Is Your Risk of Being Sued Climbing

Image
southland primary care :: Article Creator Primary Care The material on this site is for informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment provided by a qualified health care provider.© 2005–2024 MedPage Today, LLC, a Ziff Davis company. All rights reserved.MedPage Today is among the federally registered trademarks of MedPage Today, LLC and may not be used by third parties without explicit permission. How Upfront, Predictable Payments Can Improve Primary Care Decades of evidence shows that primary care is associated with improved health, greater patient satisfaction, and reduced health inequities, and it is strongest when teams of providers coordinate care to address patients' needs. Yet the way the United States currently pays for primary care limits this potential. Most primary care providers are paid on a fee-for-service basis — that is, retrospectively for each individual service they provid

These Are the Top Doctors in the Hudson Valley in 2022



valley native primary care center :: Article Creator

Center Valley Dental Practice Acquired

Dental365, a New York state-based provider of comprehensive dental care services, has acquired Cirocco Dental Center in Center Valley.  

The practice offers family and cosmetic dentistry services including; general dentistry, dental implants, teeth whitening, crowns, dentures, root canals and endodontic treatments.  

Dental365 said this latest acquisition brings its network to 13 practices in Pennsylvania in just 7 months.  

"This office has embraced technology and understands the importance of preventative dental care. They are a great fit with our company," said Dental365's CEO, Scott Asnis. 

Cirocco is a Lehigh Valley native, originally from Bethlehem, who has been practicing for more than 15 years.  

He received his DMD from the Temple University School of Dentistry and attended a one-year advanced Dental General Practice Residency program at the Mountainside Hospital in Montclair, New Jersey.  

"We have always been focused on our patients, and we are excited to continue all the things that have made our office such a trusted dental practice in our community," Cirocco said. 

 


New And Upgraded Health Care Facilities For Native Americans Open In Arizona

The Navajo Nation is one of the largest Native American reservations in the U.S. And delivers health services to nearly a quarter million people.

It also a medically underserved area, facing significant health disparities and lower life expectancy due to high rates of diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obesity and metabolic syndrome.

That has begun to change for the better. Three new and upgraded health facilities opening in Arizona will provide Native Americans with better access to health care, and more are in the works.

  • The Supai Health Station is located on tribal lands at the bottom of the Grand Canyon. Accessible only by helicopter, mule or on foot, the 12,700-square-foot facility provides space for primary care, dental, pharmacy and medication dispensing, lab, and radiology services.
  • Dilkon Medical Center, a new facility run by the Indian Health Service (IHS), offers 12 in-patient beds, as well as primary care, eye care, dental care, diagnostic imaging, laboratory, pharmacy, physical therapy, behavioral health and support services.
  • Sage Memorial Hospital is scheduled to open a new 90,000-square-foot, 25-bed hospital in late May, 2024. The hospital and medical, dental and field clinics are operated by a private, nonprofit corporation, Navajo Health Foundation-Sage Memorial, and provide health care for about 23,000 people in the area.
  • Staffing remain an issue. To encourage people to work for the Navajo facilities, IHS is providing incentives such as loan repayment and scholarship programs to encourage people of American Indian or Alaskan Native descent to pursue health care careers.

    Resources on the Role of Hospitals

    Navajo Psychiatrist Bridges Gaps Between Native American Culture And Behavioral Health Care

    "Our way is to not just understand your current state and try to move forward from there, but to also find out the reasons that brought you to that point," said Dr. Richard Laughter, a Navajo psychiatrist at Sage Memorial Hospital in Ganado. (Photo by Kevinjonah Paguio/Cronkite News)

    GANADO – As a Navajo himself, Dr. Richard Laughter understands mental health issues experienced by members of the Navajo Nation on a deeply personal level. As a Native American psychiatrist, he breaks down accessibility barriers for his people by blending Native cultural practices with Western behavioral health care.

    According to Laughter, the rural nature of the Navajo Reservation greatly impacts the number of accessible behavioral health services because of the distances people have to travel to get to them. The Navajo Nation website says tribal lands cover 27,000 square miles in Arizona, Utah and New Mexico.

    "The care service is very small because we are rural, the whole reservation is rural, so we're going to have a big shortage," he said. "There is some stability, but there is a lot of instability, too."

    This lack of mental health care has impacted the Native American community at large. The suicide mortality rate for American Indian/Alaska Native individuals (39.7 suicides per 100,000 population) was the highest of any racial and ethnic group in Arizona in 2021, according to the Arizona Department of Health Services.

    Laughter identified himself as the only Navajo psychiatrist on the reservation and pointed to the interconnected nature of providers on the reservation as evidence.

