and Willgruber from some of their administrative duties.

“We will be able to focus more (on patients),” Willgruber said.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Friday, August 17, 2012

Neonatal staff, parents to meet at fifth reunion

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 8/17/2012

To Mandy Emedi and Patty Thurman, The Medical Center’s Neonatal Intensive Care Unit staff is like family.

When Emedi’s twin daughters, Anna and Brooklyn, were born about six weeks early, she found the NICU staff “amazing.”

“You give birth to babies and envision yourself two or three days later going home. That was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do, leave without my babies,” she said. “The NICU took such good care of not just the girls, but of us as a family. They really made us feel a part of the babies’ care.”

NICU Parent Encouragement and Support Group coordinator Patty Thurman remembers when her twin daughters, Grace Ann and Addyson, were in the NICU.

“They were born at 32 weeks. Grace Ann was my most sick child. She was on ventilators and had bowel and intestinal problems. They had to watch her real close,” she said. “Most parents don’t know they’re going to the NICU. You don’t put that on your birth plan. There’s a flood of emotion.

“While you’re in the NICU, you get to know the nurses. They talk on your level,” she continued. “You get on a personal level with them. It makes you feel better about the situation your child will be in.”

Both women will attend the fifth NICU Reunion, which gives parents and former patients the opportunity to reunite with physicians, nurses staff members and other parents who were involved with their child’s hospital stay.

The free reunion, which will feature food, games and fun, will be from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 9 at The Medical Center Auditorium. Registration is preferred, but not required. Parents of former NICU patients can submit photos by Wednesday for a slideshow. For more information, call 796-2144 or email info@mcbg.org.

George Miller, a registered nurse in the NICU and nursery, said this year’s reunion theme is “Under the Sea.”

“We’ve had a barnyard and beach theme for the kids who come back and visit. It makes it fun for them,” he said. “It’s fun for the kids, parents and nurses. There are a lot of smiles.”

The reunion has drawn about 300 people over the past couple of years, nearly maxing out the capacity of the facility, Miller said.

“We’ve frequently got twins who are born premature and stay with us for a while,” he said. “The longer they stay the more they get to know the staff.”

Emedi agreed.

“We had the same nurses for several days at a time, so you really get to know them,” she said. “I would wake up and call in the middle of the night – about 4 a.m. – and never would the nurses would be bothered by it.”

Emedi said she sometimes runs into nurses outside of the hospital who still ask about her daughters, who are now nearly 4 years old.

“This is our fourth reunion. At the first reunion we were so proud we had gotten a good start with them. They showed us how to feed them, how to bathe them,” she said. “It was a good learning process since I’d never really been around babies. I know people who say they can’t wait to get back to the reunion.”

Thurman’s babies are now 4 years old and “doing well with no issues or problems at all,” she said.

“The nurses get so excited to see your child again because they took care of this child when they were sick. To me, being a NICU nurse is an incredible job. They do miracles,” she said. “When they see a happy child and happy parents, they feel good. You can’t praise them enough. You don’t just come back the first year. You come back year after year.”

Miller said the people who work with the babies enjoy the reunions as much as the parents.

“We put a lot of passion in our work. It’s quite the payoff to see them a couple years later and see they’re doing so well,” he said. “It’s a thrill to know you played a little part in their success.”

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Sunday, July 22, 2012

James Britt, a selfless man, deserved honor

The Daily News, originally published on 7/22/2012

Chaplain James Britt has devoted a large part of his life to serving the Lord. In that time, he has served Him and those he has touched with great respect and dedication.

Britt is well known in our community. When he’s not spending time with his beloved family, writing passionate letters to this newspaper or walking his dog around town, he can be found volunteering as a hospital chaplain at The Medical Center.

Britt, who was a pastor before serving as a hospital chaplain, began consoling patients in 1978 when he worked as a full-time chaplain at the former city-county hospital.

He has given so much to the hospital in his visits to patients over three decades. We believe because of his devotion to those patients and The Medical Center that the prayer room at the hospital’s Hospitality House, which will be called Chaplain James Britt Prayer Room, was a very fitting recognition.

On Monday, Britt believed he was going to the Hospitality House to see a patient, but instead walked into a large crowd assembled to honor him and to witness the dedication of the room.

Britt’s daughter and son-in-law, Beth and David Bradford, and a friend, Coverall Biggers, donated a total of $100,000 to Hospitality House and requested that the prayer room be named for Britt.

Britt was very humbled by the honor and was brought to tears by the event.

Britt, during his time at The Medical Center, has encountered his share of tough situations where he is with patients in their final days or hours, and he has seen the sudden death of children. But good has come out of those very difficult experiences. Britt has formed many meaningful relationships and friendships through his work.

Bradford said, “It’s just in honor of a giant among men – one of the greatest men I know. It’s just ... a very appropriate place for his name to last forever.”

These are words well spoken.

Britt’s acts are selfless. We could think of no one more deserving to have been honored in this manner.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Saturday, July 21, 2012

How to survive fair food: Once-a-year splurge is fine, but some choices are healthier than others

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 7/21/2012

Do you wait eagerly for county fair season so that you can indulge in funnel cakes? That sweet treat will add 750 calories and 44 grams of fat to your thighs.

Maybe you think a corn dog sounds better. You’ll have to walk four miles to make sure it doesn’t expand your waistline.

Does the thought of a smoked turkey leg make your mouth water? Surely that has to be healthy – it’s turkey and it’s smoked. It’s worth it if you’re willing to pay the price of devouring 1,150 calories and 54 grams of fat. You’ll have to walk 11 miles to make up the balance.

The county fair may be a great place to enjoy wild rides, but it isn’t a place to go wild for the food, said Linda Howsen, registered dietitian with The Medical Center Medical Nutrition Therapy Program, who researched statistics for popular foods at county fairs.

“A splurge once a year at the county fair is OK. Make sure it’s a one-time splurge,” she said. “The problem is if it becomes once a week or once a day. We have to watch that because we tend to become a society of splurges.”

Part of the reason people tend to indulge more at fairs is because of mindless eating, Howsen said.

“It’s like watching TV and other activities and not focusing on the food,” she said. “It’s the lights, music, rides, talking – you tend to lose track of what you’re eating, and that’s a danger.”

Overeating isn’t the only hazard. Fair foods can be hard on the teeth. Dr. Devin Hall of Chandler Park Dentistry said that a variety of foods, particularly carbohydrate-laden ones, can cause tooth decay.

“When it comes to teeth and oral health, foods that you find at the fair are probably not going to do anything worse than typical food. A green bean can have a bit of sugar in it. If we eat that in the wrong way, that could hurt as much as bowls of M&Ms,” he said.

“I’m not one to tell people not to enjoy that type of thing,” he added. “The frequency gets us, but not the treat every now and then.”

Good oral hygiene is always important to keep the mouth in a healthy state, Hall said.

“After we enjoy them, there’s nothing wrong with getting a good toothbrush and floss to clean them up after that,” he said.

One of the better food choices may be a surprise since it’s sweet. Cotton candy has 170 calories and no fat, Howsen said.

“You have to walk for one mile to burn it off,” she said. “It’s a good option.”

Other healthier options include corn on the cob on a stick, fruit, a small ice cream cone, a pickle, a caramel apple, a small bag of popcorn with no added butter or a snow cone, Howsen said.

“It’s always about the portions. Smaller portions equal lower in calories,” she said.

When considering what to eat, check out the food choices, Howsen said.

“You don’t want to fill up on the high-calorie things before you check out the lower calorie choices. Think about three things you’re going to choose,” she said. “Don’t graze and have a little bit at this stand and a little bit at that stand.”

In fact, those considerations can be made before leaving home.

“Eat or drink something before you go to the fair. If you’re hungry before you walk in, you may choose high calorie foods,” Howsen said.

Seek out grilled food instead of fried food, Howsen said.

“When you look for grilled meat, look for one that’s not ground – pork chop (instead of) hamburger,” she said.

Walk as much as possible to help burn off the calories, and make sure to drink a lot of water, Howsen said.

“You need water so you will be hydrated because you’re going to be hot,” she said. “Take a water bottle and fill it at the water fountain.”

Stands featuring local foods may help with finding healthier options, Howsen said.

“Maybe a farmer has set up a stand with fresh apples and peaches or corn on the cob on a stick,” she said. “Eat it with less butter and a little salt or no butter.”

Sharing splurges will make all the difference, Howsen said.

“It’ll save each of you 400 calories with a funnel cake,” she said.

Most of all, remember that your body is not a trash can.

“It’s OK to throw food in a trash can. You don’t have to eat all of it,” she said. “It’s not going to hurt the trash can, but it can hurt you.”

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Conference will feature TV doctor

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 7/21/2012

Dr. Pamela Peeke is passionate about getting women to take better care of themselves.

