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KU professor solving puzzling mental health issues

Adjusting to life in the United States has been a challenge for Jenga Chhetri, left, and his mother, Ratna Chhetri, who moved to the Kansas City area almost three years ago.- photo by Alex Smith
Adjusting to life in the United States has been a challenge for Jenga Chhetri, left, and his mother, Ratna Chhetri, who moved to the Kansas City area almost three years ago.- photo by Alex Smith

By Alex Smith, KCUR

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Making the rounds at a public housing complex in Kansas City, Kan., community health worker Rinzin Wangmo is greeted by cheery voices and faces. As she enters a home, the heavy aroma of chopped onions stings her nose, and she hurries up a short flight of stairs to escape the burn. After gently knocking on a door, she walks in to meet with a woman who’s bedridden with pain.

The woman’s condition is not unusual among Bhutanese refugees, according to University of Kansas professor Dr. Joe LeMaster.
“They went through quite a lot, and that has had its mark on them, there is no question about that,” LeMaster said.

The community health specialist, who worked for a decade in the Himalayas, has been working for the past several years to address the unique challenges of Bhutanese refugees, and in particular their striking rates of mental illness.

For hundreds of years, Nepali people lived and worked in southern Bhutan, a country that earned notoriety in the 1970s when its king introduced the “national happiness index” as an alternative to the more traditional measure of prosperity, the gross domestic product.

But in the early 1990s, a government campaign of harassment and what Human Rights Watch has described as ethnic cleansing led tens of thousands of Nepalis to flee to refugee camps in Nepal. In 2006, the United States offered to resettle some of the refugees. Since then, more than 75,000 have arrived in cities like Philadelphia, Denver and Kansas City.

A long journey

Jenga Chhetri was 23 when he convinced his family to resettle in the United States nearly three years ago. But not long after they arrived, his parents told him they shouldn’t have come.

“At the time, my parents – they blamed me. Like, ‘You did a great mistake to bring us over here.’” Chhetri said.

Many Bhutanese refugees have trouble adapting to life in the United States. As the organizer of a Bhutanese health outreach program, LeMaster said he has witnessed great suffering among his patients.

“Within a month of getting here, somebody committed suicide,” he said. “We began to become aware that the risk of suicide in the Bhutanese refugees is about three times the risk in other refugee groups, so we started looking into that.”

A report released earlier this year by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention highlights the acute problems of suicide, anxiety and depression among Bhutanese refugees in the United States, although the causes remain unclear. The CDC said the problems may be related to social isolation, substance abuse or even trauma from torture the refugees endured in Bhutan.
But when LeMaster and his team tried to address the refugees’ mental health problems, they found that the cultural stigma associated with just the suggestion of mental illness made their work nearly impossible.

“They were telling us what we feel is not stress so much: ‘We feel pain,’” LeMaster said.

Testing showed no underlying medical reasons for the refugees’ chronic pain, and standard treatments – including physical therapy, painkillers and psychiatric drugs – didn’t help. LeMaster believed the pain was related to stress and decided to explore alternative treatment methods.

He tried art therapy, dance therapy, tai chi and even a petting zoo. The refugees had some success before LeMaster hit on a treatment that produced the best outcomes.

Looking for alternatives

Yoga therapist Claudia Cardin-Kleffner specializes in working with people with chronic health conditions. But she’d never seen a class like the one LeMaster brought to her – one made up of middle-age and older female Bhutanese refugees.

“I could not even begin to understand these people because they couldn’t breathe,” Cardin-Kleffner said.

The women were stiff and withdrawn, the yoga teacher said. Many would not make eye contact.

Yoga has a long history in the Himalayas, and Nepal in particular. But while most of the refugees were Hindus who had some understanding of the ancient practice, they had little actual experience with it.

“Even getting them to move their arms – it was like, ‘Why should we do this?’ and then ‘How do we do this?’ – was really difficult,” Cardin-Kleffner said.

Among the class members was Jenga Chhetri’s mother, Ratna.

“I had back pain and leg pain,” Ratna Chhetri recalled. “But right now, that’s not happening in my body.”

The program’s success surprised LeMaster, who said that earlier in his career he would have been hesitant to prescribe yoga. The women reported dramatic drops in their levels of pain. Participants also showed major improvements on standard measures of anxiety, depression and acculturation.

Does culture matter?

Studies have shown that yoga helps the brain, heart and nervous system. But why did it work in this case when physical therapy and medication failed?

