$130, 172 Grant from Tobacco Settlement Fund Enables Expansion

UNMC, Aging Service to Hold Ribbon-Cutting March 1,

Expand Free Health Screening Services, Adds Dental Screening, Targets Minorities

The University of Nebraska Medical Center has expanded its free health

screening services and will add limited dental screening services and other

nursing services at its health center in Lincoln, thanks to a $130,172

grant from the Nebraska Healthcare Cash Fund. The grant, renewable up to

three years, totaling about $314,000, is part of tobacco settlement fund

distributed last year.

On Thursday, March 1, at 11 a.m., faculty, students and officials from

the UNMC College of Nursing Lincoln Division, UNMC College of Dentistry,

and Aging Services will celebrate the expansion of free services at the

UNMC Senior Health Promotion Center with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and

open house. The event will be held at the centers location at the Lincoln

Downtown Senior Center, 1005 O Street.

The renamed UNMC Senior Health Promotion Center originally opened Nov.

9, 1999, as the UNMC College of Nursing Lincoln Divisions Senior Nursing

Clinic. Since then, 1,700 clients have been served, averaging about 100

clients a month. Because of the grant, services have expanded to include

the UNMC College of Dentistry providing limited dental services, as well

as the addition of more nursing services.

The UNMC Senior Health Promotion Center is open every week on Thursdays

from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and is operated by Lincoln nursing, dental

and dental hygiene students in their senior year, as well as faculty members.

It serves older adults with low-incomes, particularly focusing on minorities

and refugees living in Lincoln and Lancaster County area. Formerly known

as the Senior Nursing Clinic, the center changed its name to reflect added

services.

Expanded services will include: a fully-equipped dental clinic for oral

health and oral cancer screening; inspect, clean and label dentures; oral

hygiene education; bone density screening for osteoporosis; mental health

care; ear care; breast cancer screening; and help with smoking cessation,

alcohol and nutrition counseling.

Services the center will continue to offer: assessment of physical health;

blood pressure, cholesterol and glucose screening; foot care; answer questions

about medications and monitor medication side effects; and health education,

consultation and referral, if needed. No appointments are necessary.

Free medication organizers will be provided to help people organize

their medications. Each month, the center will focus on a health topic

of concern to older adults.

The Lincoln Area Agency on Aging operates the Downtown Senior Center

and donates space and clerical support

to UNMC, as well as collaborates to help identify older adults who

qualify for the services. The agency also provides transportation for people

to and from the center.

The ultimate goal of the center is to keep people healthy so they can

be independent in their own home as long as possible. The center will provide

needed services and give students valuable experiences in which to use

their skills in a community setting.

Although they serve many older adults, faculty members said the center

is not reaching the minority populations they had hoped to reach. In addition,

interpreter services will be offered as well as producing translated brochures

and marketing materials.

We need to build more awareness about the center, as well as address

transportation, language, and cultural issues that have hindered older

adult minority and refugee populations from accessing our services, said

Linda Sather, Ed.D., assistant professor of community health nursing, UNMC

College of Nursing Lincoln Division and project coordinator of the center.

We know we have a growing minority and immigrant population in Lincoln.

This grant will help us address those issues and immerse ourselves into

those areas we need to better understand.

The dental linic will be co-coordinated by Teresa E. Johnson, D.D.S.,

associate professor of dentistry, UNMC College of Dentistry. Her involvement

began last year.

This is something people can count on to be here every week, said

Dr. Johnson. The thought of the care and tenderness that is being provided

here means a lotin a place people are cared for, respected and honored

in a dignified way. I said, This is what I want to be a part of.

The center is funded by the grant, in-kind donations by the two colleges,

as well as private donations.

According to the 1997 United States Census, about 25,060 adults age

65 and older live in Lancaster County. About 3.6 percent are minority or

are refugees. The census of Lancaster County indicated in the population

age 60 and over, that 7 percent had incomes below the poverty level. This

number is increasing due to the increasingly aging population, further

causing social and economic costs to the community.

We are helping get people more enthused about their health and being

more compliant in doing things like watching their blood sugars, taking

their medications and making them aware of how to prevent fractures, Dr.

Sather said. If an older person fractures a bone, 50 percent require extended

care or a nursing home. For those who go home, some of them develop blood

clots from immobility.

One of the added benefits of the center is social interaction.

This is also a place where our clients can socialize and relate to

each other, Dr. Sather said. It gives some of them another social circle,

while it helps others who are totally alone and isolated.

Expected at the ribbon-cutting ceremony are: Ada Lindsey, Ph.D., dean

of the UNMC College of Nursing and John Reinhardt, D.D.S., dean of the

UNMC College of Dentistry, Bob Esquival, manager of the Lincoln Downtown

Senior Center; Don Wesely, the mayor of Lincoln; and Gina Dunning, director

of the Lincoln Area Agency on Aging.

 

f L