“The grand majority of women need to understand what they put in their mouths is actually changing the expression of their own genes,” she said Thursday in a phone interview with the Daily News. “If you choose leafy greens instead of junk foods, it changes the script writing for basic genes in your body, the level of energy, your immune system, longevity. You need to start honoring what goes in the body.”

It’s one of the issues Peeke plans to discuss during The Medical Center’s 15th annual A Day Just for Women. The conference will be from 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sept. 13 at the Carroll Knicely Conference Center. Cost, which includes the presentations, screenings and conference materials, is $50 per person or $450 for a corporate table for 10 people. Lunch and a continental breakfast will be served. Nurses and dietitians who attend can earn continuing education units. Early registration is encouraged.

“We draw between 400 to 500 women of all ages from across the region,” said Linda Rush, director of Community Wellness. “We’ve been able to bring some nationally recognized speakers that really add to the conference.”

A Day Just for Women will include about 40 exhibits with health screenings and information as well shopping opportunities, which include makeup, jewelry and items related to health, Rush said.

“We just really want to encourage women to take time for themselves,” she said. “We try to structure times so that those who have children in school can have time. We try to give women the tools and motivation they need to have healthy lifestyles.”

In addition to Peeke, the conference will feature Grace Lichtenstein, a counseling psychologist who is a professional trainer and life coach.

Known as the “doc who walks the talk,” Peeke is assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, board certified in internal medicine and a fellow of the American College of Physicians. Among her other accomplishments, she is WebMD’s lifestyle expert, chief medical correspondent for nutrition and fitness at Discovery Health TV and author of several books, including “Fight Fat After Forty” and her latest one, “The Hunger Fix: The 3 Stage Detox and Recovery Plan for Overeating and Food Addiction,” which will be released Sept. 18. She is scheduled to appear on Katie Couric’s new talk show Sept. 19.

“Katie and I have worked together in the past on the ‘Today’ show,” she said.

In “The Hunger Fix,” Peeke writes about how bodies can be rewired from overeating and food addiction.

“I’m talking about the book itself and what it’s about. It’s brand new, exciting science,” she said.

One aspect of being healthy is medicating with movement, Peeke said.

“I’m asking women to increase their activity of daily living. It’s important that people see this as just important,” she said.

Every movement counts as long as it’s done with intensity, Peeke said.

“It has everything to do with intensity. If I can hit some cardio intensely instead of looking like a zombie on a treadmill, I will get much better bang for my buck,” she said. “Most people are time constrained, but they can give you 30 to 40 minutes.”

Sponsors of A Day Just for Women are Knicely Conference Center, Citizens First Bank and Graves-Gilbert Clinic.

— For more information, call 745-1010 or 800-624-2318.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Prayer room named for Britt

by Jenna Mink, The Daily News, originally published on 7/17/2012

Chaplain James Britt has comforted patients and families at The Medical Center at Bowling Green for more than three decades, and now his name is a permanent part of the organization.

The community surprised Britt on Monday by unveiling the prayer room at the Hospitality House’s new name: Chaplain James Britt Prayer Room.

“This is an honor, a blessing. I’m honored by this,” Britt said through tears, adding that he was told to drop by the Hospitality House that day to visit a patient. “I didn’t know I was visiting so many people.”

A crowd gathered to support Britt, who has visited, prayed with and comforted patients and workers for 34 years. Britt’s daughter and son-in-law, Beth and David Bradford, and a friend, Covella Biggers, donated a total of $100,000 to Hospitality House and requested that the prayer room be named for Britt.

“It’s just in honor of a giant among men – one of the greatest men I know,” David Bradford said. “It’s just ... a very appropriate place for his name to last forever.”

Britt, who was a pastor before serving as a hospital chaplain, began consoling patients in 1978 when he worked as a full-time chaplain at the former city-county hospital.

He has encountered his share of tough situations, such as the sudden deaths of children. But he has also formed many, meaningful relationships, he told the Daily News.

“I’m just proud of the work and ministry of The Medical Center,” he said. “We have a great staff, caring people, and it’s just a joy to visit and see the staff and the people who come.”

The Hospitality House opened more than a year ago as a place for families and caregivers to stay when visiting patients who are hospitalized for an extended period of time. With 12 private guest rooms, it’s a service for many out-of-town visitors – so far, it has served people from 49 counties, 32 states and four countries.

And the prayer room – now the Chaplain James Britt Prayer Room – is an important part of the organization, hospital officials say.

“When you find you have an illness in your family, there’s a spiritual need that typically needs to be met,” said Cristi Pruitt, vice president of accounting and corporate controller for Commonwealth Health Corp., the parent company of The Medical Center.

It’s “befitting,” Pruitt said, to name the room after a man who has dedicated decades to prayer for the patients and family of the hospital.

“I’ve just been doing what I’ve been called to do,” Britt said, as a long line of people waited to embrace him.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Better to be safe than sorry: Screenings can bring early detection of vascular disease

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 7/14/2012

Mary Newby was traveling to Las Vegas for a vacation with her siblings in 2003 when she received an unpleasant surprise.

The Bowling Green woman got as far as New Mexico before she became ill enough to seek medical care. She found out she had an aneurysm in her carotid artery that can block blood flow to the brain.

“They found it by chance,” she said.

Newby made an appointment with Dr. Michael Byrne, a vascular surgeon at The Medical Center Heart Institute in Bowling Green, and had surgery to correct her condition.

“I did very well from the surgery,” she said. “I didn’t have any complications.”

In 2005, Newby decided to have a screening to see if there were any other blockages. This time she found out she had an abdominal aortic aneurysm. Once again, she went to Byrne for surgery.

Since that surgery, Newby has felt well, but she thought it was better to be safe than sorry. She decided to get her legs screened.

“Sometimes my legs feel kind of funny, like a tingling,” she said.

She had a screening Friday at The Medical Center Health and Wellness Center at Chandler Park. A vascular technologist screens for disorders such as stroke, aortic aneurysm and lower-extremity vascular disease and sends the results to The Heart Institute so they can be evaluated by a board-certified vascular surgeon.

“Vascular screenings are easy and cost-effective tools to identify patients at risk of stroke, amputation or mortality associated with complications of vascular disease,” said Dr. Shane O’Keeffe, a vascular surgeon at The Heart Institute.

A copy of the report is also sent to the patients and their physicians. The cost is $35 per screening or $90 for all three. Members of Senior Health Network, Men’s Health Alliance and The Women’s Center can get all three for $80.

Newby said she didn’t “want any surprises.”

“I’m a preschool monitor. This is my fifth year,” she said. “I want to have everything up and running before school starts.”

Charlotte English, a vascular ultrasonographer at The Heart Institute, does the screenings and said they are important. Men make up the majority of people with vascular disease, and it tends to run in families.

“We take anyone who comes in, but our target age we’re trying to reach is 50 and up,” she said.

Some people don’t go to the doctor until they begin to have symptoms, English said. Some vascular issues don’t even have symptoms, making them even more deadly.

“Screening for (abdominal aortic aneurysm) is especially important because there are no symptoms until a rupture occurs,” she said. “We have a high rate of deaths with ruptured aneurysms.”

English asked Newby to slip off her sandals and lie on an examination table. She put gel on one side of Newby’s neck and slid an ultrasound wand over the area. Black-and-white images began to appear on the screen. The machine whirred as English checked the velocity of the blood flow to her artery. Then she repeated the process on the other side.

“What’s that black thing?” Newby asked as her head was facing the ultrasound screen.

“That’s your artery that we’re looking at,” English explained.

English did an ultrasound on Newby’s carotid artery and did an ankle brachial index, in which blood pressure is measured on the arm and neck. She put gel on the lower and side of each ankle as she examined them.

When screening results aren’t good, English doesn’t let patients leave, calls a doctor immediately and lets the doctor tell her what the patient needs to do. In Newby’s case, English let her leave with a recommendation that she check in with her doctor.

Newby was happy to find out more about her health and plans to talk to a doctor soon about her results.

“I would advise anybody to have (screenings) done,” she said.

The next screening will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 27. Appointments are encouraged, but walk-ins are taken if space is available. For more information, call 745-0942 or 877-800-3824.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Disaster response is given a boost: Mobile health care sites will be funded by grant

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 7/11/2012

The Barren River region has acquired new means of responding to disasters affecting the local and state health care system.

A $56,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has helped set up Alternative Care Sites that can be dispatched to areas across the state in times of disaster and during hospital evacuations. The grant was received by Area 4 Healthcare Emergency Area Response Team, a group of health care and community organizations that work together to plan and coordinate health disaster preparedness and response.

“With the latest grant cycle, one of the things that had been noticed in health care was the lack of means to directly provide care during a disaster,” said Jim Williams, The Medical Center at Bowling Green’s Emergency Medical Services field operations manager. “This is more for disaster-type situations.”

