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Olathe Medical Center opens facility for final stage of life

A new inpatient hospice at Olathe Medical Center features a screened-in porch. It faces west, said Sally Lundy, director of hospice and home health for the medical center, "so it gets beautiful sunsets in here."-Photo by Mike Sherry
A new inpatient hospice at Olathe Medical Center features a screened-in porch. It faces west, said Sally Lundy, director of hospice and home health for the medical center, “so it gets beautiful sunsets in here.”-Photo by Mike Sherry

By Mike Sherry
Hale Center for Journalism

OLATHE — Olathe Medical Center officials say they have added a building block to their vision of providing cradle-to-grave care.

On Wednesday, in front of a crowd of about 300 donors, employees and other well-wishers, the hospital officially opened a freestanding inpatient hospice on its land at Interstate 35 and 151st Street.
“In the early 1980s, when we were considering what someday would be on this campus, our board of trustees and leadership discussed the full continuum of care — the continuum of care from birth to the end of life,” CEO Frank Devocelle said. “So it is with great pride that we take another step in that vision here today.”

Officially called Hospice of Olathe Medical Center, the $4.3 million facility covers about 10,000 square feet. It is opening with eight beds, but future plans call for an expansion to 32 beds.

The official opening came after about three years of fundraising and roughly 18 months of construction. Officials said they will continue fundraising to help finance operations.

It will likely be a few weeks before the facility gets the go-ahead from the state to start admitting patients, said Sally Lundy, director of hospice and home health for the medical center.

“This day has been a long-awaited dream of mine and for many in the community,” she said.

The primary purpose of an inpatient hospice facility, she said, is to stabilize medically fragile patients so they can return to a home-based setting. Inpatient hospice stays are typically no longer than a week, Lundy said.

Olathe Medical Center officials said their building is the first inpatient hospice facility on the Kansas side of the Kansas City metropolitan area.

Myra Christopher, an expert on pain and palliative care at the Center for Practical Bioethics in Kansas City, Mo., noted that the opening coincided with the release of a much-anticipated national report by the Institute of Medicine.

The authors of the report, “Dying in America: Improving Quality and Honoring Individual Preferences Near the End of Life,” concluded that the nation’s health care system is “increasingly burdened by factors that hamper delivery of high-quality care near the end of life,” including a fragmented care structure and payment models that incentivize use of acute-care services, such as intensive care units, “that often are costly and poorly suited to the needs, goals, and preferences of patients and their families.”

Christopher attributed some of that to a mindset among caregivers that death is tantamount to failure. That, she said, is beginning to change with the emphasis in the Affordable Care Act on continuity of care and seamless transitions among settings.

A lot of that emphasis is driven by efforts to keep a lid on health care costs, and Christopher said hospice care is unquestionably less expensive than an ICU.

She added, however, that the primary aim of hospice care is to provide the most comfortable and calming environment for terminally ill patients and their families.

Christopher said she’d heard of hospices honoring a patient’s request for a meal of lobster. She’d also heard a story about a facility in Las Vegas that paid to have a rancher’s horse transported to the hospice and tethered outside his room where he could see it.

“Could you imagine telling a hospital that is what you want them to do?” Christopher asked.

Sen. Blunt demands answers on why ATF Is forcing gun buyers to declare race, ethnicity

Senator Blunt's letter- click to expand
Senator Blunt’s letter- click to expand

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Roy Blunt (Mo.), who co-chairs the Senate Law Enforcement Caucus, sent a letter on Friday demanding answers from the Obama Administration surrounding reports that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) is forcing Americans to declare their race and ethnicity when purchasing a firearm.

“The right of law-abiding citizens to own firearms is an individual right guaranteed by the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution,” Blunt wrote. “The constitutional right of a citizen to own a firearm has nothing to do with race or ethnicity. It is disconcerting that the U.S. government is gathering this type of data on citizens when there is no connection between purchasing a firearm and an individual’s race or ethnicity. Any measure that may interfere with a citizen’s ability to exercise his or her constitutional right to purchase a firearm needs to be questioned.”

According to a report in the Washington Times this week, “With little fanfare, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) in 2012 amended its Form 4473 — the transactional record the government requires gun purchasers and sellers to fill out when buying a firearm — to identify buyers as either Hispanic, Latino or not. Then a buyer must check his or her race: Indian, Asian, black, Pacific Islander or white… The ATF declined to comment on why race and ethnicity information are needed in the first place or what they are used for.”

According to previous reports, the ATF claimed, “Question 10 was revised due to an Office of Management and Budget requirement that every form issued by the federal government that collects race and ethnicity information must use separate questions wherever feasible for reporting race and ethnicity.”

Gower woman’s vehicle hit by a train

railroad trainRUSHVILLE- A woman from Gower was involved in an accident with a train just after 6 p.m. on Sunday in Buchanan County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Chevy Impala driven by Corrin D. Wright, 28, Gower, was traveling west on 60th Road at U.S. 59 five miles north of Rushville at an intersection controlled by a crossbar.

