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Feds approve KDADS plan at State Mental Hospital

Screen Shot 2014-12-06 at 5.13.05 PMBy Dave Ranney
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — A spokesperson for the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services on Friday announced that federal officials had approved the agency’s plan for improving conditions at Osawatomie State Hospital.

The decision means the hospital’s Medicare payments will remain intact after Monday.

Earlier, federal officials had threatened to block a significant portion of the payments if the hospital failed to correct several deficiencies cited during a late October survey.

Federal surveyors returned to the hospital this week.

“As a result of the re-survey earlier this week, our two immediate jeopardy deficiencies have been lifted,” Angela de Rocha, a KDADS spokesperson, wrote in an email to KHI News Service.

KDADS is working with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on a “plan of correction” for other deficiencies related to census issues at the 206-bed hospital, de Rocha said. KDADS will have 90 days to implement that plan.

Though the federal survey and the state’s correction plan have yet to be made public, de Rocha last month said that a “fire watch” had been initiated to address concerns raised by the Office of the State Fire Marshal.

The two “immediate jeopardy” issues, she said, involved the hospital’s nursing and pharmacy procedures.

For the hospital to have been cited for “immediate jeopardy” means the surveyors had reason to believe that patients’ safety and well-being were at-risk.

Osawatomie State Hospital is the larger of the state’s two inpatient facilities for adults with serious mental illnesses who’ve been deemed a danger to themselves or others. The other state-run mental health hospital is in Larned.

In recent months, patient admissions to Osawatomie State Hospital have reached record and near-record levels, causing dozens of patients to be triple-bunked in rooms meant for two.

On Tuesday, KDADS announced it was suspending voluntary admissions due to “ongoing and critical census challenges” at the 206-bed state hospital.

In keeping with a memo sent to the state’s 26 community mental health centers, the suspension will be in effect whenever the hospital’s census exceeds 185 patients.

Last year, according to KDADS records, the hospital’s census was below 185 patients for one day.

Typically, most patients who are involuntarily admitted to the hospital have been involved in encounters with police and have been found to be a danger to themselves or others. These admissions, oftentimes, are court-ordered.

Federal officials’ decision to accept the KDADS correction plan did not surprise the state’s mental health advocates.

The Osawatomie and Larned hospitals, they said, have long been understaffed, underfunded and overcrowded.

“Our hope now is that the 2015 Legislature will be supportive of the community-based solutions that we know are needed to avoid running into this crisis time and time again,” said Amy Campbell, a lobbyist for the Kansas Mental Health Coalition.

Patients who don’t have access to crisis intervention services in their local communities are one reason why the Osawatomie hospital has been above census, she said.

“The current leadership at KDADS is actively pursuing solutions – more community-based crisis-intervention services, more (substance abuse) treatment beds, more housing options,” Campbell said. “They’re steps, but they’re baby steps. The department is headed in the right direction, it’s just not moving fast enough.”

Rebecca Proctor, executive director at the Kansas Organization of State Employees, a labor union that represents many state hospital front-line workers, said her members were disappointed by the decision.

“Conditions there are not good for the residents and for people who work there,” Proctor said. “I can tell you this: If somebody who never worked in a state-hospital environment went to work at Osawatomie (State Hospital), they would very quickly come to the conclusion that conditions there are unacceptable.”

 

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

Richardson, Vols outlast Kansas State

By STEVE MEGARGEE
AP Sports Writer

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Josh Richardson scored 17 points Saturday as Tennessee withstood a late 3-point onslaught from Marcus Foster in a 65-64 victory over Kansas State.

Tennessee (3-3) had a 10-point lead with less than 2 minutes remaining before Kansas State made five 3-pointers in the last 1 minute, 35 seconds. Foster sank four 3-pointers in the final minute and finished with 23 points.

The Volunteers held Kansas State (4-4) without a basket for a stretch of nearly 11 1/2 minutes during the first half and forced 22 turnovers.

Foster went 7 of 14 from 3-point range for Kansas State. Jevon Thomas had 13 points and Nino Williams added 10 for Kansas State.