The need for such sites has been seen in disasters such as 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina and regionally with ice storms and tornadoes, Williams said. “It has been recognized as an issue for several years. It’s now it’s becoming a more focused priority,” he said.

The mobile trailers and equipment – which will be used among all hospitals and long-term care facilities in the region or state in times of need – are maintained by The Medical Centers at Bowling Green and Scottsville, T.J. Samson Community Hospital in Glasgow and Logan Memorial Hospital in Russellville.

“They are stationed in four counties in the region, but all the mobiles can come together in the same county. They can be hooked up to trucks and can go to wherever the problem is,” Williams said.

Rita Tabor, clinical manager at the emergency room at The Medical Center at Scottsville, agreed.

“Three of the trailers are placed in the largest counties, but the one in Allen County was placed there because of its central location,” she said, adding that the site there borders Warren, Simpson, Barren and Monroe counties.

The trailers could be used to help more people, Tabor said.

“If our building was damaged in some way and we had to move someone else or had a disaster or epidemic, we could set up the alternative site trailer at an alternate location and see patients there,” she said. “We’re setting up with all the other regions so that if they have something we need, we can call them and if we have something they need, they can call us. We live in a great state.”

The Alternate Care Site can also be used to decompress hospitals if it became necessary, Williams said.

“We could take patients who are already in the hospital and are in stable condition but still need medical care (to have alternative sites so we could) have beds for patients who need more care,” he said.

The trailers would use regular hospital staff, although off-duty staff might have to be called in at times, Tabor said. The supplies include items that staff members use regularly.

“You’d have everything you’d need to start your own little hospital at another site,” she said.

Williams said the equipment will be a big help to the region and state.

“It’s expandable with all the resources we have. We can respond to a lot of different types of issues,” he said. “It gives us a lot more options to help take care of people. We realize the importance of it.”

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Saturday, July 7, 2012

10K Classic around the bend: Registration begins Aug. 1 for race, which features challenges for churches and businesses

by Justin Story, The Daily News, originally published on 7/7/2012

Preparations are under way for extensive community involvement in the 33rd running of The Medical Center 10K Classic.

The annual race, which will be run Oct. 13 through downtown and will start and finish on the campus of Western Kentucky University, attracts thousands of runners, volunteers and spectators.

In addition to the 10K race that headlines the event each year, this year’s classic will also feature a 5K competitive run, a 10K wheelchair race, two Children’s Classic races for runners from kindergarten through sixth grade and the 1.5-mile Fun Walk.

Last year, a total of 1,369 competitors were in the 5K and 10K races.

Registration for the race begins Aug. 1, though businesses and churches can get a jump on getting involved through corporate and church challenges.

In these challenges, businesses and churches spearhead efforts to encourage their fellow employees or church members to participate in the event, and family and friends can count toward corporate participation.

Doris Thomas, vice president of Commonwealth Health Corp., which operates The Medical Center, said the corporate and church challenges are a way to motivate people to adopt a healthier lifestyle.

“It’s never too early to start, and if you’re not on a fitness program already, this is a good, fun way to get started,” Thomas said.

Those who register through the corporate or church challenges receive a $5 discount off the registration fee, with those registrations and payments to be made online by Sept. 14.

The businesses and churches that recruit the most participants will have their names or logos added to the event’s website and on a special team T-shirt, recognition at the awards ceremony and an option to display a banner with the winning business’s or church’s logo at the finish line and at the Health and Fitness Expo that will take place Oct. 12 at Sloan Convention Center.

“The whole purpose would be for businesses to encourage their employees to become active, and this is a good initiative for businesses to get their employees and churches to get their members involved,” Thomas said.

Harman Becker Automotive Services of Franklin won last year’s corporate challenge among employers with 250 or more employees, while Nasco was the winner among employers with fewer than 250 employees.

Woodburn Baptist Church won the church challenge among churches with 250 or more members and Community Church of Christ and Plano Baptist Church shared top honors for churches with fewer than 250 members.

— For more information, visit www.themedicalcenter10kclassic.com.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Health Tune-Up set for Saturday during Minor League baseball game

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 6/14/2012

Gary Payne strives to attend as many health-related events as he can.

“They have a lot of valuable information. I’m getting up in age, so any information I can get will be beneficial,” the Bowling Green man said.

Payne is considering going to The Medical Center’s Men’s Health Tune-Up, which will be Saturday during the Bowling Green Hot Rods game against the Fort Wayne TinCaps at Bowling Green Ballpark. Gates open at 6 p.m., and the game starts at 7:05 p.m. A game ticket, which is $10, is required for entry.

“A ticket to the game is a ticket to get those screenings done,” said Linda Rush, community wellness director for The Medical Center. “We’ll be set up when the gate opens for men who want to get their screenings early. We’ll be set up with different screenings where they can do it at any time during the game.”

Nine booths will be set up during the game. Screenings that will be offered include those for blood pressure, grip strength, lung health, sleep apnea, body fat analysis, hearing and the prostate-specific antigen tests for prostate cancer for men over age 40, Rush said.

Screenings and participation are for men ages 18 and older.

Men can get free memberships to the Men’s Health Alliance, which addresses men’s health concerns. The membership, which usually costs a one-time membership fee of $10, includes free health screenings, discounts on select screenings and exercise programs offered through The Medical Center, a quarterly newsletter and access to special events.

“Over the last 10 to 15 years, we’ve had a men’s health event in June,” Rush said. “We’re taking the health information to where the men already are.”

Men will get a scorecard that they can present to each booth. Those under 40 who go to the PSA screening booth will receive information to help complete their card. Participants who complete the card can be entered into drawings for prizes provided by the Hot Rods, including the grand prize, a Hot Rods luxury suite valued at $600.

“It’s a fun evening. We had 150 (participants) last year, but the ballgames bring in such a large crowd,” Rush said. “It will be interesting to see how many men participate.”

The Hot Rods provided prizes for last year’s Tune-Up, which was at the National Corvette Museum, said Ryan Gates, the Hot Rods’ general manager.

“We saw the turnout and demographic of men and thought it would be a good fit,” he said.

The games average about 3,500 people, but Gates expects more than 4,000 for Saturday’s game.

“I think (men) tend not to always do little things to check on our health. We get to address a lot of different categories in one small area,” he said. “We encourage men to come out, all families to come out. Men’s health is families’ health.”

Payne said he enjoyed last year’s event. He was interested in learning about prostate cancer and what’s available now to test for and treat it.

“My wife encourages me to go because of the seriousness of prostate cancer,” he said.

Payne appreciates the way that health information is easily accessible in Bowling Green.

“I’m from Massachusetts by way of Oregon. I appreciate all the functions for men and women,” he said. “I think they’re very professionally done.”

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Medical Center-WKU Health Sciences Complex: Officials Break Ground for Project

by Robyn Minor, The Daily News, originally published on 6/13/2012

As many as 150 people at a time will help build the new Medical Center-WKU Health Sciences Complex in the 700 block of First Avenue.

Ground was broken today on the project, which will generate a bevy of activity during the next 13 months as crews from Scott, Murphy & Daniel and subcontractors go to work on the 73,000-square-foot building.

Company President Mike Murphy said it will be a tight deadline to meet. “Plus we’ve got the winter to contend with,” he said.

Work will begin as soon as possible. During that time those workers will be joining an already large workforce from The Medical Center campus – about 2,000 – many of whom will eat in nearby restaurants for lunch.

“Hardly anybody brings their lunch anymore,” Murphy said.

The workforce downtown will grow again when Western Kentucky University occupies the building, bringing in staff for its School of Nursing and two new programs: the doctor of physical therapy and doctor of nursing practice.

Connie Smith, president and chief executive officer of Commonwealth Health Corp., The Medical Center’s parent company, said the hospital also will use about 20 percent of the building’s space for staff training and other purposes.

Smith told the 300 people gathered for the groundbreaking that CHC and WKU came together to “to solve what separately seemed insurmountable” – a critical shortage of nurses.

WKU President Gary Ransdell said the university will double the number of nurses it can educate, growing even more the number of WKU graduates who find jobs at The Medical Center and other area hospitals.

And it shouldn’t be a problem getting students to fill the new slots since WKU turns away about half the qualified applicants who apply each year, he said.

Ransdell said WKU turns away the students because it doesn’t have the space or staff to accommodate them and doesn’t have the bonding capacity to construct a new building on its own.

The doctor of physical therapy program will begin next year with its first 30 students – that also will help solve a critical problem in the region, Ransdell said.

More nursing homes, hospitals and small communities are without physical therapists at a time when many in the aging population could use such help.

Construction of the $18.4 million three-story building will likely put investment in the Tax Increment Financing District over the top of the $150 million required before tax revenues can begin coming back to the community. Those tax revenues help provide infrastructure for such projects and allow developers to get a return on their investments.

