LAKE COUNTY – Older adults will receive free health screenings at local senior centers during the last two weeks of June.
The Area Agency on Aging is partnering with Health Screens Gerontology Research Foundation to bring a mobile health screening service to senior centers in Lakeport, Clearlake Oaks, Clearlake, Ukiah, Willits, Fort Bragg and Point Arena.
Screenings are available to people of any age, but only those aged 60 or over who have low incomes will qualify for the free screenings.
Many diseases do not cause noticeable symptoms until a heart attack, stroke or other life-threatening event occurs. Health screenings can detect early disease processes before symptoms appear.
The screenings use ultrasound imaging, Doppler and CardioVision to check for plaque deposits, blockages, aneurysms, cysts, stones, nodules, masses, enlargements and bone density. The tests are safe and use no x-rays or radiation. The Health Screen staff of registered sonographers and technicians documents results that are recorded in a report and given to the participant that day.
Because they are considered “preventive health care,” Medicare and most insurance companies do not cover screenings, which cost between $40 and $50 each or $275 for all nine tests.
Lake and Mendocino County residents aged 60 or over who cannot afford to pay for screenings are encouraged to take advantage of a limited number of FREE screening packages (a $130 value) sponsored by the Area Agency on Aging.
The free package includes any four of the nine basic screenings: stroke, aneurysm, gall bladder, liver, kidney, thyroid, heart, circulation or osteoporosis.
Lake County screenings:
– Highlands Senior Center in Clearlake – June 21.
– Live Oak Senior Center in Clearlake Oaks – June 22.
– Lakeport Senior Center – June 30.
Mendocino County screenings:
– Ukiah Senior Center – June 18 and 19.
– Willits Senior Center – June 26.
– Redwood Coast Seniors in Fort Bragg – June 27 and 29.
– South Coast Seniors in Point Arena – June 28.
All screenings are by appointment only. Please call Health Screens at 877-854-4735 to make your reservation. Spaces are currently available.
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The idea of a fifth-grader making such a self-respecting health choice is becoming more and more common in one northern California school district, thanks to a unique education program developed by Sutter Lakeside Hospital.
The program is called Healthy Kids Are Contagious, and has just completed its first pilot in schools throughout Lake County, the primary region served by Sutter Lakeside's main facility in Lakeport, located about two hours north of San Francisco.
Health Kids are Contagious stems from Sutter Lakeside's Wellness Center program and its hallmark, The Five Keys to Wellness, which identifies and promotes five aspects of healthful living, including self-love, breathing, positive choices, balance and trust. The Five Keys are infused through all hospital wellness programs.
"To improve health and lower healthcare costs in our county, we are reaching the kids," said Kelly Mather, CEO of Sutter Lakeside. "The Healthy Kids Are Contagious program not only educates students about nutrition and exercise, but it also addresses mental and emotional issues from our Five Keys to Wellness principals, so they will be motivated to make healthier choices for a lifetime.
Mather turns hospital staff into healthy role models
The dismal health status of Lake County – ranked 56 out of 58 California counties by the state's Department of Health & Human Services – prompted Sutter Lakeside's Mather to develop a series of wellness programs for hospital staff and the adult community.
Mather had required Sutter Lakeside's staff members to improve their own health through a wellness program that included weight-loss support groups, exercise programs and stress-management classes.
More importantly, using the Five Keys to Wellness, members of Mather's wellness team guided the staff to develop healthier thoughts, feelings, beliefs and habits – the issues that drive poor life-style choices and lead to chronic illness.
Collectively, the staff saw their average blood pressure and cholesterol levels drop ten percent in one year – and the cost of their medical insurance premiums went down as well. Mather then established the Wellness Center at Sutter Lakeside to offer the community a place to get support for making lifestyle changes and used those same principles to educate children, morphing the adult program into Healthy Kids Are Contagious.
"We're offering 'wellness care' and not only illness care,'" Mather said. "Once we saw the results among staff members and patients we wanted to promote the idea of wellness beyond the hospital walls. Since children have not yet formed decades of bad habits we felt we could reach them in the classroom instead of the doctor's waiting room."
A healthy curriculum
Healthy Kids Are Contagious offers school presentations that cover a variety of subjects ranging from avoiding the flu on the playground to preventing bacterial outbreaks in the locker room.
The "Healthy Mascots," however, are by far the most popular ambassadors for the program because they feature Sutter Lakeside staff members dressed in costumes representing characters such as "Healthy Mr. Heart," "Healthy Mr. Spine" and "Mr. Tissue."
"I've seen kids sit up straight because that's what 'Mr. Spine' says to do," reports Chris Veenstra, a first-grade teacher at Upper Lake Elementary School whose class enjoyed one of Sutter Lakeside's presentations. "I've also heard them say things like 'We should go exercise because it's good for our hearts.'"
Gail Marshall who teaches sixth grade at Minnie Cannon Middle School in Middletown says, "I saw a huge transformation in the kids. They now speak the vocabulary of the five keys to wellness. One boy actually stood up in front of the entire class and said, 'I love myself!'"
Mather writing children's books
To give parents a tool to understand and support what their children are learning about good health choices, Mather has written the book, The 5 Keys to Wellness for students to take home with them.
The full-color illustrated hardback describes the five aspects of healthful living, and provides characters and illustrations to educate readers about self-love, breathing, positive choices, balance and trust.
For more information contact Shelly Gordon, 650-856-1607, e-mail
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