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AARP Kansas to urge passage of caregiver legislation

Judy Bellome, of Lawrence, helped cared for her diabetic mother until her death. Bellome is now among those supporting a bill to require more instruction for caregivers before patients are discharged from the hospital. She's holding a picture of her mother, Eleanor Francis.-photo by Andy Marso
Judy Bellome, of Lawrence, helped cared for her diabetic mother until her death. Bellome is now among those supporting a bill to require more instruction for caregivers before patients are discharged from the hospital. She’s holding a picture of her mother, Eleanor Francis.-photo by Andy Marso

By Andy Marso
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — When diabetes began to steal her mother’s legs and vision three decades ago, Lawrence resident Judy Bellome and her family joined the ranks of thousands of caregivers across Kansas.

Bellome had advantages others don’t, but even so she found it challenging.

“If I hadn’t been a nurse — and my sister is a physical therapist — there’s a very good chance we would not have been giving my mother the right insulin doses,” said Bellome, former CEO of the Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association. “Because nobody trained us.”

Bellome has added her voice to an effort by the senior advocacy group AARP Kansas to pass a bill requiring hospitals to demonstrate follow-up care instructions for caregivers before their loved ones are sent home.
605,000 Kansas family caregivers

AARP Kansas leaders hope to introduce the Caregiver Advise, Record, Enable (CARE) Act in the upcoming legislative session. The bill is still in draft form, but it is intended to allow patients to designate a caregiver upon admission to the hospital.
Hospital staff would then be required to notify that caregiver if the patient is to be discharged to another care facility or home. If the patient is being sent home, the hospital must “provide an explanation and live instruction of the medical tasks” that will have to be performed at home.

“Family caregivers are also required to undertake tasks that were once in the domain of only doctors and nurses,” AARP Kansas Director Maren Turner said. “Complex medication management, wound care, injections. Yet, most receive little or no training for these duties.”

Turner’s group celebrated November as National Family Caregivers Month. There are 605,000 Kansans looking after an aging spouse, family member or friend, the group said, providing unpaid medical care with an estimated value of $4.1 million.

There are 42 million family caregivers nationwide, according to AARP.

“Other states in our AARP network are working on caregiving issues, but ours will be Kansas-specific,” Mary Tritsch, associate director of communications for AARP Kansas, said of the CARE Act.

Financial incentives for hospitals

The Legislature reconvenes in January, and AARP Kansas has been meeting with some legislators to brief them on the proposal.
Rep. Barbara Bollier, a Republican from Mission Hills who is also a retired physician, said she has asked legislative research staff for more information on what state law currently requires when it comes to discharging patients from the hospital.

She said the Missouri hospital where she worked had protocols in place to ensure safe discharge.

Bollier said she did not know if those protocols were standardized across Kansas’ health care system, but Medicare provides financial incentives for hospitals nationwide to discharge patients safely by penalizing quick readmissions.

While she respects the goal of AARP Kansas proposal, Bollier said she wants to investigate further to see if changing the law is the right path to reach it. Hospital data can help determine whether the current system is truly leaving discharged patients without the level of care they need, she said.

“You really have to look at outcomes data,” Bollier said.

Connected by caregiving

The early phase of the AARP legislative push has focused largely on the anecdotes of people like Bellome, whose mother, Eleanor Francis, was diagnosed with diabetes in the 1980s at age 70.

For a while Francis was able to manage the condition through changes to her diet, Bellome said. But after extensive walking during a church trip to China, she returned to the United States with a sore that never healed because her circulation was compromised. Her leg had to be amputated, and insulin injections were prescribed.

Francis also had worked as a nurse, so Bellome said the hospital staff assumed she could handle her written discharge instructions.

But Bellome said her mother had been retired for years and her vision was failing.

“She had a can-do attitude. So you tell her to do something and, by golly, she’s going to do it,” Bellome said. “And what happened was she went home and she wasn’t able to give herself the injections.”

Bellome and her sister served as their mother’s caregiver for much of the next three years, until she died of a heart attack shortly after her 75th birthday.

The experience, Bellome said, connected her to hundreds of thousands of Kansans.

“Just about everybody has either been a caregiver or received care or will be a caregiver,” Bellome said. “It’s a very common characteristic that’s going to bind us all together.”