Smith said the project will be ready for occupancy in fall 2013, in time for WKU to begin the semester in the building.

“And I know you will have us in on time ... and even early,” Smith said to Murphy.

WKU will lease its space from CHC for 25 years, and CHC will use that money for operational expenses and to help pay off industrial revenue bonds that will be sold for the project.

While there are no immediate plans to make the building even larger, it has been designed to accommodate future expansion needs.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Proponents, medical community disagree on juicing’s impact

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 6/9/2012

The film “Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead” changed Lauren Culbreth’s life.

The documentary shows Joe Cross’ journey to regain his health by trading junk food for juicing – using an appliance to extract the juice from fruits and vegetables – for two months.

“It was every meal, every day,” she said. “He started losing weight. His health problems disappeared. It shows how he affected another man’s life.”

The Bowling Green woman decided to try juicing, although not nearly to the extreme that Cross did. She has been juicing for a year and has seen benefits without fasting.

“I’ve lost more than 30 pounds, and I exercise,” she said. “It’s really a good cleanse. If you’re going to do a juice fast, consult a physician.”

Culbreth led a class at the Warren County Public Library’s Bob Kirby Branch recently to share what she has learned. Julie Speer, a library assistant at the branch, is also an avid juicer and helped with the class.

“I got a juicer in September for my birthday,” she said. “I love the bright, beautiful colors.”

Culbreth prefers to use her juicer because bottled drinks are full of artificial sugar, but only makes enough to drink that day and the next because it can go bad faster than bottled juice and tastes better fresh.

“You get all the vitamins and minerals as soon as you drink it,” she said.

Culbreth suggested a mix of fruits and vegetables, but less fruit because of the sugar content. She also warned people to be ready for digestive changes.

“It might mess with your system a little bit,” she said. “It may cause your body to go through a healing process, especially if you eat a lot of junk food.”

Linda Howsen, registered dietitian with The Medical Center Medical Nutrition Therapy Program, cautions against juicing. Several well-known medical resources such as the Mayo Clinic and WebMD also don’t support it, she said.

“It’s not something I would necessarily advocate. It’s a kind of fad,” she said. “There’s no benefit to juicing that eating fruits and vegetables won’t give you.”

The idea that people are getting enzymes because they are drinking “live food” is false, Howsen said.

“The enzymes in a plant are only effective for the plant. They don’t work in your own body,” she said. “They’re taken apart and digested. Our body makes all the enzymes it needs unless there’s a medical problem.”

While juicing may help those who won’t eat fruits and vegetables except in liquid form, they will be missing fiber. It can be found in the pulp, but many people throw it away, Howsen said.

“The pulp is something many of the juicers don’t use. It’s very important,” she said. “There are many nutrients in the skin. They can use it in soup broth, muffins and fruit bread.”

Juicing doesn’t cleanse or remove toxins as claimed, Howsen said.

“The liver and kidneys take care of that,” she said.

There is also a calorie issue, Howsen said. Fruit juice can pack in the calories, especially if you use a lot of fruit.

“A 16-ounce drink can be 250 calories. If you chew a piece of fruit, it will fill you up,” she said.

Howsen said it’s better for people to eat whole foods, such as eating apples instead of applesauce, Howsen said.

“I’m not sure you’re going to process juice the same way as a whole food because it has been processed,” she said.

Cathy Prebe has wanted to try juicing ever since her daughter saw an iridologist, a person who determines health by studying the eye.

“He said she’s not absorbing her food,” the Bowling Green woman said.

When Prebe heard about the class, she thought it would be a good way to help her daughter and herself.

“I don’t eat a lot of vegetables, so this would be a good way to eat more vegetables,” she said. “I needed to really chew the food. I definitely will try it.”

John Foti of Bowling Green said he has juiced, but not for a long time.

“It’s a lot of work,” he said.

Culbreth agreed.

“The hardest part of juicing is the cleanup,” she said, looking at her juicer after she did a demonstration. “There’s a lot of cleanup.”

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Bond issue for health science complex OK’d

by Katie Brandenburg, The Daily News, originally published on 6/9/2012

Warren County Fiscal Court approved the first reading Friday of an ordinance to issue industrial revenue bonds for the construction of a health science complex to house Western Kentucky University’s School of Nursing.

Fiscal Court also voted to approve the first reading of a budget of about $33.7 million for fiscal year 2013, as well as an agreement with Connected Nation to look into the best way to make high-speed Internet available at competitive rates to all Warren County residents.

The bond ordinance would allow for the issue of up to $48 million in industrial revenue bonds for the construction of a building adjacent to The Medical Center complex to house WKU’s School of Nursing and physical therapy program.

The hospital will be solely responsible for repaying the debt, according to Ron Sowell, executive vice president and chief financial officer for Commonwealth Health Corp. and The Medical Center.

The medical science complex is expected to cost a little more than $18 million, he said.

The bond issue will also allow for the refinancing of some corporation debt.

“This project is very exciting for us and for Western Kentucky University,” Sowell told members of the Fiscal Court.

The facility will allow WKU’s nursing program to double in size, he said. “It will benefit not only The Medical Center, but it will generate nurses of the future for all the health care facility in southcentral Kentucky,” Sowell said.

A groundbreaking for the facility will be at 9 a.m. Wednesday, he said. It is set to open in August 2013.

The complex wouldn’t have been possible without the formation of the Tax Increment Financing district, Warren County Judge-Executive Mike Buchanon said.

It will be a benefit for not only Warren County but the region in meeting the demands on the area’s health care system, he said.

“This is really a godsend to this region of Kentucky,” Buchanon said.

Fiscal Court also approved an agreement with Connected Nation to provide broadband mapping, a policy impact assessment and help with a digital literacy program for Warren County in an effort to determine how best to make high-speed Internet available to all residents at competitive rates, according to the contract.

The contract is for $26,790 over a six-month period.

The county expects a final report from the company by the end of that contract period, Buchanon said.

Brian Mefford, Connected Nation CEO, said Connected Nation is eager to move forward with the project in Warren County.

“People want to be able to live anywhere in Warren County and have access to high-speed broadband Internet,” he said.

The availability of high-speed Internet is increasingly important to people, and not having access can be a disadvantage, especially for school-age children, Buchanon said.

Many people rate it in importance along with services such as water and sewer, he said.

“It think this broadband high-speed Internet is almost a right,” Buchanon said. “It has almost become a right.”

One goal for the county is to create more competition in the county among high-speed Internet providers, Buchanon said.

Competition can translate into wider coverage, along with better service and more competitive prices for Warren County residents, he said.

Expanding access to high-speed Internet has been a priority in the county for about two years, Buchanon said.

“This is the kind of thing that sets us apart from other communities throughout Kentucky and throughout the nation,” he said.

Fiscal Court also approved the first reading of an ordinance approving the fiscal year 2013 budget.

Buchanon said spending in the upcoming fiscal year’s budget is on par with the previous budget.

The approximately $33.7 million budget includes about $17.7 million in general fund spending. The budget is about $410,700 more than last year’s approved budget, with about $386,800 more in general fund spending.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Saturday, June 2, 2012

TIF district nearing key $150M status

by Robyn Minor, The Daily News, originally published on 6/2/2012

Even before ground is broken this month for two Bowling Green development projects, the investment in the Tax Increment Financing district is fast approaching its $150 million signature TIF status.

So far, $143.65 million has been spent on projects.

And as work progresses in the next two months on projects under construction such as Bowling Green Municipal Utilities’ new office building, the Warren County Downtown Economic Development Authority will ask the state to certify that signature TIF status, according to its chairman, Doug Gorman.

Nearly $30 million more in projects are under construction in the TIF now, which would count toward that certification. The TIF runs from Western Kentucky University to the river and is bounded in part by U.S. 31-W and Adams Street, but does not include Fountain Square.

When you consider the commercial project to be built on two sides of the parking garage and WKU’s School of Nursing, both of which will begin construction this month, the total will then amount to more than $200 million, according to TIF documents. Work has to be finished before it can count toward the status.

Clinton, Chris and Ed Mills are the private subdevelopers for the commercial project on the parking garage wrap, and Commonwealth Health Corp. will sell bonds for its building that will contain WKU’s School of Nursing.

The TIF actually has until December 2014 to reach the $150 million level. The significance of reaching that signature level is that the city and developers of many of the projects in the TIF then would start to receive a portion of the taxes created by the new jobs and sales made in the 49-block TIF area.

That money would be used to repay both groups for their work thus far.

Gorman said once the state certifies that signature status, it would calculate those payments. Any additional development in the district over the next 27 years will allow those tax returns to continue coming back to the TIF.

Some have been critical of the perceived lack of private funding that has gone into the project, something that rifles Gorman a bit.

