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Red Cross Month

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letters to the editorTo The Editor:

It’s Red Cross Month and we would like to recognize our Everyday Heroes who reach out to help their neighbors when they are in need.
These everyday heroes are our volunteers who help disaster victims get on the road to recovery. They give blood to help someone in the hospital. They brighten the day of an injured service member in a hospital far from home. They take our classes and step forward to help someone having a heart attack or to save a drowning child.
March is also a great time to become part of the Red Cross. It’s easy. Household members can work together on a preparedness plan. People can sign up to take a class or volunteer their time. They can give blood or make a financial donation.
The Red Cross responds to nearly 70,000 disasters a year in this country. It provides 24-hour support to members of the military, veterans and their families; collects and distributes about 40 percent of the nation’s blood supply and trains millions of people in first aid, water safety and other life-saving skills every year.
Here in Alabama, the Alabama Red Cross responded to more than 2,200 local emergencies, assisted more than 6,000 military families and trained nearly 30,000 people in lifesaving skills during fiscal year 2013 (July 2012 through June 2013). And, people from this area donated approximately 98,000 units of blood between July 2012 and June 2013.
Red Cross Month is observed in dedication of everyone who supports our mission. We are grateful to people for their generosity which enables us to continue our work, and encourage everyone to become an Everyday Hero during Red Cross Month by helping their neighbors.

Sincerely,

Mark Beddingfield
CEO, American Red Cross
Alabama Region

Jerry J.K. Tillery
CEO, American Red Cross
Southern, Alabama and Central Gulf Coast and Puerto Rico Blood Services Region

An Observation – Retirement dilemma

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letters to the editor   Last week, some friends and I met up at Railroad Park and while we were resting one friend began telling us about a retired neighbor friend who was caring for his ailing wife. At this point, she has a mobility problem and can barely walk, or use her limbs. She uses the support of a wheel chair when they now rarely go out of the home. Further, their bedroom in which she must spend most of her day is upstairs in the home. The husband has to assist her negotiating the staircase coming downstairs. She can barely hold the telephone to her ear, needs assistance while eating, general care in the bathroom, and getting dressed.
What was a real concern of the friend is the fact that both neighbors have been retired for some years and are now in their early seventies category of age. He said both have pensions, Medicare, savings, and the home is paid in full. However, with this security they are reluctant to use any of their resources to bring a degree of comfort to the wife‘s medical situation, or relief to the husband as caretaker.
Further, he says one factor in his neighbor’s hesitation is that their two adult married children often seek their financial help. He said a few years ago, the wife told him about the possibility to sale their home in order to help a daughter and husband purchase a home in Connecticut where they live. The group began to give comment upon the overall situation.
The following available healthcare services were related such as: the purchase of a staircase lift; motorized wheel chair, a voice activated telephone speaker; home visiting nurse; therapist; Meals on Wheels; in home hair stylist; nurse’s aide; sitter/cook, house cleaning service, etc. At a doctor’s request some services are covered for a period under medical care programs. Finally, there is the nursing home for a temporary stay or final residence.
We talked in general about the need for both of them to be comfortable and enjoy the best quality of life possible in their senior years. The matter of their pensions and retirement monies set aside for senior living was of big concern in our conversation.
One friend rebuked the idea of saving retirement resources for grown children, and not spending it as the need arises for ones’ own comfort and quality of life after retirement. Another added that after parents rear children to adulthood, and possibly have financed their college education, as well, that should be the limit of their duty and responsibility.  Another said parents may remember their children in their ‘Last Will and Testament’. If all resources have been used-up for parents’ care and comfort that is the intent and purpose of retirement programs and savings. It should not be reserved for grown children, friends and relatives. At least this is what our group of retirees concluded.

Heager L. Hill, DHL
Birmingham, AL. 35209

First Lady Michelle Obama Visits Jessie Trice Community Health Center

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Annie_Niesman_Michelle_Obama(BLACK PR WIRE) – First Lady Michelle Obama recently visited the Jessie Trice Community Health Center (JTCHC) to promote the Affordable Care Act.  Outreach and enrollment efforts by the Obama administration have been in full force to encourage key demographics to enroll by the March 31st deadline.  With just weeks left to sign up for health care under the Affordable Care Act, the First Lady was on a mission to encourage young adults and minorities to enroll.
During her visit, the First Lady shared that federally qualified health centers, such as the Jessie Trice Community Health Center, will play a key role in helping the uninsured to become insured.
“In the African-American community, one in five of us are not insured,” she said, “and the numbers are no better in the Hispanic community.”
While at JTCHC, the First Lady spoke with four Certified Application Counselors who sat at tables with individuals already enrolled in health plans and others who had yet to sign up. She looked on as one counselor, Paul Salazar, shared that it takes about 20 minutes to sign up one person. The First Lady applauded the Jessie Trice Community Health Center for its efforts and shared that their tireless dedication to ensuring that everyone has the opportunity to receive quality healthcare is reflected in the over  four million people that have signed up for healthcare nationwide  – a major milestone.
“It was an absolute pleasure meeting with the First Lady,” said Annie Neasman, RN, MS, president of JTCHC. “We are committed to doing our part to aid in the enrollment efforts of the Affordable Care Act and we look forward to helping patients receive the kind of quality and affordable care they need at the Jessie Trice Community Health Center.”