This represented the first meeting between these two programs and the final game of this season’s SEC/Big 12 Challenge. The Big 12 won six of its 10 head-to-head matchups with the Southeastern Conference this week.

2 Kan. men dead, 3 hospitalized after rollover crash

fatal crashHUGOTON – Two Kansas men died and three others were injured in an accident just before 6:30 a.m. on Saturday in Stevens County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Chevy Uplander driven by Andres Sandval, 37, Liberal was south bound on County Road 20 seven miles east of Hugoton.

The vehicle left the roadway and entered into east ditch.

The driver over corrected, came back onto the roadway, started a side skid, entered the ditch a second time and rolled.

Sandval and a passenger Juan Sebastian-Diago, 26, Liberal, were transported to Stevens County hospital where they died.

Two additional passengers Javier Villaneuva, 41, and Diego Villanueva, 23, both of Liberal were also transported to Stevens County Hospital.

A fifth passenger Michael Adam-Facio, 26, Liberal was transported to Southwest Medical Center.

The KHP reported Sandval and Sebastian-Diago were not wearing seat belts.

TMP-Marian boys, girls win at Hays City Shootout

By JEREMY McGUIRE
HaysPost

Boys:  TMP 75, Colby 50

TMP used a 27-11 first quarter to put their Saturday afternoon game with Colby away early at the Hays City Shootout.  Colby was able to close the gap to 14 at the half but would never get any closer.  Senior Kameron Schmidt poured in 27 points, 10 of those coming in the first four minutes of the game.  TMP finished seventh in the tournament with the win.

TMP is now one and two on the season and will travel to Hill City next Friday night to take on the Ringnecks.

JOE HERTEL POSTGAME

 

Girls:  TMP 53, Hays High 27

Bench points were the key for the TMP Lady Monarchs as they defeated Hays High 53-27 on Saturday afternoon at Hays Middle School.  Freshman Kayla Vitztum came off the bench to score a career high 14.  Sophomore Katelyn Zimmerman chipped in 11 off the bench as well.  TMP took a 23-13 lead going into halftime and were never challenged after that en route to a fourth place finish in the Hays City Shootout.  The victory improves TMP’s early season record to two and one as Hays High drops to one and two.

The Lady Monarchs will be on the road next Friday in Hill City.  Hays High will host Pratt on Tuesday.

STEPHANIE SCHAFFER-HOWIE POSTGAME

 

Lady Tigers win sixth straight with victory over Missouri Western

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

Kate Lehman led three Lady Tigers in double-figures with 22 points as Fort Hays State runs their win streak to six with an 81-57 victory over Missouri Western Saturday afternoon at Gross Coliseum. Lehman also grabbed 12 rebounds for her 41st career double-double. Chelsea Mason hit five 3-pointers and scored 20 and Beth Bohuslavsky added a career-high 18 as FHSU improves to 7-1 overall and 2-0 in the MIAA.

Tony Hobson Postgame Interview

 

The Lady Tigers led from wire to wire, scoring the first four and building the lead to 17 by halftime. A Chelsea Mason three pushed the lead to 25 in the second half, Missouri Western answered with an 11-2 run to pull within 16. Following a timeout, FHSU responds with a 13-2 run to put the game away.

Game Highlights

 

Missouri Western was led by LaQuinta Jefferson who scores 17. The Griffons see their five-game win streak end and falls to 5-2 and 0-2 in the MIAA.

Kan. minister frightened by death threats

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita minister says she is starting to become frightened by a growing number of death threats she has received since performing a wedding ceremony for 15 same-sex couples on the steps of the Sedgwick County Courthouse last month.

The Rev. Jackie Carter, pastor of the First Metropolitan Community Church, says some of the threats have been reported to police, but since the numbers of the callers don’t show up on her phone, she’s simply been told to “be careful.”

Carter told The Wichita Eagle someone called on Monday and she heard heavy breathing before someone rang the doorbell and someone else started throwing rocks at the windows.

She says the church has instructed people to leave the building in pairs, especially at night.

