Tag Archives: Health

Fla. lawmakers set to override Gov. Crist’s vetoes

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) – Florida lawmakers are poised to do something they haven’t done in 12 years and that they’ve accomplished only twice in the last 24 – override a governor’s veto.

The Republican-controlled Legislature’s agenda for a planned one-day special session Tuesday includes override votes on up to seven bills and one budget item. All were vetoed earlier this year by Gov. Charlie Crist, who quit the GOP to run unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate as an independent.

None, though, will be as contentious as an abortion bill that was one of two vetoed measures the Legislature last overrode on March 11, 1998.?The Legislature says it will not?consider hot-button?vetoes on teacher merit pay and retention, elections and abortion during the one-day session.

“My personal inclination would be not to try and take up anything in special session that was a big, more regular session-type issue such as health care or education,” incoming House Speaker Dean Cannon said.

Instead, Cannon and Senate President Mike Haridopolos said they picked legislation that passed by wide margins and with bipartisan support. The override candidates include a $9.7 million appropriation for the University of Florida’s Shands Teaching Hospital and a bill that would dilute the powers of the governor and other executive branch officials by requiring legislative approval of administrative rules with an economic effect.

Another bill?would let local governments put yard trash in garbage dumps so they no longer will have to make separate pickups for each type of refuse.

The two leaders Monday dropped two of the 10 override attempts they’d originally proposed, including one at the request of Governor-elect Rick Scott, a fellow Republican. That bill?would have stripped the governor of sole authority over the Department of Management Services and required him to share it with the three Cabinet members.

Scott “thinks he has the right skill set to turn around this area, and it needs a lot of turn around,” Haridopolos said.? The agency has drawn criticism from lawmakers over its building construction, maintenance and leasing functions.

The other bill contained provisions designed to control the state’s costs for risk management and workers compensation, including a cap on how much doctors can get reimbursed for drugs they dispense to injured workers. Crist’s veto was supported by doctors who donated heavily to Republicans, including political committees formed by Haridopolos and Cannon.

Besides the overrides, votes also are planned on appropriating $31 million in federal stimulus money for consumer rebates on purchases of solar energy and high-efficiency heating and air conditioning systems and delaying a new septic tank inspection requirement for six months until next July 1.

The last time the Legislature, also with Republican majorities in both chambers, overrode vetoes was when Democrat Lawton Chiles was governor

Republicans also voiced opposition to higher taxes, yet one vetoed bill set for possible override would triple the tax on citrus to 3 cents a box. The increase is expected to raise $3.5 million a year for research on such things as greening, a citrus disease.

Haridopolos said he supports the increase because growers approved it in a referendum.
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Fla. lawmakers set to override Gov. Crist’s vetoes

CALL FOR ACTION: WINK investigates claims of ”deplorable conditions” at Tampa VA hospital

TAMPA, Fla. – A Call for Action investigation into what one soldier’s stepfather calls, “deplorable conditions” at the James A. Haley Veterans’ hospital in Tampa.

WINK News uncovered a disturbing report showing this isn’t the first time a family has raised concerns about the type of care their loved one received at the VA hospital. We also found the VA is well aware of the concerns the Kent family raised about the condition of the hospital building.

Private First Class Corey Kent’s family sent us pictures of what they saw inside the hospital: hair and mold in bathrooms, holes in the walls, and broken fixtures. We found the problems they documented are well known to the staff, but hospital administrators left out an incredibly vital piece of information about what they’re doing to correct it.

PFC Corey Kent’s family asked for a transfer from Walter Reed in Washington, D.C., to James A. Haley in Tampa.

“Things went downhill from the first day,” Kent’s stepfather Dan Ashby told WINK.

Kent’s health took a turn for the worse and Kent had to undergo gall bladder surgery because of a blood infection. His family blames the condition of the hospital and the care he received for his setback.

“It was a direct result of why he got a blood infection,” Ashby told WINK

Kent’s step dad showed WINK News the pictures he took of the conditions in the hospital. They show mold and hair in the corners of rooms, holes in the walls, and broken fixtures.

“It’s time something is said and done. It needs to be looked into. Someone needs to go and investigate that hospital,” he said.

So we decided to do some digging. We uncovered almost a dozen published reports by VA investigators about the facility.

We found inspections done in 2002 and 2008 which cited the hospital’s cleanliness as a problem. We also found seven different investigations into quality of patient care at the hospital; one following the death of a marine who lost his legs from a roadside bomb and whose condition suddenly and unexpectedly deteriorated once he arrived at James A. Haley.

“I think we provide the very best to not only our veterans but our active duty service members,” said Carolyn Clark, a spokeswoman for the VA.