That’s something LeMaster is still trying to understand. But the answer may have to do with nothing more mysterious than cultural familiarity.

“What we did notice is that, as we went into it, the (yoga) concepts resonated with what their basic Hindu worldview was. So there was nothing in it that jarred them,” LeMaster said.

There have been no recent suicides among the refugees in Kansas City, an indication of the yoga program’s success.

LeMaster thinks the yoga program could be used to help struggling Bhutanese in other cities. He’s currently exploring how yoga and other culturally specific practices can be used to help other immigrant groups.

Alex Smith  is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Curbside alley cleanup complete in most of Hays

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At the end of Day 3 of the alley cleanup, curbside pickup is complete except in the northwest quadrant of Hays.

HAYS PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT

ALLEY CLEANUP DAY 3  is now complete. The map available on the City’s website shows the progress thus far.

Progress is good, and the residents of Hays are doing great at following the rules to make Alley Cleanup a safe and economical service provided to the refuse customers of Hays. Thank You!

As in years past, the City WILL NOT pick up tires, hazardous waste, batteries, and medical waste. Tires should be disposed of at the Ellis County Landfill, and hazardous waste and batteries should be disposed of at the Ellis County Hazardous Waste Facility. Medical waste can be taken to the Ellis County Health Department. Please call 628-9460, 628-9449, or 628-9440 for detailed information.
Waste should be placed in four separate piles in preparation of the alley cleanup. The piles should be organized in the following manner:

• 1.Tree limbs and brush (no longer than 12 ft. in length or 6″ in diameter) All yard and garden waste MUST be bagged to be collected!

• 2.Construction and Demolition Debris, i.e., lumber, drywall, bricks, sinks, wires, etc. (please pull or bend over nails and place small quantities of concrete, bricks, and plaster in containers)

• 3.White Goods/Metals, i.e., guttering, siding, washing machines, dryers, refrigerators, metal swing sets, etc.

• 4.Municipal Waste (all other items), i.e., furniture, carpet, etc.

TO AVOID WRONGFUL PICK UP, “TREASURED ITEMS” SHOULD BE TAGGED OR REMOVED FROM THE COLLECTION AREA

NOTE: Alley cleanup is for City of Hays residential customers paying for refuse services.

HPD activity log, Oct. 29

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The Hays Police Department conducted 19 traffic stops and received five animal calls on Wednesday, Oct. 29, according the HPD activity log

Abandoned Vehicle, 1000 block East 15th, 12:27 a.m.
Driving Under the Influence, 900 block Oak, 12:48 a.m.
Assist, 2900 block Canterbury, 11:43 a.m.
Animal At Large, 1000 block East 15th, 12:56 p.m.
Motor vehicle accident, 3300 block Vine, 2:30 p.m.
Motor vehicle accident, 300 block West 6th, 11:15 a.m.
Harassment, 200 block East 17th, 6:30 p.m.
Animal Call, 100 West 18th, 8:08 p.m.
Abandoned Vehicle, 1700 block Felten, 10:00 p.m.
Lost Animals, 100 block East 7th, 11:15 p.m.

FHSU Virtual College picks up another top five ranking

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By NICK BUDD
Hays Post

The rankings for Fort Hays State University’s virtual college continue to pile up. Recently, OnlineU ranked FHSU fifth in its 2015 Best Value Online Colleges.

“We completed extensive research into the cost of attending different online colleges.” said Kimberly Weber of SR Education Group, the publisher of the rankings. “With the average price of college skyrocketing, forcing many students to rely on student loans to fund their education, we were impressed with FHSU and their ability to continue to offer quality degrees at a reasonable price.”

The group also ranked specific degree online degree programs and FHSU’s programs in business, counseling, education,  human resources, nursing and psychology all received top five rankings.

The rankings noted that the “overwhelming majority” of online students who received a degree from the virtual college “reported very positive experiences and would recommend the school to others.” The rankings also spoke about specific services provided such as veteran benefits, admissions help, and drug and alcohol counseling.

Western Governors University received the top overall ranking, followed by American Public University System, Southern New Hampshire University Online, and Brigham Young University-Idaho.

The website based their rankings on the price of tuition, nonprofit status, student loan repayment rate, accreditation, student services, student review rates, program selection, and college and program highlights. A full list of the rankings and be viewed HERE.

Insight Kansas: Are Kan. voters ready to be decisive?

Election polling has the challengers close enough to make unseating Governor Sam Brownback and U.S. Senator Pat Roberts more than just a toss-up possibility, however, this column is not about “the horseraces.” There’s plenty of that available elsewhere.