The sun obstructed the driver’s vision. The vehicle traveled into the path of a Burlington Northern train. The train hit the front driver’s side of the Chevy.

The MSHP has not released details on injuries as a result of the crash.

Check St. Joseph Post for more information as it becomes available.

Sheriff: Stranded Kansas driver steals police car

 The Sheriff’s Department vehicles with flat tires had to be towed into Junction City, or hauled on the back of a flatbed truck in one case.- photo Dewey Terrill, JC Post

The Sheriff’s Department vehicles with flat tires had to be towed into Junction City, or hauled on the back of a flatbed truck in one case.- photo Dewey Terrill, JC Post

Screen Shot 2014-09-22 at 7.29.04 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas sheriff says a deputy pulled over to help a stranded motorist, who stole the officer’s vehicle and led officers on a chase.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the chase happened Sunday night in Geary County.

The sheriff says an officer stopped to help a woman along the side of the road who appeared to be suffering from asthma. He says the officer took her to his patrol car to wait for EMS before she jumped in the front seat and took off, leaving the officer behind.

Spike strips left by Grandview Plaza officers eventually disabled the stolen vehicle and the woman from Lawrence was arrested. It’s unclear if she’s been charged.

The sheriff says two deputies accidentally ran over the spike strips.

Police: 3 injured in 2 Kansas City shootings

police

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Kansas City, Kansas, police say three people have been injured in two separate shootings.

Police say the shootings happened within about 20 minutes of each other on Sunday evening. They say one person was found shot at the first scene and two were shot at the second. Police say their injuries were not life-threatening.

Their identities haven’t been released.

Police say they don’t believe the shootings are related but are investigating.

 

 

Sunny, mild Monday

Screen Shot 2014-09-22 at 5.03.37 AMToday marks the autumnal equinox, and astronomical autumn will be rung in with great fall weather. Isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms are possible Tuesday evening, mainly northwest of I-35.

Today Sunny, with a high near 73. Light and variable wind.

Tonight Partly cloudy, with a low around 53. Light southeast wind.

Tuesday A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 71. South southeast wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
Tuesday Night A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 57. Southeast wind around 7 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Wednesday Partly sunny, with a high near 73. South southeast wind 7 to 9 mph.
Wednesday Night Mostly cloudy, with a low around 56.
Thursday Mostly sunny, with a high near 77.
Thursday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 57.

Police warn Mo. schools of scam

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Police are warning Missouri schools to beware of a scam intended to make it appear as though they are getting invoices from a common book distributor.

The Jefferson City Police Department says some central Missouri schools have been getting bills from a source identifying itself as Scholastic School Supply for items that were never actually ordered.

The name is similar to Scholastic Inc., which has its main national warehouse and distribution center in Jefferson City. Scholastic says the other entity is using its name and trademark without its authorization.

Jefferson City police say the Scholastic School Supply invoices are a scam that is possibly occurring in several states.

Pitt State to offer doctoral program in nursing

kansas board of regentsPITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) — Pittsburg State University has won approval to start offering a doctorate degree in nursing.

The Joplin Globe  reports that Irene Ransom Bradley School of Nursing asked the Kansas Board of Regents to transition the current master’s level advanced practice nursing program into the doctoral program. The Regents agreed last week.

The school hopes to admit their first students into the program in the spring for a summer 2015 start date.

University officials say the demand for doctoral level advanced practice nurses is expected to increase both in the region and across the nation. They cited a recommendation from the Institute of Medicine that the field of nursing provide twice as many doctoral graduates by 2020 in order to build a primary care work force in the U.S.

Mo. man hospitalized after truck hits a tree in Daviess Co.

ALTAMONT- A Missouri man was injured in an accident just after 1:30 a.m. on Sunday in Daviess County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1994 Chevy pickup driven by Devin L. Hall, 20, Altamont, was westbound on U.S. 69 two miles west of Altamont. The vehicle traveled off the north side of the road, struck a tree and overturned.

Hall was transported to Cameron Regional Medical Center. The MSHP reported he was not wearing a seat belt.

2 arrested in kidnapping of 8-year-old girl

Arrest   jailTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Two people have been arrested in the weekend kidnapping of an 8-year-old Topeka girl.

The Topeka Capital-Journal  reports that the girl was missing for nearly six hours when she was found Saturday afternoon more than two miles away from her home. Maj. Jerry Stanley says the preliminary investigation showed she had been assaulted.

A man and woman were arrested Saturday night on charges that included aggravated kidnapping, aggravated child endangerment and aggravated burglary.

About 50 people had participated in the search for the missing girl. Some took 4-wheelers to nearby woods, while others printed off dozens of flyers.

 

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