Health
LAKEPORT, Calif. – October is National Physical Therapy Month, and Sutter Lakeside Hospital is recognizing the important role that physical therapy plays in the patient healing process.
Physical therapy helps to restore movement and function following an injury or surgery, relieve pain, and prevent illness and injury.
A recent body of research suggests that physical therapy treatment can be an equally effective, safer, more economical alternative to surgery and prescription drugs for numerous conditions, ranging from chronic back pain to an ankle sprain.
At Sutter Lakeside Hospital, physical therapists work collaboratively with their clients, tailoring each treatment plan to the patient.
This holistic approach includes patient education, identifying the cause of the problem, and long-term preventative strategies.
The tools that a physical therapist may employ during the rehabilitation process include exercise, massage, ultrasound, spinal manipulation, biofeedback, lasers, and a variety of hot/cold modalities.
Sutter Lakeside Hospital’s Rehabilitation Services offers physical, occupational and speech therapy on an outpatient basis.
“Our patients have access to a large fitness gym, free group fitness classes, and a very unique outdoor Mobility Park,” said Director of Rehabilitation Services Joe Prisco. “We’re proud of the services that we offer to Lake County. As a physical therapist myself, I truly appreciate being a part of the patient healing process here at Sutter Lakeside.”
Tiffany Ortega, assistant administrator at Sutter Lakeside Hospital, added, “We are a small hospital, so we are very pleased by all the amenities that we can offer to our patients. However, it is truly our top-notch physical therapists that set us apart. They are instrumental in ensuring that our patients return back to health.”
To learn more about Sutter Lakeside, visit www.sutterlakeside.org/ .
- Details
- Written by: Editor

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – On Wednesday, Congressman John Garamendi (D-CA-03), former Insurance Commissioner and health care advisor to President Clinton, highlighted the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announcement that there will be no increase in the Medicare Part B premium or deductible in 2015.
Garamendi said this is a welcome departure from the early 2000s when these premiums took a rapidly growing amount of money out of the pockets of seniors.
“There is good news for America’s seniors, many of whom live on a fixed income. For the second year in a row, there will be no increase in the Medicare Part B premium – with the premium remaining at $104.90 for 2013, 2014, and 2015,” said Congressman Garamendi. “Similarly, for the second year in a row, there will also be no increase in the Medicare Part B deductible in 2015 – with the deductible remaining at $147.
“Since the Affordable Care Act was enacted, seniors have experienced significant savings, including free preventative services, prescription drug discounts, and almost no growth in the Part B premium,” Garamendi added. “By contrast, in earlier years, seniors faced the burden of skyrocketing Medicare Part B premiums. Between 2000 and 2008, the Medicare Part B premium shot up 112 percent (jumping from $45.50 to $96.40). By comparison, the Medicare Trustees project that the premium will grow by only 10 percent from 2008 to 2016 (rising from $96.40 to $106.50) – or less than one-tenth of that rate.”
Part B premium growth has declined because of the dramatic slowdown in the growth of health care costs since the enactment of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).
Over the past four years, Medicare spending per capita has averaged only 0.8 percent a year – compared to an average growth rate of 6.3 percent a year from 2000 to 2008.
This announcement from HHS adds to the growing list of ways in which seniors with Medicare have experienced major savings, better benefits, and a more solvent program since the ACA was signed into law:
– Because of the ACA, more than 8.3 million seniors with Medicare have saved more than $12 billion on their prescription drugs, an average savings of $1,443 per senior.
– Because of the ACA, seniors now have free Medicare coverage of key preventative services, such as mammograms and colonoscopies. 37 million seniors received free preventative services through Medicare in 2013 alone.
– Since the enactment of the ACA, the solvency of the Medicare Trust Fund has been extended by 13 years. Prior to the ACA, the Medicare Trustees projected that the Trust Fund would be exhausted by 2017. In their latest report, the Medicare Trustees projected that the fund will remain solvent until 2030.
The health care reform law is supported by prominent senior citizens’ organizations, including AARP and the National Committee to Preserve Social Security & Medicare, because it protects and improves Medicare for older Americans.
Congressman Garamendi added, “I vividly remember the dark days before Medicare, watching impoverished seniors in the county ward who were simply warehoused and left to die. While today almost all seniors have health insurance coverage, before Medicare only about half had coverage. We can’t go back to those days. For that reason, I am committed to preserving and strengthening Medicare for our nation’s seniors.”
- Details
- Written by: Editor





How to resolve AdBlock issue?