The Jessie Trice Community Health Center, Inc. is a Florida 501 (c) 3, not-for-profit, Federally Qualified Health Center, which has been serving Miami-Dade County since 1967. Its mission is to provide comprehensive primary health care services by increasing access and improving the quality of life of our diverse South Florida community.  A community mainstay, JTCHC owns and operates sixteen (16) facilities, including eight (8) Comprehensive Primary Care centers, twenty-five (25) school-based/university centers, and other medical facilities. JTCHC’s multicultural, multilingual, and multidisciplinary staff services a diverse population of 30,000 patients who make more than 130,000 visits annually.  For more information on the Jessie Trice Community Health Center, visit www.jtchc.org.

American beliefs: CIA infects Blacks with HIV; feds hide cancer cure

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Willie Gary
This Jan. 31, 2014, photo shows Tuskegee Airmen G.I. Joe action figures in a display at the New York State Military Museum in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

About half of Americans think that the federal government is purposely keeping the world in the dark about the link between cancer and cell phones — and that the Central Intelligence Agency purposely infected Blacks with the HIV virus, a new survey showed.
The study, conducted by the University of Chicago and published in the subscriber-only JAMA Network, found about half of American citizens believe in at least one medical conspiracy theory. Time reported that the study involved 1,351 adults who were asked: Have you heard of — and do you agree or disagree with — these six theories?
One theory was that government regulators kept Americans from obtaining information about natural cures for diseases, as part of a lobby-driven effort from the medical community to keep profits flowing. Another theory: The federal government knows full well that cellular phones contribute to the onset of cancer, but won’t admit it.
And one more, Time reported: The CIA infected Blacks with HIV, to see what would happen.
Nearly 49 percent of those who participated in the study said they agreed with at least one of the posed theories.
The lead author on the study, J. Eric Oliver, attributed the 49 percent belief factor to the fact that conspiracy theories are easier to understand than actual science or medical findings. He also said that those who believe in medical conspiracy over fact are more likely to use alternative medicines and treatments than those who dismiss such theories as ridiculous.
At the same time, the federal government — including the CIA — has been involved in questionable tests on citizens in past years. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports, the Public Health Service worked with the Tuskegee Institute in 1932 on a research project called the “Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male.”
Six hundred Black men — 399 of whom had syphilis and 299 who did not — were chosen to take part in the study.
“The study was conducted without the benefit of patients’ informed consent,” the CDC reported, on its “Tuskegee Timeline” webpage. “The men were never given adequate treatment for their disease,” even when penicillin came on the scene in 1947. An advisory panel that later looked into the study called it “ethically unjustified,” because the participants were told they were being treated for “bad blood,” but not given proper medical care.
The CIA, meanwhile, was found to have conducted secret LSD experiments throughout the 1950s and 1960s, some of which involved unsuspecting Americans, as Time noted. The program, highlighted in the release of unclassified government documents in recent years, was called MK-ULTRA.

Trial Attorney, Willie E. Gary, inspires future lawyers to Be the Best

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Willie Gary JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Trial attorney Willie E. Gary recently visited Jacksonville, Florida to serve as the keynote speaker at the Southern Region National Black Law Students Association (SRBLSA) 43rd Annual Regional Convention. Gary delivered the keynote address at the Southern Journal of Policy and Justice 5th Annual Symposium, on the topic of “Ending the Scourge of Disenfranchisement: The Evolution of Social Justice in America.”
Gary addressed a lively audience comprised of lawyers, judges, public officials, law students and university professors. SRBLSA is comprised of students from over 40 law schools including Florida A&M University College of Law, Duke Law School, North Carolina Central University School of Law, University of Alabama School of Law, Wake Forest University School of Law and University of Miami School of Law, to name a few. Gary encouraged the audience to give back to their communities and help support the educational goals of Black law students. Gary also challenged the law students to continue the pursuit of academic excellence and to lead by example.
“Lawyers have a tremendous opportunity to bring about positive change in the lives of the underprivileged and downtrodden,” said Gary. “The responsibility to serve as a voice for the voiceless will ultimately rest on your shoulders, future lawyers. You are preparing to embark upon a career that can positively impact and make a change in the lives of others – and you shouldn’t take this lightly,” commented Gary.

