CLEARLAKE, Calif. – St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake is one of 12 hospitals out of 450 in the Premier Hospital Engagement Network to receive Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) recognition as top performer in six or more measures tracked in a pilot program, Partnership for Patients (PFP).
St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake has participated in this pilot program since January of 2012.
PFP is a nationwide public-private collaboration developed to improve the quality, safety and affordability of health care for all Americans.
This recognition indicates that St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake has demonstrated the ability to improve care for hospital acquired conditions such as injuries from falls, pressure ulcers and surgical site infections. In addition, preventable hospital readmissions have been reduced.
“Our physicians, nurses and staff are focused on providing quality care,” stated Jenny Senff, interim administrative director of patient care at St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake. “This recognition validates that our processes are working to improve the quality of care for our patients.”
When asked what this recognition means to patients, Tanya Drew said, “It means my family and I receive better care and feel more comfortable. It is comforting that St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake received this recognition for excellent patient care. It’s a great accomplishment.”
Of the 12 hospitals recognized, three were Adventist Health facilities. St. Helena Hospital Napa Valley and Feather River Hospital received the same top performer recognition.
St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake is part of Adventist Health, a faith-based, not-for-profit integrated health care delivery system serving communities in California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington.
Visit www.sthelenahospitals.org for more information.
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) affects more than 90 percent of the population worldwide and was the first human virus found to be associated with cancer.
Now, researchers from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) have broadened the understanding of this widespread infection with their discovery of a second B-cell attachment receptor for EBV.
The new findings, which currently appear on-line in Cell Reports, reinforce current directions being taken in the development of a vaccine to guard against EBV, and raise important new questions regarding the virus's possible relationship to malaria and to autoimmune diseases.
“Our discovery that CD35 is an attachment receptor for EBV helps explain several previously unsolved observations,” said the study's senior author Joyce Fingeroth, MD, a member of the Division of Infectious Diseases at BIDMC and Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.
First discovered in the early 1960s, EBV is one of eight viruses in the human herpesvirus family. The virus affects nine out of 10 people at some point in their lifetimes.
Infections in early childhood often cause no disease symptoms, but people infected during adolescence or young adulthood may develop infectious mononucleosis.
EBV is also associated with several types of cancer, including Hodgkin's lymphoma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and has been linked to certain autoimmune disorders.
“EBV was the first human virus that was discovered to be a tumor virus,” explained Fingeroth. “In fact, individuals who have had infectious mononucleosis have a four times increased risk of developing Hodgkin's disease.” After the initial infection, the EBV virus remains in a person's body for life.
To gain entry, viruses must first attach to their host cells. For herpesviruses, receptors on the viral envelope become connected to complementary receptors on the cell membrane. In the case of EBV, the virus gains access to the immune system by attaching to primary B cells.
Nearly 30 years ago, Fingeroth and her colleagues discovered that this attachment occurs via the CD21 protein, which until now was the only known B cell attachment receptor for EBV.
The recent finding that B cells from a patient lacking CD21 can be infected and immortalized by EBV had indicated that an alternative attachment receptor must exist.
The identification of this second receptor – CD35 – by Fingeroth's team, led by first author Javier Ogembo, PhD, of BIDMC and the University of Massachusetts Medical School, not only underscores an important finding regarding primary infection but also underscores the importance of EBVgp350/220, the virus protein that has been found to bind to both attachment receptors, for the development of a vaccine against EBV.
“The EBV glycoprotein gp350/220 is the most abundant surface glycoprotein on the virus,” noted Fingeroth, adding that these results further suggest the virus fusion apparatus is the same for both receptors. “An EBV vaccine might be able to prevent infection or, alternatively, greatly reduce a person's risk of developing infectious mononucleosis and EBV-associated cancers, without necessarily preventing the EBV infection itself.”
Interestingly, she added, whereas a human has now been identified to be lacking the CD21 receptor, no persons are known to lack CD35.
“CD35 is a latecomer in evolution and in its current form, exists only in humans,” said Fingeroth. “We know that it is often targeted in autoimmune diseases and was recently identified as a malaria receptor. Our new discovery may, therefore, reveal new avenues for the exploration of unexplained links between EBV, autoimmune diseases, malaria and cancer.”
A new study shows that children who are exposed to bullying during childhood are at increased risk of psychiatric disorders in adulthood, regardless of whether they are victims or perpetrators.
Professor William E. Copeland of Duke University Medical Center and Professor Dieter Wolke of the University of Warwick led a team in examining whether bullying in childhood predicts psychiatric problems and suicidality in young adulthood.
While some still view bullying as a harmless rite of passage, research shows that being a victim of bullying increases the risk of adverse outcomes to mental health.
This study, published in Online First by JAMA Psychiatry, looked beyond the victims of bullying and also investigated the impact on the bullies themselves, and those who fall into both categories.
Professor Wolke summarized the outcome of the study, “It is clear that those involved in bullying are at an increased risk for emotional disorders in later life. It is those in the middle of the chain, who are both bullies and victims, who are at the highest risk of suicide.”
The results indicate a clear pattern in the three categories that highlights the extent of the influence that childhood bullying can have.
Victims of bullying displayed a higher prevalence of agoraphobia, general anxiety and panic disorder in young adulthood, whereas bullies showed a tendency to develop an antisocial personality disorder.
Those who were both bullies and victims were significantly more likely to suffer from depression, panic disorder, agoraphobia (in females only) and suicidal tendencies (in males only).
“Bullying simply cannot be seen as a harmless, inevitable part of growing up. Bullying can be easily assessed and monitored by health professionals and school personnel, and effective interventions that reduce victimization are already available,” Professor Wolke explained.
“Understanding the impact of bullying on both the individual, whether victim or perpetrator, and on society as a whole, means we must promote such interventions to help reduce human suffering and provide a safer environment for children to grow up in,” Wolke said.
The research assessed 1,420 participants four to six times between the ages of 9 and 16 years and accounted for the influence of childhood psychiatric problems and family hardships.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Community members are invited to a free lecture on women's heart health on Wednesday, Feb. 27.
The lecture, hosted by the Adventist Heart Institute, will take place from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake's Live Well Clinic, 15230 Lakeshore Drive, Clearlake.
Heart disease kills more women each year than all forms of cancer combined.
Dr. Monica Divakaruni, a leading interventional cardiologist, will discuss what you can do to prevent heart disease.
She will explain how simple lifestyle changes can prevent cardiovascular disease and improve your overall cardiovascular health.
Light refreshments will be served.
To RSVP or request a consultation call 707-995-3764.