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Dr. Mark Peterson teaches political science at the college level in Topeka.

We at Insight Kansas have posted the results of the numerous quality polls that have been done during the campaign for the general election Nov. 4 on our blog — insightkansas.wordpress.com).  Our rolling average meta-analysis is there as well.

Is Kansas ready to have a decisive referendum on the conservative agenda versus an agenda of moderate, pragmatic policies?  Will voters for state offices embrace candidates who want to adequately fund K-12 education; provide “austere but adequate” assistance to the poor, elderly, and disabled; keep higher education high quality; and maintain roads without abusing the wallets of working Kansans and their employers? For the U.S. Senate and House will voters reject “fighters” and back “doers” instead?

At the end of the 2014 campaign, the state has economically rebounded from what it was during the recession when Kansas’s economy slowed dramatically and the housing market declined but did not collapse and create a banking mess; unemployment pushed up to unacceptably high levels; public revenues declined as a result; and the aviation flu Wichita had been suffering turned into full-blown pneumonia.

The election of America’s first African-American president and the subsequent drafting of Governor Sebelius to his cabinet provoked a snarling nativist reaction among a broad swath of Kansans that subsequently rang in Tea Party politics and the deeply conservative Republican partisanship that elected Brownback/Colyer, Kobach, Yoder, Pompeo, Jenkins, and the inimitable Huelskamp to our highest offices.  Moderate Republicans and about 17 Democrats were driven from the legislature.

The 2014 election is a sort of an accounting, offering the people of the state the opportunity to validate or reject the tumultuous changes of the past four years.  All but one of the incumbents, to their credit, has completely owned their participation in the political changes that have occurred.  Even Senator Roberts, who doesn’t make this list of forthright incumbents, has campaigned fully embracing this aggressively conservative path.  The opponents have drawn clear positions rebutting the incumbents.  The campaigns’ “optics” may be ugly, but the issues and positions are clear.

Soon after the polls close, we’ll know about turnout.  The pre-election evidence suggests a pretty modest level of likely voter participation.  October, 2014 statewide voter registration totaled 1,743,790 voters, 13,500 more than in October, 2010, but almost 30,000 less than in 2012, and 6,000 less than in 2008!  Not exactly a tidal wave of new voters seeking their chance to express an opinion on the “experiment” of the last 4 years.

There have been organized, bi-partisan mobilization efforts by the Reroute the Roadmap organization, the KNEA, and Women for Kansas on the anti-incumbent side.  Notable moderate Republicans have organized and endorsed the challengers. Editorialists and pundits have critiqued the data associated with slashed tax revenues, slow growth, reduced spending on classroom education, the regressivity of current tax policy, and in surprising numbers in surprising places endorsed the challengers over the incumbents.  Yet at the close of the campaign, voter excitement and motivation seems to mirror past “off-year” elections – not intense.

H.L. Mencken, the American curmudgeon wrote, “Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want and deserve to get it good and hard.”  Let us all hope that, whether it turns out to be “good and hard” or just good, a substantial majority of registered voters show up and make their choices rather than letting the choices of the few make the decision for the many.

Dr. Mark Peterson teaches political science at the college level in Topeka.

Ray C. Clark

Memorial service for longtime Wallace County, Kansas, resident Ray C. Clark, 97, will be held Thursday, November 6, at 10:30 AM MT at Dinas Community Church in rural Wallace County.

Inurnment at Dinas Community Cemetery.

Friends may share respects on Wednesday, November 5, 4:00—6:00 PM MT at Koons Funeral Home in Sharon Springs.

Memorials, in lieu of flowers: Dinas Community Church (for the Dinas Community Cemetery) may be left at the services or mailed to Koons Funeral Home, 211 North Main, Goodland, KS  67735-1555

Online condolences: www.koonsfuneralhome.com

Washburn pledges to stop sexual violence on campus

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Washburn University faculty, staff and students are pledging to help stop sexual violence on campus.

The university in Topeka is one of several across the nation under federal investigation for the handling of sexual violence complaints.

On Wednesday, Washburn president Jerry Farley signed a pledge to help stop sexual crimes on campus. Supporters of the “It’s On Us” campaign set up two computers to allow students, faculty and staff to sign the pledge.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports  pledge signers agree to recognize that nonconsensual sex is sexual assault, intervene when consent hasn’t or can’t be given, and create an environment in which sexual assault is unacceptable.