She wouldn’t talk to us on camera about those reports, telling us off camera that the investigations were “old” and not relevant. But as far as the condition of the hospital, we were shocked to learn they’re making state-of-the-art renovations to the building– built in 1972. And from the outside, there’s no indication to family or to patients that there is a multimillion dollar renovation going on.

We finally persuaded Clark to let us show you how your tax dollars are paying to upgrade the facility.

“We have a painting project– we also have on five west, we have just rehabbed that unit and we should have that finished in 60-90 days and what that it is– we have rehabbed that unit with single rooms, flat screen tv’s, overhead lift system– where we are able to lift them to a wheelchair or to the commode or restroom. State-of-the-art,” Clark explained.

The downturn in the economy allowed the original renovation project to come in under budget, so now they have money to build a tower with 56 new rooms.

“You’ll see that the hospital is somewhat dated but we’re working on updating it so it looks modern. And in the next five years it will look totally different and modern. We’re one of the busiest VA hospitals in the country and also for active duty service members,” Clark told WINK.

The new rooms will be available in the next few weeks, but amazingly, that information was never passed along to Corey Kent’s family.

Even knowing about the renovation now, Kent’s family said they’re glad they moved Corey back to Walter Reed and plan to keep fighting to make sure all VA hospitals offer the best care possible.

“It’s not just about Corey. It’s about all men and women. Anybody who served in the armed forces deserves better,” Ashby explained.

We have links to all the inspections done at the James A. Haley hospital in Tampa. Just click on the links below to see the full reports.

2002 INSPECTION/REVIEW OF FACILITY

http://www4.va.gov/oig/CAP/VAOIG-02-03094-101.pdfs

2005 INVESTIGATION AFTER MARINE DEATH

http://www4.va.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-05-00641-149.pdf

2006 FOLLOW UP INVESTIGATION AFTER MARINE’S DEATH

http://www4.va.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-05-00641-166.pdf

2006 INSPECTION CRANIAL IMPLANT SURGERIES

http://www4.va.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-06-01642-126.pdf

2006 INVESTIGATION IN TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY PATIENT TREATMENT

http://www4.va.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-05-03053-77.pdf

2006 REVIEW OF THE FACILITY

http://www4.va.gov/oig/CAP/VAOIG-06-02004-14.pdf

2007 PATIENT COMPLAINT

http://www4.va.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-07-00457-206.pdf

2008 PATIENT COMPLAINT

http://www4.va.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-08-00183-94.pdf

2008 REVIEW OF THE FACILITY

http://www4.va.gov/oig/CAP/VAOIG-08-03090-160.pdf

2008 INVESTIGATION INTO THE VISION CARE

http://www4.va.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-09-02554-28.pdf

2009 SURGERY

http://www4.va.gov/oig/54/reports/VAOIG-09-00356-198.pdf

CALL FOR ACTION: WINK investigates claims of ”deplorable conditions” at Tampa VA hospital

Florida horse tests positive for West Nile Virus

DELRAY BEACH, Fla. (AP) – The Palm Beach County Health Department is monitoring mosquito-borne illnesses after a second horse tested positive for the West Nile virus.

The South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported Saturday that the latest case was found in Delray Beach. The health department confirmed the two cases of the virus and two cases of Eastern Equine Encephalitis in horses. Both viruses are spread by mosquitoes.
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State officials are advising horse owners to vaccinate their animals or have booster shots up to date.
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Several sentinel chickens have tested positive for mosquito-borne illnesses across Florida, including Hernado County.
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To reduce the risk of being bitten by mosquitoes, state health officials recommend wearing clothes that cover most of their skin and applying mosquito repellent.

Florida horse tests positive for West Nile Virus

PHOTOS Agencies helping home-bound seniors struggle to find volunteer drivers

Belva Padgett, left, of Naples, a volunteer with the Dr. Piper Center for Social Services, helps Bill Blackney, III, right, also of Naples, grocery shop at Publix  supermarket in Naples. Padgett volunteers to help around a half dozen residents in the Goodlette Arms apartment complex go to the grocery store and hair salon, attend their medical appointments and tackle other daily chores throughout the week.  Local nonprofits in southwest Florida have been paralyzed by volunteer shortages and struggle to meet the growing demand of needs seniors who have limited mobility. Tristan Spinski/Staff

Photo by TRISTAN SPINSKI // Buy this photo

Belva Padgett, left, of Naples, a volunteer with the Dr. Piper Center for Social Services, helps Bill Blackney, III, right, also of Naples, grocery shop at Publix supermarket in Naples. Padgett volunteers to help around a half dozen residents in the Goodlette Arms apartment complex go to the grocery store and hair salon, attend their medical appointments and tackle other daily chores throughout the week. Local nonprofits in southwest Florida have been paralyzed by volunteer shortages and struggle to meet the growing demand of needs seniors who have limited mobility. Tristan Spinski/Staff

Nearly a dozen Southwest Florida senior citizen service providers, including nonprofits, churches and for-profit businesses, agreed that growing numbers of low-income elderly people are becoming more isolated as transportation and companionship services grasp for volunteers.