Inmates Attempt Escape Using Prison Toilet

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InmatesFrom Wire Reports

Four Rikers Island inmates reportedly attempted escaping prison Monday by breaking down cinderblock walls with a toilet ripped from the floor, the New York Daily News reports.
The inmates, Vernon Easley, Chris Martinez, Jeffrey Lashley, and Naquan Febres, then reportedly crawled through the holes they created, attacking an officer with bricks. According to department records, the officer ran off and called for backup.
An internal department report stated that “the inmates entered the dayroom and refused to exit.” Officials managed to avert the escape by convincing the inmates to head back in to different cells. The incident went without anyone getting injured, per acting Correction Department Commissioner Mark Cranston.
“The officers and captain on post showed remarkable professionalism and restraint and no force was necessary to deal with this incident,” Cranston said.
However, the inmates did cause an estimated $6,000 in damages.
“Those who caused it will be held accountable,” Cranston added.
It remains unknown how the officer patrolling the area was unable to hear them escape; guards are to check the cells once every 30 minutes in that particular location.
Jail supervisors are now worried the attempt will inspire copycats.
“This has never happened before,” a veteran jail boss told the Daily News. “All the other inmates are going to find out. Word travels fast.”
A department official did point out, however, that the housing unit where the escape attempt happened is meant for mentally ill inmates. Meanwhile, all prisoners in the unit were being moved to a more secure area at the time.
Criminal charges are currently pending against the inmates.

Florida Memorial University Among Select HBCUs Chosen for Distance Learning Collaboration

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fmuname2FMU joins Lumen Learning, Oakwood University and Wiley College for online education initiative

MIAMI, Fla. – Florida Memorial University, Lumen Learning, Oakwood University and Wiley College have announced their collaboration in support of The Center for Excellence in Distance Learning at Wiley College, with the goal of improving online education at HBCUs through the effective use of open educational resources.  The Universities are forging a new path by tapping into the wealth of high quality open education resources (OER) available today. The Center for Excellence in Distance Learning is working with OER services provider Lumen Learning to tailor online courses to the unique needs of HBCUs and the students they serve.
“Distance learning is a great way to encourage collaboration and innovation in online learning within the HBCU community,” said Dr. Roslyn Artis, president of Florida Memorial University. “Florida Memorial is excited to be partners in this initiative. It will enhance the online courses that we will begin offering on June 23rd.”
When Wiley College embarked on plans to build out its distance learning programs, faculty members found a growing body of free, high quality OER that aligned with many of the high-demand courses the College planned to offer. Seeking faculty professional development on how to use OER effectively, Wiley College joined the Kaleidoscope Project funded by Next Generation Learning Challenges (NGLC) and began collaborating with Lumen Learning and other colleges to design and improve OER-based courses.
According to Kim Thanos, CEO of Lumen Learning, OER offer several advantages over commercial textbooks for addressing challenges faced by many HBCU students. “Cost has an impact: OER are free, so no expensive commercial textbooks are required. Perhaps more importantly, OER provide faculty with the freedom to design a course that works for their students. With OER, they can excerpt, modify and rearrange course materials to align with learning objectives. They can also add elements that encourage student success, such as study aids, embedded assignments, culturally-relevant examples, and materials that fit different reading levels or learning preferences.”
Success with the Kaleidoscope Project collaboration in 2013 soon led to the creation of The Center for Excellence in Distance Learning at Wiley College. With most HBCUs relying on lean staffing and leaner budgets, distance learning programs have been largely out of reach. Leaders from Wiley College, Oakwood University and other HBCUs hope to change this picture.
“As we introduced the new OER-based online courses for Wiley College students, we saw huge potential for broader collaboration with other HBCUs,” said Dr. Glenda F. Carter, Executive Vice President and Provost at Wiley College. “We all face similar challenges with online education. Through The Center for Excellence in Distance Learning, we can share courses, materials, progress and innovation. With a pooled investment, we can get further and faster toward the outcomes we all want to see.”
HBCUs Florida Memorial University and Oakwood University have joined The Center for Excellence in Distance Learning at Wiley College. Faculty members from these and other Lumen Learning client institutions are working together to develop new OER-based courses. They plan to offer 30 new courses in summer 2014, adding to 12 already being taught across a range of high-enrollment subjects. Wiley College is in discussion with other HBCUs interested in joining the Center.
In addition to cross-institution collaboration in support of distance learning, the vision for the Center is ultimately to develop a vast catalog of online courses, programs and supplemental resources that Historically Black Colleges and Universities can use to build distance education programs more efficiently and effectively. With this collection grounded in open educational resources, each institution and instructor has greater freedom to adapt the courses and materials to their programs, preferences and students’ needs.
Through the Center, Lumen Learning provides faculty training and ongoing support to help instructors teach effective courses using OER. This support assists with instructional design, maintaining current and high quality learning content, alignment with learning outcomes, proper licensing and attribution, and ongoing improvements to courses and materials based on student success data.
“In the end, this is all about encouraging student success,” said Dr. Kim Long, Director of The Center for Excellence in Distance Learning at Wiley College. “Many of our students lack the technology and information literacy they need to succeed in both online courses and the workplace. Using OER, we are designing online courses and programs to help them develop and apply these skills as an integral part of the education we provide.”