“We had a man from Massachusetts spend $8 million of his own money to bring a baseball team here,” Gorman said. “This community has been blessed by Mr. (Art) Solomon.”

Having that baseball team here created 20 full-time jobs and 120 part-time jobs and has been the impetus for some of the development since, he said.

There has been private investment in medical facilities, residential housing, fraternity housing and other projects totaling more than $46 million that has already been spent, according to TIF documents.

More than $3 million in private funding is being spent to purchase and renovate the old Bowling Green Junior High School. While part of the property had an apartment building on it, the remainder had been a perpetual construction site with little work going on for years.

Since the purchase last fall, construction fences have come down but work has steadily progressed, with the lease-a-bedroom housing facility to be ready for WKU students in the fall.

One of the largest private projects was the nearly $24 million expansion and improvement of The Medical Center.

The Medical Center’s parent company, CHC, will add even more to the total of private funds invested when it breaks ground this month for a nursing building. The project is expected to cost $16 million to $18 million, with WKU’s lease of the space being primarily paid with tuition fees from the new students that an expanded program can serve.

WKU’s alumni also are funding the Augenstein Alumni Center, which is in the TIF and adjacent to WKU’s campus.

“The alumni association has raised $5 million for the project so far and would like to raise $1.5 million to $2 million more to pay for furnishings,” WKU President Gary Ransdell said. “That is all being paid for with private funding.”

The funds will be used to pay for the lease on the building, just as the WKU Student Life Foundation will pay for the lease on the housing wrap around the parking garage.

“Western won’t actually own any buildings in the TIF, but it is contributing to its development through lease payments,” Ransdell said.

The center is expected to be completed in late December with a move-in date of January.

Ransdell said on hold for now are WKU’s plans to build campus police offices and a bookstore on the other side of the parking garage that has the student housing on two sides of it now.

“We had wanted to use New Market Tax Credits for that, but Kentucky didn’t get enough ... allocated for us to use them,” Ransdell said. “So we are seeing if there are credits from somewhere else we can use.”

Ransdell said if the university can’t find the credits, it will look for other funding to at least build the campus police offices, something that is a priority.

Ransdell said he is still working with a single developer to build a hotel in the block next to campus and the alumni center.

“That talk had been quiet for a while ... but now the developer is back and engaged,” he said. “We are hopeful, anxious and optimistic. But we are going to be patient and work with this one developer.”

Has there been public money spent? “Yes,” Gorman said. “And now we are seeing private investment.”

Some of the public projects include parking garages, the ballpark and the Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center.

SKyPAC bonds are being repaid in part with a special motel tax, and other projects will be paid for when the TIF revenue comes back. The TIF revenue also would be used to pay off a portion of the SKyPAC debt.

More than $5 million in public funds was used to purchase land and improve infrastructure that includes more than $1 million to improve stormwater drainage in the area, Gorman said. There is a large underground drainage system that was installed under the parking garage, and a few months ago a retention basin was installed off Adams Street.

The city also received a Community Development Block Grant to improve drainage in the area, according to city public works Director Jeff Lashlee. That project, which cost about $126,000, was near the Bowling Green Area Chamber of Commerce.

Since those projects were completed, the flooding that previously occurred at intersections on College and State streets’ lower blocks has mostly disappeared, Lashlee said.

People outside Bowling Green are starting to see the fruits of the labor here, Gorman said.

Outside companies have requested information about the commercial space that will be available on the ground floor of the wrap of the parking garage.

Both Gorman and Ransdell are excited that the signature status will be reached well ahead of the deadline.

“It’s a terrific tribute to the leaders across the community,” Ransdell said. “So many people have been important to its success.”

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Friday, May 18, 2012

Nursing school could boost by-pass growth

by Robyn Minor, The Daily News, originally published on 5/18/2012

The look of Commonwealth Health Corp.’s proposed new building for WKU’s school of nursing should help spur development along that end of U.S. 31-W By-pass.

That was the opinion Thursday’s of the design review committee for the Tax Increment Financing District.

CHC’s new building will have a curved wall of windows facing the bypass to take in the northern sun exposure and the curve would mimic that of the bypass, according to architect Paul W. Edwards of Stengel-Hill Architecture in Louisville.

Commonwealth Health, the parent of The Medical Center, will own the building and will enter into a long-term lease with Western Kentucky University for about 80 percent of the building for classrooms, labs and office space. As for the 20 percent that The Medical Center will use, CHC Executive Vice President Jean Cherry said it will be used for training and meetings, some of which are spread across The Medical Center campus now.

The three-story, 77,163-square-foot building will use a combination of masonry, stone, aluminum and glass to complement the other buildings on the multiblock campus of The Medical Center.

Edwards said the building tries to incorporate as much light in the major public spaces such as break rooms and the lobby as possible, as well as lighting the ends of the hallways that lead to classrooms and offices.

On one side of the exterior, there is a pull-off spot for buses for the future possibility of public transit to the building.

Committee member Neal E. Downing, an associate professor of architecture at WKU, said he knows the university will be capable of expanding transit to the building with the recent purchase of three additional buses.

The project as a whole has the campus buzzing, Downing said.

Downing said historically that this end of the bypass had not been very aesthetically pleasing. The TIF ends on The Medical Center side of the bypass, but perhaps its appearance will encourage development on the other side, he said.

Over the years CHC has developed its side of the bypass piecemeal as it could purchase dilapidated properties and tear them down, according to Cherry.

“This gives us a chance to dress it up (further) and put a beautiful facade on the campus, rather than looking at the back of a building,” Cherry said. “I think that this certainly would encourage development on the other side of the street.”

Edwards said the building also will have a green belt on the bypass side, incorporating many of the same plants that already are used throughout The Medical Center campus.

The design review committee was pleased with the plan, only making two minor suggestions.

Member Elinor Markle suggested that the architect consider removing a few parking spots adjacent to the building and instead extend the greenspace to the building’s entrance.

Markle said it would better connect the building to the outdoors.

Member Eileen Starr suggested some sort of architectural element be added to a blank brick wall that people will see as they exit buses.

Cherry said they would try to incorporate the suggestions.

The City-County Planning Commission of Warren County also on Thursday approved the detailed development plan for the nearly four acres needed for the project. The commission also approved a variance of the required property line setback for construction.

The review committee also heard some preliminary plans for Block 7 in the TIF where the new Dollar General Store will be located.

“This is a very challenging site,” local landscape architect Brian Shirley told the committee.

The site is bounded by Seventh and Sixth avenues and Center Street.

In addition to being triangular shaped, it has multiple utilities that can’t be moved without great expense – about $150,000, he said.

Shirley and architects Nick and Matt Sewell gave the committee some preliminary drawings for the site that will be developed in two phases. The first is a 9,100-square-foot Dollar General. The second would be a two-story 6,000-square-foot building that doesn’t yet have a tenant.

Starr asked why there are two separate buildings.

Shirley said that is pretty much being dictated by Dollar General. The building is pushing the boundaries of what most Dollar General’s look like. It has a two-story appearance that is much dressier than most, primarily because of design standards within the TIF.

Downing and other members on the committee said the plan as it stands doesn’t really follow the standards set out for that block that is a gateway into the TIF. It should engage pedestrian traffic in the area as well as signal the entrance into the TIF.

“You are headed in the right direction,” Downing said.

But the plan has a ways to go before it will pass muster.

Shirley said they already were on revision 24 to the plan but will make further changes.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Hospitals working to prevent readmission

by the Daily News, The Daily News, originally published on 5/16/2012

Six area hospitals are among 100 Kentucky hospitals joining the Kentucky Hospital Association to improve patient care and reduce health care costs in the state.

The hospitals’ goals include reducing preventable readmissions and hospital-acquired conditions.

Included in the program are Greenview Regional Hospital, The Medical Centers in Bowling Green, Scottsville and Franklin, T.J. Samson Community Hospital in Glasgow and Caverna Memorial Hospital.

The program will help hospitals identify ways to improve patient safety and share learning among hospitals across the state. The goal for this two-year project is to reduce preventable hospital readmissions that occur within 30 days of discharge by 20 percent and hospital-acquired conditions by 40 percent (compared to 2010) by the end of 2013.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Generations gather for tea: Mother-daughter event at The Medical Center draws more than 90

by Robyn Minor, The Daily News, originally published on 5/13/2012

After an absence of nearly 30 years, Norma Hoehler is returning home to Bowling Green and spent Saturday celebrating the fact with parts of three other generations of her family.

Hoehler was at The Medical Center Women’s Center Mother-Daughter Tea with family, as were many of the other women and young ladies. More than 90 turned out for the annual event, which has been going on for about two decades.

“I just received the most wonderful Mother’s Day present,” Hoehler exclaimed. “I’m moving back to Bowling Green and they landscaped my patio for me.”