It took the death of a friend to make Norman Schreiber think about his own legacy.

While attending a funeral several years ago in Boca Raton, Schreiber listened as his deceased friend’s two sons delivered eulogies that celebrated their father’s life. The man had owned several nightclubs and was a financial success. He gave back to his community. He was a devoted husband and father.

“A big macher” or “big shot,” said Schreiber, 69, of North Fort Myers.

“I thought: ‘God. What will they say about me? Here’s Norman. Open and shut the coffin,’” Schreiber said.

So Schreiber and his wife, Adrienne, decided to spend their time with home-bound senior citizens.

Last year, they met Beverly McLaughlin, 80, of North Fort Myers, through the Lee County Senior Friendship Centers ­­— a nonprofit dedicated to improving the quality of life for elderly people.

Now they run errands together, go out for breakfast, even take McLaughlin’s cat to the vet. They give McLaughlin mobility and companionship in a world that is difficult to navigate when you’re 80, partially deaf and have a difficult time walking.

While McLaughlin has a success story, she is one of the lucky few. Throughout Southwest Florida, nonprofits that help the elderly find themselves in a volunteer crisis.

Nearly a dozen Southwest Florida senior citizen service providers, including nonprofits, churches and for-profit businesses, agreed that growing numbers of low-income elderly people are becoming more isolated as transportation and companionship services grasp for volunteers.

Nancy Green-Irwin, executive director of the Senior Friendship Center in Fort Myers, said her organization has more than 600 people on a waiting list for its services.

“There are a lot of great services, but it doesn’t even scratch the need,” said Sarah Owen, chief executive of Community Cooperative Ministries in Fort Myers.

Green-Irwin said the recent closing of Faith in Action, a transportation-providing subsidiary of Community Cooperative Ministries in Fort Myers, has compounded an already overwhelming need for volunteers. Because the Senior Friendship Center is a multifaceted senior service provider and doesn’t specialize in transportation specifically, people who just need rides are put at the bottom of the waiting list.

Sarah Owen, chief executive of Community Cooperative Ministries in Fort Myers, which used to operate Faith in Action, said her organization had to cancel its transportation program several months ago because it couldn’t obtain liability insurance.

Owen said the organization now has moved to a “facilitative role” in which it refers senior citizens who need rides to other providers in the area.

“There are a lot of great services, but it doesn’t even scratch the need,” Owen said.

And the widening void of transportation options, Owen said, affects people’s independence, dignity and health.

According to Owen, elderly people become at-risk when nobody checks up on them regularly. This degrades the quality of life — an extra day without grocery shopping, the house falling into disrepair and not addressing problems until they become emergencies.

These issues are difficult to address because home-bound seniors are hidden behind closed doors, Owen said. It’s not like driving past a soup kitchen and seeing a line of people in need of help, she said.

The “neighbors helping neighbors” dynamic is what makes these volunteer programs so valuable, as opposed to the elderly relying solely on public transportation, Owen said.

Though public transportation options seem like the remedy for nonprofit volunteer shortages, waiting at the bus stop can deter frail senior citizens, co-payments for door-to-door service can add up, and traversing the bureaucracy of Medicaid and other government programs can be demoralizing. This process can be so frustrating that many seniors give up and retreat into seclusion.

Though public transportation options seem like the remedy for nonprofit volunteer shortages, waiting at the bus stop can deter frail senior citizens, co-payments for door-to-door service can add up, and traversing the bureaucracy of Medicaid and other government programs can be demoralizing.

Gary Bryant, president and CEO of Good Wheels, a nonprofit organization in Fort Myers that provides transportation to people who can’t provide service for themselves, said his company’s budget depends on state and federal funding and already is operating at capacity of serving 500 clients a day.

“There’s a tremendous need for our services and the funding doesn’t match the demand,” Bryant said.

Bryant said he wishes he could find 50 volunteers to free up his 50 paid drivers, so that 50 more people in need would be able to use his service. But in the case of Good Wheels, Bryant said, dependable volunteers have been difficult, if not impossible, to find.