Farley said the school does not have a rampant sexual violence problem but it is important to ensure that students are safe.

 

Kansas Cold Weather Rule takes effect Nov. 1

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TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission reminds Kansans that the Cold Weather Rule takes effect Nov. 1 and remains in effect through March 31.

“The Cold Weather Rule helps to ensure that Kansans can be warm in their home this winter,” said Chair Shari Feist Albrecht. “We encourage consumers to take steps to prepare for colder temperatures. Steps can include making sure heating equipment is in good working order, thermostats are set at a reasonable level, weather strip and caulk windows and doorways – these things can cut down on heating costs.”

The Cold Weather Rule in most cases prevents or limits utility companies from disconnecting a customer’s natural gas or electric service during periods of extreme cold. The Rule requires utility companies to offer a 12-month payment plan to allow consumers to maintain or re-establish utility service.

Disconnection Conditions:

• Utility companies may not initiate disconnection until temperatures are forecast to be above 35 degrees for the next 48 hours.
• Utility companies must attempt to contact the customer by phone or in-person 24 hours before disconnecting service.
• Utility companies are prohibited from disconnecting a customer’s service when temperatures are forecast to be at or below 35 degrees over the next 24 hours.

The KCC wants Kansans to have the electric and gas service needed to keep their homes warm during winter months. The KCC also recognizes the customer’s responsibility to make arrangements to pay for that service. The Cold Weather Rule was designed in 1983 to ensure that both goals are met. Any residential customer with a past due balance will qualify for payment arrangements under the Rule. However, it is the customer’s responsibility to contact the gas or electric company to make those arrangements.

Payment Plan conditions to maintain or restore service:

• Customers must contact their utility company and inform that they cannot pay their bill in full.
• Customers must agree to pay 1/12th of the total amount owed, 1/12th of the current bill, the full amount of any disconnection or reconnection fee, plus any applicable deposit to the utility.
• Customers must agree to pay the remaining balance in equal payments over the next 11 months, in addition to their current monthly bill.

The Cold Weather Rule applies only to residential customers of electric and natural gas utility companies under the KCC’s jurisdiction.

Kansans may also contact their local utility company or the KCC’s Office of Public Affairs and Consumer Protection at (800) 662-0027.

Second developer interested in casino in SE Kansas

Casino 6 110727PITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) — Odds are better for a casino in southeast Kansas after a second developer expressed interest in the project.

The Joplin Globe report Southeast Kansas Casino Group said this week it was interested in developing a casino, hotel and restaurant on 200 acres of privately owned land southeast of Pittsburg.

On Tuesday night, the Pittsburg City Commission approved a petition from the landowners and a resolution of intent for the development. However, the group has not yet submitted an application to the state gaming commission.

Developer Phil Ruffin Jr. and the Quapaw Tribe’s Downstream Casino in nearby Oklahoma announced earlier this year that they want to build a casino, restaurant and event center in the former Camptown Greyhound Park near Frontenac.

The application deadline for the casino is Dec. 19.

For-profit colleges face ‘gainful employment’ rule

KIMBERLY HEFLING, AP Education Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — For-profit colleges that don’t produce graduates capable of paying off their student loans could soon face the wrath of the federal government.

Schools with career-oriented programs that fail to comply with the new rule being announced Thursday by the Obama administration stand to lose access to federal student-aid programs.

To meet these “gainful employment” standards, a program will have to show that the estimated annual loan payment of a typical graduate doesn’t exceed 20 percent of discretionary income or 8 percent of total earnings.

The Education Department estimates that about 1,400 programs serving 840,000 students won’t pass. Nearly all of these programs are offered by for-profit schools.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan says the department wants to make sure that programs that prey on students don’t continue abusive practices.

Sunny, cooler Thursday

Screen Shot 2014-10-30 at 6.35.54 AMToday Sunny, with a high near 68. North northwest wind 11 to 17 mph.
Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 32. North wind 9 to 11 mph.
Friday Sunny, with a high near 49. North northeast wind 8 to 14 mph becoming east in the afternoon.
Friday Night Widespread frost after 2am. Otherwise, mostly clear, with a low around 29. Southeast wind around 10 mph.
Saturday Widespread frost before 9am. Otherwise, sunny, with a high near 53. Windy, with a south wind 10 to 15 mph increasing to 21 to 26 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 36 mph.
Saturday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 41. Breezy.
Sunday Mostly sunny, with a high near 71. Breezy.
Sunday Night Mostly cloudy, with a low around 50. Breezy.
Monday A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 63.

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