Hoehler is moving to Bowling Green Retirement Village, where her daughter, Vickie Jennett, is executive director.

“I’ve got a lot of catching up to do,” Hoehler said.

So Saturday’s event was a good time to start, at least with her daughter, her daughter’s daughter, Angie Wilk, and her daughter’s granddaughter, Morgan Wilk, all from Portland, Tenn.

The event turned out to be multigenerational for many families.

Guyla Wilson of Bowling Green was there with three other generations of her family from Bowling Green, 12 in all.

Wilson said she’s been coming so many times to the tea that she has lost track.

Her daughter, Carolyn Lindsey, said they missed the last few years and are happy to be back.

Lindsey’s granddaughter, Stephanie Riley, shares her love of tea, so the two were eager to drink the sweet concoction poured from one of the teapots on the table.

The pots were part of the collection of Linda Rush, director of community wellness for The Medical Center.

“I think I have 20 or 25 teapots,” she said. “You know once someone finds out you collect something, they tend to give that to you.”

But that doesn’t bother Rush.

“I love them,” she said.

While she no longer adds to her own collection, to satisfy her teapot craving, Rush buys them for others as gifts.

Three-year-old Emma Trinh eagerly ate one of the cupcakes prepared by Sweet Treats.

Hoehler and her daughter purchased the two books for sale by author Virginia Davis of Hart County.

Davis gave a brief talk about how her imagination as a child and voracious appetite for reading got her interested in writing. She now has two children’s books for sale, “The Flowers on Apple Hill” and “Irises’ Secret,” at virginiadavisbooks.com.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

WKU nursing program looking at expansion

by Robyn Minor, The Daily News, originally published on 5/13/2012

Western Kentucky University’s School of Nursing is about to get a big boost with a proposed expansion of Commonwealth Health Corp.’s campus.

Commonwealth Health is proposing to construct a 77,163-square-foot building adjacent to The Medical Center complex that would be used mostly for WKU’s School of Nursing. The project is in the Tax Increment Financing district, an area that starts at WKU’s main campus, extends downtown to the new Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center and over to U.S. 31-W By-Pass, and includes the large Medical Center campus.

“This takes quite a commitment both on the part of The Medical Center because it will own the building and on the part of WKU because we will have a long-term lease of the space,” WKU President Gary Ransdell said. “Western will have access to a new academic building, and we will be able to double the number of nursing students, which is huge for health all across Kentucky.”

Ransdell expects that graduates of the program will find employment not only at both of Bowling Green’s hospitals but in Glasgow, Caverna, Owensboro, Elizabethtown, Hopkinsville and elsewhere.

WKU would lease 80 percent of the building and move all of its nursing program and the new doctors of physical therapy and practical nursing programs to the building. The space also would contain faculty offices and the necessary lab space, Ransdell said.

It’s not clear what CHC or The Medical Center would do with the remainder of the building. CHC staff members familiar with the project were out of town and could not be reached for comment.

Ransdell said details of how many new faculty members would be required for the enlarged program are still being worked out.

WKU’s first classes in the new building are expected to begin in fall 2013, so bids for the project are expected to be sought soon.

The design of the project will be up for review Thursday by the TIF Design Review Committee, and then later that evening the City-County Planning Commission of Warren County will consider the detailed development plan for the nearly four acres needed for the project. A variance of the required property line setback for construction will also be sought.

Planning staff approved both a preliminary drainage and landscape plan and determined that a traffic impact study is not required for the project. The new building would have 189 parking spaces, while just 111 are required.

The project, which has been two years in the planning stage, is ready to move forward because it is apparent that the TIF district will meet its $150 million investment requirement, Ransdell said. That means new tax revenues in the district can be used to pay for the infrastructure development of projects.

Sixty percent of the new tax revenue generated by The Medical Center and as a result of Western’s move to the area between U.S. 31-W By-Pass, Chestnut, Park and High streets and First Avenue will be used to help pay for this particular project, Ransdell said.

Western will pay an annual lease on the space – an amount that won’t be determined until construction bids are made – using the anticipated increase in tuition the university will receive, Ransdell said. That money in turn also will be used to pay off construction debt.

The move will allow Western to grow the number of baccalaureate-seeking nurses from 80 to 160, Ransdell said.

“We are (constantly) turning away qualified applicants because we just don’t have the room now,” said Robbin Taylor, WKU vice president for public affairs.

When the program is moved out of the Academic Complex, Taylor said there will be other programs eager to take over the space on the crowded main campus.

Doug Gorman, chairman of the Warren County Downtown Economic Development Authority, is pleased the project is coming to fruition.

“It is a culmination of the benefits and the hard work that has gone into the TIF that are making it possible,” Gorman said.

Gorman said it’s great for the community because the project involves the partnership of two of its largest employers – CHC and WKU.

“And it’s very exciting for the future of health care in our area,” he said.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Saturday, May 5, 2012

The Medical Center to honor nurses, mothers

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 5/5/2012

The Medical Center will celebrate nurses and mothers May 12 with the first Nurse Walk and the annual Mother-Daughter Tea.

The Nurse Walk will begin at 9 a.m. on The Medical Center Emergency Department lawn.

“The walk will be a mile and a half. We’re walking around the building,” said Jodi Hanna, a registered nurse and surgical services educator at the hospital. “There is not a registration fee. Our nurse of the year (who has not been revealed) will say a few words.”

The event is in celebration of National Nurses Week, which is Sunday through May 12, Hanna said.

“We wanted to promote wellness in the community and get the community involved,” she said. “Everybody’s lives have been changed or impacted by a nurse at one time or another. We wanted to bring attention to what we do.”

The walk will be casual, Hanna said. “We’re hoping to do it as an annual event and would love people to come out and join us,” she said.

The Mother-Daughter Tea will be at 3 p.m. at The Medical Center Auditorium. Cost is $8 per person. Preregistration is required.

“We have got 15 to 20 spaces left,” said Linda Rush, director of community wellness for the hospital. “The Medical Center has had this event for more than 20 years. We do it the Saturday of Mother’s Day weekend.”

The Mother-Daughter Tea isn’t just for mothers and daughters, Rush said.

“It’s for women and girls of all ages. You can come with your mother or daughter, neighbor or aunt,” she said. “We just encourage women to come and enjoy that afternoon together.”

Hart County author Virginia Davis and illustrator Jane Ward Kehrt of Glasgow will talk about their children’s book, “The Irises’ Secret,” during the tea. The book tells the story of a girl who hides a tea set in an iris patch and the little girl who finds it some time later.

“They will have copies of the book and do a signing,” Rush said.

Girls will have the opportunity to have cupcakes decorated especially for them by 11-year-old St. Joseph School students Madison Feria and Kate Lawless, who operate Sweet Treats Bakery.

— For more information about the Nurse Walk, call 796-3380. For more information or to preregister for the Mother-Daughter Tea, call 745-1010 or 800-624-2318.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Women in the Arts: Medical Center's exhibit showcases female artists from Kentucky

by Billy Hicks, The Daily News, originally published on 4/12/2012

The Medical Center will host the 22nd annual Women in the Arts exhibition this weekend at the hospital’s auditorium.

The exhibit will showcase female artists from Kentucky ages 18 and older and hosts a Special Purchase award, which gives the winner, determined by the exhibition committee and a juror, a cash prize, essentially to purchase the painting for display at the center.

The Medical Center’s director of community wellness, Linda Rush, said the exhibit is a good way to add atmosphere to the building.

“It started as a way to give visitors something nice to enjoy while they visited,” she said. “Then we found that it was also enjoyed by the employees and patients and was very therapeutic for them.”

Defending Special Purchase award winner Nell Peperis knows the joy of having patients look at her artwork. She said she has had about nine paintings purchased by the center to display, in addition to last year’s award-winning still-life painting of pears.

“Sometimes it’s work that motivates me, but sometimes I get requests to paint, sometimes I get the feeling I want to paint something,” Peperis said. “But there’s also the enjoyment of having someone appreciate the work you do that appeals to me, like when a patient who is sick forgets their illness for a bit while looking at my work.”

Misha Ambrosia, an artist enrolled in the last six exhibitions, recalled her first time winning the Special Purchase award and why she enjoys the event.

“There’s a lot of really talented women artists here, and it’s really nice to share an art show with them, share and talk, meet their significant others,” she said. “It’s always nice to have your artwork represented in the hospital. The year I won the Special Purchase award, my painting featured a patient there and she wanted to be wheeled down so she could see herself, and that made her really happy. How many artists can say that?”

The public exhibit runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and Saturday and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday.

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Baby steps: Gaumard ‘Newborn HAL’ simulator helps Medical Center staff train for emergencies

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 4/7/2012

With the click of a mouse, Debbie Smith could make the baby have a seizure, have trouble breathing or turn blue.