Jonnie Eason, the senior companionship director of the Dr. Ella Piper Center based in Fort Myers, a nonprofit that caters to the needs of low-income elderly people in six counties throughout Southwest Florida, said her organization is in desperate need of volunteers to give seniors companionship and mobility.

Eason pointed to Belva Padgett, a 75-year-old volunteer with the Dr. Piper Center who lives in Goodlette Arms, an affordable housing community for senior citizens in Naples.

Padgett helps five clients through the Dr. Piper Center – giving them rides to the grocery store, the hair salon and medical appointments. She also shops for several home-bound residents in the complex who are too sick to venture out.

“I moved here to a little, one-bedroom. There wasn’t anything to do,” Padgett said. “You can’t clean all day. I like to be around people … I love people.”

Padgett said that volunteering to help her friends and neighbors allows them to maintain a certain degree of independence and gives her something productive to do with her day.

Margarette Rice, 77, who lives in the same apartment complex as Padgett, said that after nine strokes and an ongoing battle with diabetes, she depends on Padgett weekly to get to medical appointments and for grocery shopping.

“She’s my guardian angel,” Rice said about Padgett. “A person like me would be lost without her.”

Back in North Fort Myers, Martha Scott, 74, a retired caregiver and neighbor of McLaughlin, said that her friend is lucky to have found companionship with the Schreibers.

Scott used to secure transportation through Faith in Action and praised the organization for the help it gave her.

“It’s demeaning,” said Martha Scott, 74, a retired caregiver. “You feel like you’re begging. And no senior should feel like they’re begging.”

“They had heart,” Scott said.

It wasn’t just the transportation, Scott said, it also was friendships that developed between clients and volunteers. One of the volunteers used to sit with her for hours as she received medication injections into her eyes to slow her encroaching blindness.

The volunteer, she said, had the same condition, only in much earlier stages.

In a way, they helped each other through the ordeal, Scott said.

Scott now depends on an electric cart to get around. It can be scary, she said, because she is blind in one eye and losing sight in the other.

The worst part, she said, is “not being able to see the traffic coming at you so you’re not too sure when you’re crossing the street.”

When it comes to venturing farther out, Scott said, she feels like she’s being a nuisance to have to ask friends and neighbors for a ride.

“It’s demeaning,” Scott said. “You feel like you’re begging. And no senior should feel like they’re begging.”

And this is what bothers Scott the most — elderly people who have lived full lives, raised families, fought wars — being stripped of their dignity as they scrounge for scraps of independence.

She points to the bigger issue of a general disregard for elderly people and their value to society.

“It leaves us feeling worthless when we can’t find a ride … even to the grocery store,” Scott said.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

PHOTOS Agencies helping home-bound seniors struggle to find volunteer drivers

New pill mill law being challenged in court

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) – A new Florida law cracking down on ‘pill mills’ that dispense powerful prescription painkillers is being challenged in federal court.

A company operating pain clinics in South and central Florida, two doctors and a patient sued the state this week in Tallahassee.

They want a federal judge to block the law before it goes into effect Oct. 1.

The suit alleges the law is discriminatory because it bars patients from getting more than a three-day supply of drugs if they don’t have insurance and violates free speech rights by limiting clinic advertising.

Another claim is that various provisions are unconstitutionally vague.

A Department of Health spokeswoman had no immediate comment Friday.

New pill mill law being challenged in court

Dogs rescued from oil spill Gulf looking for new home in Naples

NAPLES, Fla – The Naples Humane Society added five new members to its family and just how these four legged friends made the trip to Southwest Florida is sure to break your heart.

The puppies were flown in on Saturday by a rescue group who saved the group from an animal shelter in New Orleans that could no longer look after them. The dog’s owners, some of whom were fisherman, were left without work and could not afford to keep their family pets.

The shelter that originally had the dogs was forced to euthanize more than 900 animals back in June.

Some 58 flights on Saturday carried more than 160 animals to new shelters across the country. All of the pets were rescued from Gulf states that were impacted by the oil spill earlier this summer.

The Humane Society will be open on Sunday and adopting one of the rescued dogs is only $125. The price includes vaccinations, a microchip, a month’s worth of health insurance and having the dog’s spayed and neutered.

Dogs rescued from oil spill Gulf looking for new home in Naples

Health Department says stay out of the water at some Southwest Florida beaches

CHARLOTTE COUNTY, Fla.- It may be beautiful weather at the beach, but you may need to steer clear of the water in some areas this weekend.

The Charlotte County health department? is issuing a swimming advisory for a number of Southwest Florida beaches, after recent water samples revealed a dirty dilemma.