American Family Care,Inc. to pay $1.2 million to settle allegations of inflated Medicare claims

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America Family CareWASHINGTON – American Family Care Inc. has agreed to pay the government $1.2 million to resolve allegations under the False Claims Act that it knowingly submitted claims to Medicare for outpatient office visits that were billed at a higher rate than was appropriate, the Justice Department announced today.  American Family Care is a network of walk-in medical clinics headquartered in Birmingham, Ala., with offices in Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia.

“Mischarging the government for office visits wastes valuable government resources that could be used to care for other patient needs,” said Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Civil Division Stuart F. Delery.  “At a time of increasing concern about the cost of medical care, it is especially important to ensure that health care providers are not overbilling the government by improperly inflating their claims.”

Following guidance adopted by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, health clinics such as American Family Care bill Medicare for their services by selecting a corresponding Evaluation and Management code.  The codes are divided into five different levels – from basic (level 1) to most complex (level 5).  Higher level codes result in higher reimbursement from Medicare than lower level codes.  The government alleged that American Family Care knowingly selected Evaluation and Management codes for a level of services that exceeded those actually provided in order to artificially increase the amount of reimbursement it received for those visits.

“The False Claims Act is a critical tool for weeding out fraud and protecting the taxpayers,” said U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama Joyce White Vance.  “My office will continue to return funds, like the $1.2 million in this case, to the taxpayers by proceeding against those who abuse our public health programs.”

“Billing the government for services not provided as claimed cheats both taxpayers and patients,” said Derrick L. Jackson, Special Agent in Charge of the Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services region including Alabama.  “We will pursue aggressively providers like American Family Care alleged to have improperly maximized reimbursements.”

The civil settlement resolves a lawsuit filed by Anita C. Salters, a former employee of American Family Care, under the whistleblower provision of the False Claims Act, which permits private parties to file suit on behalf of the government for false claims and to obtain a portion of the government’s recovery.  Salters’ share has not yet been determined.

This settlement illustrates the government’s emphasis on combating health care fraud and marks another achievement for the Health Care Fraud Prevention and Enforcement Action Team (HEAT) initiative, which was announced in May 2009 by Attorney General Eric Holder and Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius.  The partnership between the two departments has focused on efforts to reduce and prevent Medicare and Medicaid financial fraud through enhanced cooperation.  One of the most powerful tools in this effort is the False Claims Act.  Since January 2009, the Justice Department has recovered a total of more than $19 billion through False Claims Act cases, with more than $13.4 billion of that amount recovered in cases involving fraud against federal health care programs.

This settlement with American Family Care was the result of a coordinated effort among the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Alabama; the Department of Justice’s Civil Division, Commercial Litigation Branch; the Office of Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The lawsuit is captioned United States ex rel. Anita C. Salters v. American Family Care Inc. (N.D. Ala.).  The claims resolved by this settlement are allegations only, and there has been no determination of liability.