Smith, nursery and neonatal intensive care unit charge nurse at The Medical Center, was demonstrating the hospital’s new Gaumard “Newborn HAL” simulator.

“It’s like a baby doll that has a computer programmed inside it. We can program scenarios,” she said. “We can make the heart beat faster or slower. It has the ability to turn blue, and that signals to the staff to treat it as if the baby’s color is blue. We can practice positive pressure breathing. If it’s done too vigorously it can pop a hole in the lungs.”

The simulator, which helps staff learn how to handle high-risk clinical emergencies in a risk-free environment, also “breathes,” kicks and cries. It can be a boy or a girl. Employees can practice routine skills, such as starting IVs and catherization. The Medical Center is nearly finished training various staff, including labor and delivery and NICU nurses and respiratory therapists, according to obstetrics clinical manager Amber Herman.

“Ten percent of babies born here will need a little assistance. This gives the staff the ability to approach the baby. Not everything is cut and dry,” she said. “It can help work out some of the kinks in their training and react appropriately. There has been a lot of positive feedback. This shows the value we all hold in their professional growth.”

Smith agreed. The staff who have trained seemed to respond to the simulator as they would in a real-life situation.

“In the past, we had a baby doll to do those skills, but we have to tell them (the scenarios),” she said. “It didn’t seem that real.”

There are also trainings with the emergency room staff at the other facilities of Commonwealth Health Corp., the parent company of The Medical Center, Herman said.

“They may end up delivering in those ERs,” she said. “They can practice on the simulator.”

The simulator is used with initial employee orientation in the NICU, ongoing competency assessment and continuing education for medical personnel. Doctors have shown an interest in it. Paramedics may also train with the simulator and have it tailored to situations they may face in their environment, Smith said.

“We can customize it to individuals. With paramedics, their work is in the field whereas we have this equipment (at the hospital), so we practice with the equipment,” Smith said. “It fosters a community between the disciplines.”

The newborn simulator was purchased in part by a $14,500 grant from WHAS Crusade for Children. The total cost was $22,500. The Crusade for Children website at www.whascrusade.org says the grants are made to nonprofit agencies, schools and hospitals that help children with special needs up to age 18. The term “special needs” is defined as physical, mental, emotional and medical needs.

“We’re very grateful for Crusade for Children,” Smith said.

The “Newborn HAL” will help the hospital give better service to southcentral Kentucky, Smith said.

“Our community will see the benefits of it over time,” she said. “I think it’ll get better and better.”

Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Ribbon cut on wellness center

by Billy Hicks, The Daily News, originally published on 1/26/2012


The Bowling Green Area Chamber of Commerce cut the ribbon Wednesday at The Medical Center's new Health & Wellness Center location in Chandler Park.


The Health & Wellness Center moved in December to its new facility on Tucker Way from nearby Greenwood Mall, where it had been housed for 13 years.


"Our lease with Greenwood Mall expired in December and they wanted to have a restaurant near the front of the mall," said Linda Rush, director of community wellness at the center. "We started looking in October and this area was available and in the same general area."


Rush said the building has not only allowed staff to continue to provide services such as exercise classes, blood pressure checks, health screenings and education, but new services have been added, as well.


"We've added a celiac support group, a brain and spinal tumor support group and a support group for those who have recently lost loved ones," she said.


Gaines Penn, chairman of the board of directors for the chamber, said The Medical Center is an important component in the Bowling Green community.


"The chamber appreciates all the center does for the community," Penn said. "They help bring economic benefits, such as jobs, to the community. They've turned Bowling Green into a main hub for health care."


Penn also thinks the new facility will be a boost for the Health & Wellness Center.


"(The move) gives them new exposure in a growing area and the opportunity to better serve the community," he said.


Rush agreed, citing positive public reaction to the Tucker Way facility.


"We've been really pleased with the response, especially with the improvement of parking with our new location," she said.


The center is staffed by registered nurses, dietitians and health educators, with a focus on disease prevention and wellness.


Its hours are from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Thursday and from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday and Friday.


Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Support system: Medical Center’s Healthy Weight/Healthy Life class starts Tuesday

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 1/21/2012


Charles Phillips is so interested in getting healthier, he’s willing to drive to Bowling Green from Russellville to get the tools he needs.


“I met with a dietitian before Christmas,” the Russellville man said. “We talked about goals, how to make smarter choices in the food that I eat and an exercise program.”


Phillips will be participating in the Healthy Weight/Healthy Life class, which starts Tuesday.


“I’m interested in losing weight,” Phillips said. “I want to learn to eat better instead of crash dieting.”


The six-week class will meet from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. each Tuesday through Feb. 28 at The Medical Center’s Health and Wellness Center at Chandler Park. The cost is $50, and preregistration is required. For more information or to register, call 745-0942, 877-800-3824 or visit www.themedicalcenter.org.


“We usually do this twice a year. With the new year, we’re trying to reinforce wellness,” Community Wellness Manager Andrea Norris said. “It’s something to teach individuals to make a lifestyle change, something they can keep up and use for the rest of their lives.”


The class focuses each week on something different, Norris said.


“We’ll talk about portion control, food labels, healthy eating when dining out, grocery shopping tips, cooking tips, recipe substitutions, healthy ways to stock their pantry,” she said.


The class also provides support, Norris said. “With a class, you have more people so it’s a support system as well,” she said. “They’re able to encourage each other.”


Phillips has already incorporated some of the strategies in his life. He hopes to alleviate his high blood pressure and sleep apnea through a healthy diet and exercise.


“It’s about staying alive and staying healthy,” he said.


Phillips has managed to make health a lifestyle. He works out at least six days a week at the Carpenter Center in Russellville.


“When I don’t do it, I miss it,” he said. “You have to commit to it.”


He walks on a treadmill for one hour at a brisk pace. He also likes to use an elliptical machine.


“I’m 54 years old, so I can’t go out and jog,” he said, laughing. “It’s easier on my joints.”


Phillips plans to add weightlifting to his routine very soon.


“It’s an important component to losing weight,” he said.


Phillips said he eats at home more than at restaurants. When eating out, he uses an application on his phone called “My Fitness Pro” that tells him how many calories a food contains. He and his wife often split an entree to lessen the calories.


“She does not need to lose weight,” he said. “She’s very supportive of me. I guess she wants to keep me around longer.”


Phillips said he’s trying to burn 500 to 600 calories a day and to eat 300 calories less than his body needs to fuel itself.


“I’ve lost 15 pounds so far,” he said. “I’ve got another 100 pounds to lose, so I’ve got a ways to go.”


Phillips said he has told several people at the Carpenter Center about the classes.


“It’s very affordable. It’s a good way to learn all the little things that you need to do to lose weight,” he said. “You’re never too old to lose weight. If I can do it, anybody can.”


Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Yoga, CPR demonstrations highlights of health expo

by Laurel Wilson, The Daily News, originally published on 1/15/2012


Hundreds of people gathered at the Sloan Convention Center on Saturday morning to learn about health and wellness.


The annual Health and Wellness Expo aimed to educate the public and included health screenings, vendors, demonstrations and performances.


Ashley White, an instructor at Hot Yoga Bowling Green, was at a booth for the studio giving demonstrations of yoga poses and promoting classes.


“I love whenever you’re there, you’re in the moment,” she said.


The room used for hot yoga is warm, which allows muscles to stretch more and regulate the body better, White said.


She said the expo allows the community to see what hot yoga is like and meet the instructors.


Sherry Suggs, a registered nurse and staff development educator for The Medical Center, taught people how to perform CPR using dummies.


“The most important thing is when they figure out somebody’s collapsed, they call 911,” Suggs said.


That way, they know help is on the way while they perform CPR, she said.


A group from The Medical Center was demonstrating hands-only CPR, which involves pushing down hard and fast in the center of the chest with both hands on top of each other, Suggs said.


“A lot of people in the community would never start CPR if they thought they had to breathe into someone’s mouth,” she said.


Through education and media reports, people have learned that isn’t the only way to perform CPR, she said.


“I think there’s a lot more awareness about how important it is,” Suggs said.


Amy Bratton, a registered nurse at The Medical Center, handed out cards about the risk factors and signs of a stroke, which include slurred speech, facial droop and arm numbness.


“A lot of times people don’t really know that they’re doing that, so you need to educate the people around them too,” Bratton said.


She said events like the expo are important.


“It educates people because they gather so much information,” Bratton said.


Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Increasing Awareness: Health and Wellness Expo features Incredible Colon, other demonstrations

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 1/12/2012


Elizabeth Westbrook hopes people will learn more about colon cancer by touring The Incredible Colon.


"It's an inflatable education colon that people can walk through," said Westbrook, cancer control specialist of the Kentucky Cancer Program. "They can see what a polyp would look like, what a lesion would look like and what a healthy colon would look like."