    "For some reason, psychiatry hasn't been big for the Navajos that have gone to medical school," he said. "Usually, it is a small circle. If there was another Native psychiatrist, I think I would have found out through those circles."

    Laughter is working to bridge gaps in mental health care in his work for the behavioral health unit at Sage Memorial Hospital in Ganado,

    "Most people here are running into counselors, psychiatrists and nurse practitioners who are non-Indians," he said. "Then, it's hard for them to communicate and relate. By me being Native, at least it kind of relaxes them, even though I don't speak the (Navajo) language."

    Personal connection

    The behavioral health unit at Sage Memorial Hospital in Ganado, where Dr. Richard Laughter incorporates traditional Indigenous culture into his psychiatric practice. (Photo by Kevinjonah Paguio/Cronkite News)

    The behavioral health unit at Sage Memorial Hospital in Ganado, where Dr. Richard Laughter incorporates traditional Indigenous culture into his psychiatric practice. (Photo by Kevinjonah Paguio/Cronkite News)

    Laughter attended the University of Utah for both his undergraduate degree and medical degree and completed a four-year residency in psychiatry at the University of Nevada, Reno.

    He worked for four years at the Gallup Indian Medical Center, a facility run by the Indian Health Service in Gallup, New Mexico, and went into private practice. He is now a key member of the behavioral health team at Sage Memorial Hospital, a unique Native-managed comprehensive health care system, poised to open a brand new 90,000-square-foot facility this summer.

    Navajo people often refer to themselves as "Diné," which means "the people" in the Navajo language. Another culturally significant way Navajo people identify themselves is through the clan system. Laughter's clans are Bit'an'nii, born for T'od'ich'nii.

    He said clan systems relate to the word "k'é," meaning system of kinship.

    GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

    SUBSCRIBE

    "They say in Navajo, 'k'é,' and that means we're all related, we're all here to help, we're all together on this life journey," Laughter said. "The clan system further divides what your relationship is with that other person. What it does is, I think, promote that harmonious life."

    At the center of his decision to enter psychiatry, Laughter cited an intense desire to help his people.

    "With our people, there is a lot of transition into the Western world and historical trauma," Laughter said. "My dad went to boarding school at Intermountain up in Utah, and they used to send people away to church homes. They figured that they would teach us English, even though they were fluent speakers of our language."

    Laughter said the transition away from Native culture drove his family to alcohol. He stayed away from it until the night of his high school graduation.

    "I tried it, and it relieved some of the stress that I was going through at home with domestic violence," he said. "It got me into some trouble. Not with the law, just being rowdy. Then, I gave myself to God and decided I wanted to help people."

    Laughter draws upon personal experience and familial struggle to strengthen his connection with his patients and point them to available resources for help.

    "I can tell them now that they can get well with all these programs they have available to them," Laughter said. "AA (Alcoholics Anonymous) groups, counseling, medications. But I did it with nothing. Just pure will and the good creator to guide me."

    Laughter's practice at Sage Memorial Hospital emphasizes cultural observances combined with Western medicine. He is working on expanding the diversity of care through a variety of traditional practices, such as sweat lodges, hogans and teepees.

    After promising his life and medical practice to God, Laughter became immersed in Native American culture. He said he has completed the Lakota Sun Dance ceremony 39 times, a ritual that brings people together to reaffirm their beliefs about the universe. Laughter is also involved in the Native American Church, where he conducts peyote ceremonies when asked to do so.

    "Along the way, I developed a sense of what helps people outside of the Western philosophy of health," Laughter said. "In coming down here and trying to help people, you can only do so much for their mental health if you're just using meds and short therapy sessions."

    Mental health care in Navajo Nation

    "Our way is to not just understand your current state and try to move forward from there, but to also find out the reasons that brought you to that point," said Dr. Richard Laughter, a Navajo psychiatrist at Sage Memorial Hospital in Ganado. (Photo by Kevinjonah Paguio/Cronkite News)

    "Our way is to not just understand your current state and try to move forward from there, but to also find out the reasons that brought you to that point," said Dr. Richard Laughter, a Navajo psychiatrist at Sage Memorial Hospital in Ganado. (Photo by Kevinjonah Paguio/Cronkite News)

    According to Laughter, it is essential to offer alternatives to traditional Western medicine to provide the Native community with adequate care. He said the focus on a patient's background is important.

    "Our way is to not just understand your current state and try to move forward from there, but to also find out the reasons that brought you to that point," he said. "By focusing on that, you get a fuller healing. That is the part that really excites me, because there is an element of giving yourself to the higher power."

    Laughter said his patients have voiced fears of only receiving bad news when in a traditional Western medicine setting.

