Combined Federal Campaign of South Hampton Roads PERSONAL STORIES Selection by Health Charities
American Cancer Society Story 1 Mr. Brown As a 52 year old African-American who was diagnosed with lung cancer in April 2005, Mr. Brown received chemotherapy treatment once a week. Despite his failing health, Mr. Brown continued to work his low income job & take care of his brother in their apartment. Mr. Brown needed help. Through the American Cancer Society's Patient Resource Navigation Program, Mr. Brown was given financial assistance, gas cards to help with transportation to & from treatments & a free respite room at the Hope Lodge after chemotherapy treatments. Story 2 In the spring of 2000 I received the three words you never want to hear. "You have cancer!" at that very moment your world stands still and your emotions become a roller coaster. Where to turn, who to turn to? At this point in stepped the American Cancer Society with a program "Reach to Recovery". Women who are cancer survivors, specially trained to help me with what was ahead and most importantly offering me HOPE. Now I offer the same hope and Help that was offered me as a volunteer. American Heart Association Today Taylor is an active 11 year old, his journey since birth has been far from normal. It was a very quick delivery which helped saved his life. He had pediatricians standing by in the room and within minutes he was being run (literally) to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. He coded (stopped breathing on his own) on the way. It was a normal pregnancy. We had no forewarning. It was after 10pm the day of Taylor’s birth before two Pediatric Cardiologists came in to tell us that Taylor had Pulmonary Artesia with an Intact Septum, Hypo plastic Right Ventricle as well as an ASD and would require almost immediate surgery. It was a mouthful and we had a lot to learn in a short amount of time. Taylor was kept alive by medicines and machines until he could have open heart surgery number 1 at age: 6 days. Open heart number 2 was at day 13. Open heart surgery number 3 was before he was ten months old. Each one more emotionally draining than the next as his bright emerging personality became such a strong part of our family’s pulse. Taylor has been in the cath lab at least five times since his surgeries and has had two procedures while he was in the labs. He currently has a bi-directional Glenn Shunt and a gortex outflow patch in place of a pulmonary valve. People who meet him for the first time can’t tell ay difference between him and his friends. He runs tussles and hangs with the best of them. The only restriction he’s ever had is absolutely no football. He loves to be active. He lives, eats and breathes baseball. He’s a miracle that needed just a little help from the AHA.
Beach Health Clinic Story 1 ―John‖ is an employed 36yr old male who first visited the Beach Health Clinic on September 2008. He is uninsured and came to the clinic seeking help with a seizure disorder. The Tegretol XR medication that he takes for his seizures is too expensive for him to afford but without it he puts his life in danger. After appointments with both an internal medicine physician and a neurologist at the clinic, his prescription was filled by our onsite pharmacy enabling John to be seizure free. Tegretol XR is donated by Novartis through Rx Partnership with means that there is very short waiting period to get his prescription filled. Story 2 ―Harold‖ has been a patient at the Beach Health Clinic for several years. He presented himself with severe epilepsy and was immediately placed on medication to help manage his seizures. At that time, the only way we could get his medication was through the patient assistance program. It takes 4-6 weeks to receive medication from the pharmaceutical company through the patient assistance program. Because of the long wait, ―Harold‖ suffered from gaps in his treatment. He visited the emergency room several times when he ran out of medication to control his seizures. With the new pharmacy program, ―Harold‖ is able to receive his medication at the clinic. The prescription is filled within a week, so that he is not without medication. Along with epilepsy, ―Harold‖ also suffers from high cholesterol. He is currently taking three different medications to help with this medical problem. ―Harold‖ can pick up his medications from the clinic for a reasonable price so that he may place his earnings toward other expenses during these hard economic times. The pharmacy program has helped this patient and others maintain treatment plans in order to better manage their chronic conditions. WHRO We recently spoke with the niece of one of our listeners (80 years old), just to check in to see if her aunt was enjoying the receiver we sent out in 2009. Her niece said that she was loving being able to get the news and had rediscovered the joy of some things, because she finally could participate again. Her aunt regularly calls her to discuss something she ―just heard,‖ and is really excited to keep up with current events. Meal on Wheels of Chesapeake Recently, Anita Kilabrew, one of our board members who is the associate pastor of a local Chesapeake church delivered a meal to an elderly lady named Betty who had just arrived home after throat surgery. Betty told Anita that Meals on Wheels of Chesapeake was such a much needed blessing to her by not only providing meals to her during her recovery but also the fact that someone is checking on her daily. Betty has a local grown child but it was a blessing for Betty's family that MOW of Chesapeake could provide services for Betty when her grown child had to work and was not able to check on her.
St Mary’s Home for the Disabled Children Go, Kishaun, Go! Kishaun really loves to move. Once seated on an adaptive tricycle, 10-year-old Kishaun zooms up and down the corridors of St. Mary’s Home for Disabled Children so quickly that his therapists sometimes have trouble keeping up with him. Like most of the children and young adults who live at St. Mary’s Home, Kishaun uses a wheelchair. He also can walk, with assistance, for short distances. Pedaling on the tricycle helps him walk by warming up his legs and strengthening the muscles in his legs and core – all while he’s having a blast. ―Kishaun just wants his independence,‖ said physical therapist assistant Lynn Regna. ―The trike is a way for him to just go.‖ Kishaun is one of about 15 children at St. Mary’s who now regularly ride a tricycle as part of their physical therapy. The seats and handle bars are easy to configure to give each child a comfortable ride. While the child grips the handle bars and pedals, a therapist uses controls on the back to steer. Through the generosity of supporters, the Auxiliary Board of St. Mary’s Home for Disabled Children was able to donate funds for the Home to buy two of these tricycles. St. Mary’s Home has been providing a loving and caring environment for Virginia’s most vulnerable children for 65 years. During World War II, St. Mary’s opened as a home for young children with no homes of their own or who needed a temporary place to stay while their mothers were at work at war plants. The Home’s mission evolved over the years. At St. Mary’s Home, we provide unique, complex, around-the-clock-care within a homelike environment for special children with severe disabilities, so each child can achieve his or her fullest potential. About 90 children and young adults—ages newborn to 21—from all across Virginia live, play and go to school at St. Mary’s. The Home is the only pediatric long-term-care residential facility of its size and scope in the state for children and young adults with severe disabilities, and one of only about 100 such facilities nationwide. Children come to St. Mary’s as a result of birth disorders, traumatic accidents, illness and child abuse. Staff provide medical, therapeutic and recreational services, and SMHDC partners with Southeastern Cooperative Educational Programs to provide individualized education programs. Medicaid, United Way donations, CFC donations and other funding such as grants and donations cover the cost of this care, and military families can get assistance through the U.S. Armed Forces’ Exceptional Family Member Program.
Introduction to How Lobotomies Work It's evening in a mental hospital in Oregon, and there's a struggle happening between a noncompliant patient and the head nurse. Because of the violent patient's actions, the head nurse has him committed to a special ward for patients deemed "disturbed." He also undergoes a lobotomy -- an operation in which the connections between the frontal lob
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