The inflatable colon will be one of the demonstrations this weekend at the Health and Wellness Expo.


"It's an event that we put on to increase awareness and education for the community," said Andrea Norris, community wellness manager at The Medical Center's Health and Wellness Center. "It's really a good opportunity for people because it has different types of information at one place."


Sponsored by The Medical Center and WBKO-TV, the expo will be from 8 a.m. to noon Saturday at the Sloan Convention Center. Health screenings available will include blood sugar, colorectal cancer kits, glaucoma, hearing, lung health, skin cancer, vision, blood pressure and body fat analysis. There will also be door prizes, demonstrations and special presentations by various participants, including Zumba, yoga, CPR, BG Rockerz, Jumpin' Jaguars and Bowling Green Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and Judo. Admission is free.


"We have over 65 vendors and 19 free screenings," Norris said. "We have between 1,500 and 2,000 people every year."


Jim Williams, field operations manager for The Medical Center Emergency Medical Services, said EMS would be demonstrating how to use an automated external defibrillator.


"People can test drive an AED and see how to work it, and we'll be able to answer questions about where to get training and where to buy them," he said. "It's an automated device that has a computer in it that reads a person's heart rhythm. In the case of a person who has suffered cardiac arrest, about 80 to 85 percent of the time their first heart arrhythmia can be reversed with an electric shock."


Using an AED doesn't take special training, although with a CPR class, people can learn to use it even more effectively, Williams said.


"It's like a fire extinguisher. You can use it to put out a small fire while you're waiting for the fire department," he said. "You put a couple of patches on the person's chest. The computer will talk you through what you need to do. It will tell you when and when not to do CPR. It analyzes the heart rhythm on its own."


AEDs are available in a variety of places, including malls, schools and workplaces, Williams said.


"People have probably noticed that more AEDs are out in the public," he said. "Day to day, most people don't realize they're walking past them. They're all over the community."


Westbrook said the Kentucky Cancer Program's display will be focusing on colon cancer.


"We'll have lots of information about colon cancer and the importance of screenings," she said. "Colonoscopy is considered the gold standard. They can remove polyps before they become cancer. There are other types of tests also. Talk to your physician."


There are about 150,000 new cases of colon cancer and 52,000 deaths each year in the United States, Westbrook said. In Kentucky, it is estimated that there will be 2,280 new cases and 900 deaths in 2012.


The number of people being screened for colon cancer in Kentucky is increasing and the number dying from colon cancer is decreasing because of awareness, she said.


"Colon cancer is preventable. People over 50 should be screened," she said. "People who have a family history or who have polyps or Crohn's disease need to be more vigilant and screened earlier."


- For more information, call 745-1010 or 800-624-2318.


Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Lifestyle change: Group helps people with celiac disease as well as others who have gluten intolerance

by Alyssa Harvey, The Daily News, originally published on 1/7/2012


When 3-year-old Aidan Meredith had surgery to remove his tonsils and adenoids, his parents found out he had an issue that they didn’t quite expect.


“They did an upper and lower scope because we had concerns over weight loss, loss of appetite and upset stomach,” said Nicole Meredith, Aidan’s mother.


Meredith and her husband, Brad, found out Aidan has celiac disease, an autoimmune disorder in which the body reacts to the protein gluten, which can be found in wheat, bran, rye and some oats. The disease makes it difficult to absorb and digest nutrients through the small intestine. Symptoms include diarrhea, constipation, abdominal cramping, joint pain, fatigue, certain rashes, low iron or anemia, low vitamin D, low calcium and mood irritability.


“We were upset and worried about the lifestyle change. We were kind of relieved we could put a finger on what was going on,” Meredith said. “We were wanting to make sure he would be OK. We didn’t know much about celiac at the time.”


The Edmonson County family decided to find help at the new Celiac Support Group, which helps people with the disease as well as others who have gluten intolerance. The group meets from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. the first Tuesday of each month at The Medical Center Health and Wellness Center at Chandler Park.


“We’re trying to learn everything we can and what’s best to eat,” Meredith said. “We want to make sure he’s getting enough nutrition and eating the right things.”


The Heart and Pain Management Center of Bowling Green’s Dr. Fred Gott – a specialist in cardiology, internal medicine and pain management – is facilitator of the group. He has an intolerance not only to gluten, but also to wheat, milk, onions and sulfites.


“I was diagnosed about five years ago, but I’ve had symptoms for more than 20 years,” he said. “I was becoming malnourished from it.”


After eating a food with gluten, Gott would have to lie down and prop up his legs on pillows. “With milk, in 24 hours I’m over it. With wheat, it takes a week or so,” he said. “It happens if I eat even a trace of wheat.”


The support group had its first meeting Tuesday evening. Jean Nehm, who was at the meeting, later talked about her own diagnosis of celiac disease, which came in January 2007. The Bowling Green woman went to the meeting to share what she has learned with others.


“I think of how scared and alone I felt,” she said. “From January to May, I didn’t know what I was going to do.”


For Mother’s Day, one of her daughters presented her with Bette Hagman’s cookbook, “The Gluten-Free Gourmet.” Since then, Nehm has received several of Hagman’s cookbooks from her daughters.


“It was like a breakthrough. One of the best parts was learning how to mix your own flour,” she said. “I can just go to that when I have to cook.”


Nehm said she and her husband eat a gluten-free diet, although her husband doesn’t have celiac disease. They don’t eat out very much.


“There is hidden wheat all over from soup to salad dressing and ketchup,” she said. “We’re eating well. I’ve always liked to cook, so it’s not a problem.”


Nehm said her gluten-free foods don’t taste bland or like cardboard.


“It’s absolutely delicious,” she said. “I use plenty of spices.”


Jeannie Atwood of Bowling Green said she is happy about the new support group.


“I’ve been saying for a while now that we needed one,” she said. “I would love to see people come for support and tell what they’re going through.”


Atwood found out she had gluten intolerance after experiencing other health issues.


“I have had problems with my thyroid and osteoporosis with a high risk of fracture of the hip,” she said. “I prayed that God would send me to somebody who would not look at just my thyroid.”


She began having tests in March. After doing a saliva test and bloodwork, Atwood’s doctor had her do a 21-day elimination diet. She found out she had intolerances to corn, soy, dairy, wheat and gluten. Since she has taken those things out of her diet, her health has improved and she said she feels blessed to be getting well.


“My cholesterol was also out of whack. It dropped 50 points,” she said. “My thyroid is in normal range.”


Atwood said that when she eats at restaurants, she finds it easiest to partake of the salad bar.


“It’s all about eating whole foods and no processed foods. You’ve got to be really careful that it doesn’t have gluten in it,” she said. “It comes in so many things. Read the labels and research.”


More people are aware that those with celiac disease and gluten intolerance need gluten-free foods, Atwood said. She has been to gluten-free restaurants and products are available in many stores.


“If you’ve got it, now’s the best time in history to have it,” she said.


Gott said he copes with his intolerances by reading labels carefully before he eats anything. Some foods he enjoys eating include avocados, eggs, potatoes and whole-grain rice.


“I have my own beef slaughtered and packaged,” he said. “I don’t eat anything if I don’t read the labels.”


Gott said he wanted to have a support group so that people can get together and help each other. Having celiac disease or gluten intolerance can be difficult.


“The social impact is immense. Sharing a meal together is a sign of friendship,” he said. “If you don’t do that, you’re considered anti-social. If you don’t eat what they serve, they get offended.”


Even as a doctor, Gott runs into challenges. In situations such as potlucks, he often brings food that he can eat.


“Medical meetings are hard,” he said. “They have all these gourmet foods that I can’t eat.”


He also made some other lifestyle changes so that he won’t feel isolated.


“I have taken up ballroom dancing,” he said. “It’s about socializing and not eating.”


Meredith said that when the family returned home from the hospital, they cleared their shelves, went to the grocery store and stocked up on as many gluten-free foods as they could. Since then, they have noticed improvements in their son’s health.


“He knows that his stomach feels better. He told his dad, ‘Daddy, my stomach feels better,’ ” she said. “Now he’s saying he’s hungry. He’s wanting to eat. He has always liked fruits and vegetables.”


Aidan has been able to eat safely at preschool. Meredith packs his lunch with gluten-free foods. The family is adapting to his diet.


“My husband’s not big on bread in the first place, plus I’m trying to cut back on the carbs, so it’s a big help,” she said. “So far we’ve not been overwhelmed by it.”


Meredith said she’s thankful for the support group.


“We were so excited when we saw that there were other people to talk to and get good ideas and support from,” she said. “The other people were so helpful, and that was a big relief.”


— For more information about the support group, call 745-0942.


Copyright 2012 News Publishing LLC (Bowling Green, KY)