For James Williams and family, a vacation to enjoy Southwest Florida beaches isn’t quite panning out as planned. Swimming advisories are now in affect at a handful of Charlotte County beaches, thanks to unusually high levels of two different types of bacteria.

“It’s a shame for the kids, but if it happens, it happens,” Williams said Saturday.

The bacteria traces back to human and animal fecal matter. It’s washing up at beaches in Englewood, Palm Island, Port Charlotte and Boca Grande.

“I’ll go home and play with a hose before I get in there, you couldn’t pay me to get in there,” Williams said.

Health department officials say the surge in bacteria is likely linked to the recent heavy rainfall. Either way, many beach go-ers are being forced to take in the scene from a distance.

“I won’t even touch it, I won’t even walk my feet in there. I don’t want that stuff on me,” said Jeff Vincent, who was surprised by the signs during his visit to Port Charlotte beach on Saturday.

Still, some are ignoring the yellow warning signs lining the shore at Port Charlotte beach. They say they’re taking their chances, in an effort to cool off from the summer sun.

“Nine times out of ten, not everybody’s going to get sick from it. We just went in and had fun. Spent a few minutes in, few minutes out,” said Rllan Wood, who took to the water despite the warnings.

The health department says normally, Mother Nature clears up the problem within one to two weeks. In the meantime, some swimmers just learning of the advisory say they’re taking a break from the beach.

“That’s disgusting. Ok, I don’t think I’m going again then,” said Zach Davenport, after learning about the water sample results.

For a complete list of Charlotte County beach water conditions, visit this link:

http://esetappsdoh.doh.state.fl.us/irm00beachwater/beachresults.aspx?county=Charlotte

Health Department says stay out of the water at some Southwest Florida beaches

Health Informations

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Scientists examine Gulf’s uncertain post-spill future

SARASOTA, Fla. – Scientists at Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota have been studying the aftermath of the oil spill ever since the Deepwater Horizon rig blast.

Wednesday night, several of those scientists talked about what they’ve learned so far, and how it could help answer the many questions that lie ahead.

Its been a massive undertaking for Mote Marine, monitoring the flow of oil in the water and on the shore.

“Its very weather-driven, very tide-driven,” said Dr. Barbara Kirkpatrick, who studies beach conditions.? She notes Southwest Florida beaches are clean, but areas of the panhandle have been different.? “They get more impacts at high tide than low tide.”

Research originally designed to study things like red tide now look for the impact of oil.? An underwater robot has regularly scanned the Gulf waters off Southwest Florida.

“The major thing we found is we don’t have any oil,” said Dr. Gary Kirkpatrick.

Its been good news so far for Southwest Florida, but its also relatively early in the gulf’s recovery…

“The surface is being cleaned up and looking a lot better, but we know there is a lot more oil below the surface out in the Gulf,” said Dr. Gary Kirkpatrick.

While scientists can look at past spills for guidance– like the Exxon Valdez in Alaska– the Gulf of Mexico is a very different ecosystem, where only time will tell.

“Although the lessons from the Exxon Valdez help in how we address some of these things, the knowledge of the Gulf of Mexico scientists have from what the Gulf was before is going to be important,” said Mote Marine president Dr. Kumar Mahadevan.

Scientists at a panel discussion Wednesday say that long-term impact may be subtle, but could be significant, not only for wildlife, but for the economy, environmental and health of the Gulf Coast.

“What impact does it have on our natural resources, our fisheries, all the things we depend on,” Dr. Mahadevan said.

Mote marine has been doing all of this research largely off donations. They hope to get additional funding from BP and the government as their research goes forward.

Mote Marine has also been monitoring beach conditions along the Gulf Coast, including Southwest Florida.

For updates and photos of the latest beach conditions, visit their website at www.mote.org/beaches.

Scientists examine Gulf’s uncertain post-spill future

Lawsuit: Doctors paid to refer Medicare patients

NAPLES, Fla. (AP) – A former southwest Florida hospital executive is accusing a health operator of paying doctors to refer Medicare patients to the company’s hospitals.

A lawsuit filed by Michael Mastej claims that Health Management Associates also offered free rent and private jet trips to entice doctors. The lawsuit filed in January was unsealed recently in Tampa federal court.

A telephone message left for HMA and the state attorney’s office weren’t immediately returned.

Health News Florida reports that Mastej, a former resident of Bonita Springs in Lee County, now lives in Blairsville, Ga.

The lawsuit does not specify the number of claims, but says the alleged fraud started in 2007. The company operates approximately 56 hospitals in 15 states.

Lawsuit: Doctors paid to refer Medicare patients