Art Into The Streets

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by Tina Kay Hughes

This year the ADA Advisory Committee partnered again with UAB and The Birmingham Museum of Art, under the direction of Toby Richards, to create even more beautiful panels to adorn the backside of Shields School. This is a project , started last year, that resulted in the 20 panels that are affixed to the top windows of Shields School, to serve as a covering to the old windows.  This year’s project was a little different for the ADA Advisory Committee who spearheaded the event under the leadership of State Senator Linda Coleman.  This year the project took place on the Greens of UAB’s Campus for the students’ annual “Into The Streets” project and Horizon School was invited to create 20 more art masterpieces that will accompany the other panels that span the top of Shields School. These panels can be seen from the freeway on I-20 going east bound from downtown on the right hand side as you approach the Tallapoosa exit.
According to the UAB Student Involvement page, lending a hand to the community to make a difference is nothing new for the students at UAB. Throughout the fall and spring semesters, the Leadership and Service Council host service days to connect UAB students with volunteer organizations in the Birmingham community. Into the Streets occurs in March and November, and it is a day of service in which students, faculty, and administrators from the UAB campus participate in a variety of community service projects in the Birmingham area on March 8, 2014.  The students are given many choices to do community service in different places and with an array of organizations throughout the Birmingham area and approximately 150 students showed up on the Greens of UAB’s campus to help students from the Horizon School create art for a purpose.  I asked one of the student site leaders (Rikita Patel) why she decided to participate in this particular project and she said, “This is my last year and I’ve done every single Into The Streets project since I was a freshman and now I am a senior, and I wanted to end the year right.”  I also spoke with three young ladies from Alpha Gamma Delta who were taking a break and enjoying the beautiful day and they shared, “We have a community service project for our sorority. This is the first time they’ve had the murals on the Greens and we were really excited about that, because we usually have to drive somewhere.  It also gives students the opportunity to serve even if you don’t have a car.”
There were people from the community who came out to help because they helped last year who advised me there were more students this year and lots of creativity. They were thrilled to have all facets of people from the community show up with such eagerness to help. Ellen Spencer from the community shared, “This is a project that I would like to see continue because it has and will grow. You can see the panels on the Shields School as you drive along the freeway and say I had a hand in creating that or my students helped create those panels.” I asked Leland Keller from the community what was different from 50 years ago and now who shared, “We were so excited to have Horizons School join us for the project, who worked alongside the UAB students.  The most obvious thing is we have Black folks and white folks working together and a tremendous international community that is well represented here at UAB.”  It seems this project has the potential to grow beyond our imagination that will allow the community and young people to come together to not only create lasting impressions on canvas, but impressions that will remain with us for a lifetime.
Tina Kay Hughes, ADA Advisory Council Chair

Sight Savers America Presents Inaugural Hall Thompson Hero for Sight Award to “Songs for Sight”

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Sight Savers ArtworkBIRMINGHAM – Sight Savers America held a special fundraising event recently at the B&A Warehouse and presented their inaugural Hall Thompson Hero for Sight Award to “Songs for Sight.” Over 200 people attended this event including eye care, corporate, and community leaders from across the Birmingham area. The Alabama Power Foundation, the Verizon Foundation, and Landscape Workshop were the presenting sponsors of the event.
“Songs for Sight” is an innovative partnership that began through the vision of Alie B. Gorrie in conjunction with the UAB Center for Low Vision Rehabilitation and the EyeSight Foundation of Alabama in order to build awareness of and provide services to children with severe visual impairment. “Songs for Sight” was founded on the desire to provide opportunities for children and young adults with low vision to hear “yes you can” instead of “no you can’t” and that spirit embodies exactly what the Hall Thompson Hero for Sight Award is all about.  Hall Thompson was a business leader in our state and served on the board of Sight Savers America and had a profound impact on the organization and on children’s vision issues in Alabama.
“Sight Savers America applauds the commitment and passion of Alie B. and “Songs for Sight” and appreciates everything this innovative partnership has accomplished to build awareness of and fund services for children with severe visual impairment. We are honored to recognize their work through the presentation of the inaugural Hall Thompson Hero for Sight Award”, said Jeff Haddox, Founder and CEO of Sight Savers America.
Sight Savers America is commemorating this year’s award through an original painting created specifically for this event by Jeff Hanson, an internationally known artist who is able to overcome his own severe visual impairment to create brilliant artwork. Sight Savers America has secured an agreement from the UAB Callahan Eye Hospital for a tribute wall for the Hall Thompson Hero for Sight Award to be a permanent display on the first floor lobby of the hospital. The tribute space will include permanent recognition for the award recipients along with the commemorative artwork. This year’s painting will be displayed there for one year to honor “Songs for Sight” before being auctioned at next year’s Hero for Sight event.  A new painting will then be unveiled and will be displayed at the hospital for one year to honor next year’s award winner.

Sight Savers America is an Alabama-based nonprofit that was founded in 1997. Their mission is to identify and secure treatment for unmet vision and health needs that impede a child’s ability to succeed in school and in life. Sight Savers America serves over 60,000 children each year through its four unique programs. For more information about Sight Savers America or their Hall Thompson Hero for Sight Award, please visit them at www.sightsaversamerica.org.