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UNMC/NHS Physicians To Provide Free Sense of Smell and Pulmonary Function Tests at Husker Harvest Days

Attendees at Husker Harvest Days this week will be able to receive free

sense of smell and pulmonary function tests provided by physicians from

the University of Nebraska Medical Center and Nebraska Health System. Husker

Harvest Days will be held Sept. 14 to 16 near Grand Island.

The pulmonary function tests will be available throughout all three

days, while the sense of smell tests will be offered after 3 p.m. on Tuesday

and all day on Wednesday and Thursday. The tests will be conducted in the

Nebraska Farmer Hospitality Tent.

The sense of smell tests will be administered by Donald Leopold, M.D.,

who was recently named professor and chairman of the UNMC Department of

Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. A leading international authority

in nose and sinus problems, Dr. Leopold joined UNMC Aug. 1 after serving

as chairman of the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery

at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center in Baltimore, Md.

Susanna Von Essen, M.D., associate professor in the Pulmonary Medicine

Section of the UNMC Internal Medicine Department, will administer the pulmonary

function tests. Dr. Von Essen has done this testing during previous Husker

Harvest Days, and there has been an enthusiastic response from fair goers.

Dr. Leopold said the sense of smell tests will provide important research

data to determine if farmers are at increased risk for smelling loss. The

test will take about 10 minutes and will involve a questionnaire and a

scratch and sniff test for 12 different smells.

The pulmonary function test involves breathing into a tube which measures

how much air the person is moving when they breathe, Dr. Von Essen said.

Farmers are at increased risk for pulmonary problems due to their exposure

to grain dust and hog confinement facilities.

UNMC is the only public academic health science center in the state.

Through its commitment to research, education, outreach and patient care,

UNMC has established itself as one of the country’s leading centers for

cancer research and treatment and solid organ transplantation. More than

$34 million in research grants and contracts are awarded to UNMC scientists

annually. In addition, UNMC’s educational programs are responsible for

training more health professionals practicing in Nebraska than


any other institution.

NHS is the partnership of Clarkson Hospital, the first hospital in Nebraska,

and University Hospital, the primary teaching facility for UNMC. The combined

hospital is an 835-bed facility and serves approximately 25 percent of

the Omaha-area market. NHS operates clinics and health care centers serving

Omaha, Plattsmouth, Gretna and Auburn in Nebraska; and Council Bluffs and

Shenandoah in Iowa.

In addition, NHS physicians operate more than 300 outpatient clinics

in 100 communities in four states. NHS provides access to tertiary and

primary care including world-class specialized treatment such as solid

organ transplantation, burn care, wound care, geriatrics, bone marrow (stem

cell) transplantation and other cancer treatments. NHS affiliate hospitals

include Shenandoah Memorial Hospital and Community Hospital in Fairfax,

Mo.