Kan. man hospitalized after teen falls asleep at the wheel

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMMAPLE HILL- A Kansas man was injured in an accident just before 12:30 p.m. on Saturday in Wabaunsee County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Jeep Compass driven by Andrew Jens Harvey, 19, Lawrence, westbound on Interstate 70 just west of Carlson Road.

The driver fell asleep and struck the rear end of a 1994 Chevy S 10 driven by John J. Oshea, 69, Topeka.

Oshea was transported to St. Francis in Topeka.

Harvey and a passenger in the Jeep Benjamin Fredrick Harvey, 25, Manhattan, were not injured.
The KHP reported all were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Police: SUV in Kanas City boy’s death had anti-Muslim message

PoliceBILL DRAPER, Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City police have confirmed that an SUV involved in the death of a teenager outside a Somali community center had an anti-Muslim message displayed in the rear window at the time of the crash.

Authorities say 34-year-old Ahmed H. Aden deliberately ran the boy over and have charged him with murder in a case that the FBI is investigating as a potential hate crime.

Fifteen-year-old Abdisamad Sheikh-Hussein died at a hospital Thursday evening.

Kansas City police spokesman Darin Snapp told The Associated Press in an email that the SUV had been seen in the area by patrol officers in late October with a message that compared the Quran to the Ebola virus.

Aden was held in jail Saturday. No attorney is listed for him in online court records.

INSIGHT KANSAS: Do Kansas voters even care?

About those 858,000 registered voters who didn’t get to the polls on Nov. 4 …

Secretary of State Kris Kobach had opportunity last week to once again tout the effects of his secure voting project while noting that the 50.8% voting turnout was above his originally projected flat 50%.

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

In passing, he took a dig at those concerned about the possible effects of his proof-of-citizenship voting security system as a tool for voter suppression. Perhaps he’s right, and there is certainly no doubt that he believes the naysayers are wrong, wrong, wrong.

Even if the total vote was both numerically greater and proportionately larger than 2010, there remain a handful of significant problems. Problems that raise a likelihood that tough voting registration requirements, closed partisan primaries, provisional balloting, and outside money and negative/attack advertising had combined to dissuade nearly 50% of registered voters (about 56% of what demographers term “voter eligible adults”) from participating in this year’s general election.

What’s going on here? Twenty years ago after the Republicans thumped the Democrats, putting Newt Gingrich in the Speaker’s chair in the U.S. House of Representatives, President Clinton made several poignant public declarations to the effect that government was still relevant, necessary, and really quite important.

Two recessions; NAFTA; two terrorist attacks on the American homeland; trillions of dollars spent and thousands of American military lives lost or maimed in the Mideast; hurricanes, floods, and wildfires affecting all levels of American society; Obamacare; Goldman-Sachs and the mortgage bubble; Wichita’s loss of Boeing; five years of drought and the looming exhaustion of the Ogallala Aquifer; and most of the adult population of Kansas couldn’t give two hoots about the candidates and their positions last November 4th?

It is important to recall that this was to be the Kansas electorate’s declaration regarding gridlock in Washington, ideological polarization, the wisdom of deep tax cuts to stimulate private sector growth, and the adequacy of school finance from primary to post-secondary. Voices in the public square spared no effort to point out the state’s perilous financial condition. Meanwhile big money flowed in to warn the voters that the challengers were not to be trusted and that noise they were hearing under the bed was the Obama/Biden/Pelosi/Reid terror come to raise their taxes and ruin their health.

In the hoorah and hubbub of the 2014 Election, we may have missed something really important – a substantial majority of Kansas adults simply don’t care enough about the products on offer to even bother to participate. Less than 25% of Kansas adults affirmatively endorsed either Sam Brownback or Pat Roberts to retain their offices. Fewer still were persuaded that there was any point or prospect to altering the gridlock that paralyzes Washington, D.C., or that putting the Davises in Cedar Crest was going to replenish classroom spending.