    "In Western medicine, you may go to a doctor and spend 10 minutes with them," Laughter said. "They're in a hurry to see a lot of people. This results in a lack of education on what's going on with your body or your mind. So patients come out feeling that they are being experimented on, especially if that medication didn't work."

    He said another major barrier for Navajo patients is their lack of knowledge about treating disease.

    "We have high diabetes rates among the people," Laughter said. "There's a big push to educate people from a Western standpoint, but there is still a high prevalence. And then it's the same with alcohol and domestic violence."

    According to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study published in July 2020, "an estimated 100,000 Navajo, about half of the adult population, are living with either type 2 diabetes or prediabetes."

    One of the ways diabetes is being treated within the Navajo Nation is by combining Western medicine with a traditional Native American diet.

    Sage Memorial Hospital announced a Produce Prescription Pilot Program in August 2023 to increase fruits, vegetables, healthy foods and traditional foods in Native diets as a way to improve health outcomes. This program is in partnership with a Navajo medical nutritionist named Denee Bex.

    Kathryn Barron, the director of outpatient services and community health services at Sage Memorial Hospital, talked about this focus on traditional food systems.

    "It's really about focusing on the traditional, on the things that are already known within Navajo culture, and then incorporating that into our teachings," Barron said. "(Bex) is going to provide some education for us health care providers too, so we can incorporate that knowledge into how we serve our patients, from a nutrition and traditional focus."

    Another problem with health care access in the Navajo Nation is a lack of providers who stay in the community. Laughter pointed to the struggle health care professionals have in transitioning to the rural landscape.

    "Right when you get to know your doctor, your counselor or your psychiatrist, they're gone," he said. "After six months to a year. Maybe someone will stay a little bit longer, but that's very rare."

    Dr. Kenneth Anaeme, chief medical officer for Sage Memorial Hospital, commented on this staffing issue.

    "One of the things we have to do to convince people to come here is to show them the variation of practice they can have," Anaeme said. "Having said that, the rural situation is not for everyone, right? So you have to find that fit of the provider who wants to come to your facility and who wants to essentially make a difference in practice."

    Laughter works to keep healing traditions in his work but said, in general, knowledge of Native American culture on the reservation is fading.

    "We have a lot of elders who are now passing away, and we get a little less with each generation," Laughter said.

    Elders within the Navajo Nation act as the knowledge and language keepers, disseminating Native American culture to younger generations. The Navajo Nation was hit hard during the initial COVID-19 pandemic outbreak, largely impacting older residents.

    In the first year of the outbreak, by October 2020, there were 575 confirmed Navajo Nation resident deaths, 138 of whom were aged 60 to 69 and 115 were 80 or older, according to the Navajo Epidemiology Center. The total COVID-19 death toll on the Navajo Nation as of this spring was 2,268, the center reported on Feb. 29.

    Laughter noted that, outside of his cultural focus, his status as a Native American psychiatrist helps put people at ease when accessing care.

    "People come in, and they are expecting a Caucasian doctor," he said. "But I think when they see me, they're able to at least put their mind at ease because I might understand some of their concepts. I understand the Indian Native American thinking about how to get well."

    The next move for Laughter and the behavioral health unit at Sage Memorial Hospital is the construction of their sweat lodge. A sweat lodge is used to bring people together for the spiritual practice of purifying the body. Water poured over hot rocks in the center of the sweat lodge produces steam, while people inside the lodge engage in communal prayers and songs.

    While acknowledging that not every patient will want to participate, Laughter believes providing this option for treatment will help connect Navajo culture and behavioral health care.

    "People will come here, and while we're doing an interview, we will suggest different things," he said. "We have substance abuse groups, we have certified instructors and we also will have the sweat lodge, where we can do group sessions, utilizing prayer and herbs and song."

    Laughter said he hopes to grow the behavioral health unit at Sage Memorial Hospital into a flourishing program.

    "I think as a Native psychiatrist practicing the ceremonies that we need, it is my duty to put things up that are going to connect with the people," Laughter said. "They're going to come in, they're going to pray, they're going to sing songs and go through a ritual. Just by going through that, they're going to feel better."

    If you or someone you know is struggling with thoughts of suicide, the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline is available 24/7. Call or text 988.

    For more stories from Cronkite News, visit cronkitenews.Azpbs.Org

    The post Navajo psychiatrist bridges gaps between Native American culture and behavioral health care appeared first on Utah News Dispatch.

    View comments






    Comments

    Popular posts from this blog

    Observership Program listings for international medical graduates

    Vaccination Sites | Covid-19

    Vaccination Sites | Covid-19