In fact, the circumstantial evidence suggests that there wasn’t a lot of gratitude for the reduced income taxes, concern about the gaping hole in the state’s general fund, or enthusiasm for the impending explosion of new jobs and opportunities arising from the fabulous tax break those 190,000 practitioners of small-bore capitalism received right after Governor Brownback started his first term.

Maybe the conservatives are correct.

Kansans, and perhaps the country in general, don’t believe that government does anything valuable enough to warrant paying any attention or in taking the time to make a choice concerning who is going to pay attention for them. As my barber said the other day, “There’s nothing here that people want to pay to see, and nothing here to draw a lot of new people and jobs, but I sure don’t mind having to pay less tax.”

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

Petty helps No. 5 Baylor past No. 9 Kansas State

By STEPHEN HAWKINS
AP Sports Writer

WACO, Texas (AP) — Bryce Petty threw for 412 yards, Johnny Jefferson had two touchdown runs and fifth-ranked Baylor claimed a share of its second consecutive Big 12 title with a 38-27 win over ninth-ranked Kansas State on Saturday night.

K-State's Jake Waters drops back to pass against Baylor. (Scott D. Weaver/K-State Athletics)
K-State’s Jake Waters drops back to pass against Baylor. (Scott D. Weaver/K-State Athletics)

The Bears (11-1, 8-1 Big 12, No. 6 CFP) now have to wait and see if they will get a chance to be in the four-team playoff. TCU, which also grabbed a share of the conference title, but lost to Baylor earlier this season, also is in the mix.

TCU (11-1, 8-1, No. 3 CFP) has won seven in a row since its 61-58 loss to the Bears.

Petty completed 34 of 40 passes with a touchdown and an interception, a week after getting knocked out of the Bears’ last game with a concussion.

FHSU professor presents paper at national music theory conference

FHSU University Relations

Fort Hays State University’s Dr. Judith Ofcarcik, assistant professor of music and theatre, presented at the Society for Music Theory’s recent National Conference in Milwaukee, Wis.

“The Aesthetics of Rupture: Adorno and the Adagio of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony” analyzed the slow, lyrical third movement of the symphony and used Theodor Adorno’s writings on aesthetics to explain the expressive effects Beethoven used.

“The variation-form slow movement of the Ninth Symphony is very soft and pretty,” said Ofcarcik, “but right at the end two fanfares break through the movement and shock the listeners. Adorno referred to this type of break through as ‘Durchbruch,’ and I use the term to discuss the expressive effect of Beethoven’s fanfares.”

The third movement is in double-variation form, meaning the piece alternates between two melodic themes; however, Ofcarcik said the fanfares “interrupt the double-variation form and redirect the musical narrative of the movement.”

The booming fanfares prepare listeners for the grandiose fourth movement, which marks the first symphony in history that calls for a choir.

In addition to presenting her paper, Ofcarcik attended other research presentations and discussed them with peers.

“I love going to this conference because I am surrounded by other music theorists,” she said. “Overall, it just makes me feel more connected to my field and the things that drove me to become a music theorist in the first place.”

Community education series for families to begin in January

NAMI-logo

Families with a loved one who has been diagnosed with mental illness can receive education and support from a new Family-to-Family program series beginning in Hays in January.

The 12-week educational program was developed by the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) and is hosted by the NAMI chapter in Hays.  Weekly sessions are taught by a team of trained volunteer family members who know what it is like to have a loved one with a serious mental illness.  The classes are structured to help family members understand and support their ill relative while maintaining their own well-being.

Sessions begin on Thursday, January 8 from 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. and continue on Thursday nights through March 26 at the First United Methodist Church, 305 W. 7th Street in Hays.  The series is free, but pre-registration is required to ensure adequate materials.  Class size is limited to 25 people.

The program will offer help to family members of individuals with bipolar disorder, depression, schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder, panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder and addictive disorders.  During the past 16 years, over 100,000 family members in the U.S., Canada and Mexico have completed this course.

For more information, or to register, call NAMI HAYS, 785-625-2847, at the Center for Life Experiences located at the First Presbyterian Church.  More information and a video are available online at www.nami.org/F2F.

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