 

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

Hays High to host 4A regional wrestling

Hays High school will host the 4A regional wrestling tournament February 20-21.

The Kansas State High School Activities Association released regional wrestling assignments on Tuesday and both the Hays High Indians and TMP-Marian Monarchs will be a part of the 4A regional tournament in Hays.

Hays High School
Abilene, Buhler, Chapman, Clay Center Community, Colby, Concordia, Goodland, Hays, Hays-Thomas More Prep-Marian, Lindsborg-Smoky Valley, McPherson, Nickerson, St. George-Rock Creek, Topeka-Hayden, Wamego

3-2-1A
Norton Community High School
Atwood-Rawlins County, Belleville-Republic County, Cimarron, Ellis, Hill City, Hoxie, Ingalls, Lakin, Leoti-Wichita County, Montezuma-South Gray, Norton Community, Oakley, Oberlin-Decatur Comm., Palco, Phillipsburg, Plainville, Scott Community, Smith Center, St. Francis, Stockton, Sublette, Tribune-Greeley County, Wakeeney-Trego Community

Russell High School
Beloit, Beloit-St. Johns, Bennington, Canton-Galva, Ellsworth, Gypsum-Southeast of Saline, Halstead, Herington, Hesston, Hillsboro, Hoisington, Langdon-Fairfield, Lincoln, Lyons, Minneapolis, Moundridge, Osborne, Russell, Salina-Sacred Heart, Salina-St. John’s Military Academy, St. John-Hudson, Stafford, Sterling

Fort Riley soldier held on $5M bond in child porn case

JUNCTION CITY – A Fort Riley soldier, James G. Henning, has been charged in Geary County District Court with five counts of Sexual Exploitation of a Child, two counts Aggravated Criminal Sodomy, and one count of Aggravated Indecent Liberties With a Child.

The Geary County Attorney’s Office confirmed the formal complaint containing the charges against Henning was filed Tuesday in District Court.
Bond for Henning remains at five million dollars.

Henning was arrested Nov. 25 by Junction City police at his residence in connection with the alleged distribution of child pornography.

The County Attorney’s Office confirmed a new status hearing has been scheduled for 9 a.m. Dec. 30 in District Court as requested by the defense.

Abortion-referrals case back before Kansas board

AbortionTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas board is considering whether to continue barring a physician from practicing medicine after scrutinizing her referrals of young patients for late-term abortions and finding that she kept inadequate records.

Dr. Ann Kristin Neuhaus of Nortonville will be back before the State Board of Healing Arts next week.

She successfully challenged a 2012 board ruling that she conducted substandard mental health exams in 2003 for 11 patients aged 10 to 18. Her opinions about patients’ mental problems allowed the late Dr. George Tiller’s clinic in Wichita to terminate their pregnancies.

A judge earlier this year overturned the board’s revocation of Neuhaus’ license but agreed that she kept inadequate records. The judge sent her case back to the board.

The board has a hearing set for 10 a.m. Dec. 11.

Man, woman to be tried in Kan. girl’s abduction, rape

CourtTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A judge has found sufficient evidence to try a man and woman in the abduction and rape of an 8-year-old girl in Topeka.

The Topeka Capital-Journal  reports that 28-year-old Jeremy Lindsey and 23-year-old Michelle Harris were bound over for trial Tuesday in Shawnee County District Court. The girl vanished for about six hours in September, setting off a large search that ended when she was found walking along a road about two miles from her home.

Lindsey will be tried on 10 charges, including rape, aggravated kidnapping and unlawful administration of a substance to the child. Harris was accused of transporting Lindsey and the girl to an abandoned house. She will be tried on charges of aggravated kidnapping and aggravated child endangerment.

Lindsey and Harris pleaded not guilty.

Kan. woman hospitalized after truck collides with Cadillac

KHP  Kansas Highway PatrolKANSAS CITY- A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just after 11 a.m. on Tuesday in Wyandotte County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2007 International truck driven by Richard W. Bowers, 60, Marion, was southbound on Interstate 635 at Interstate 70.

The truck made a lane change and made contact with a southbound 2001 Cadillac Deville. The collision forced the Cadillac into the wall.

The Cadillac driver Shannon M. Kirtdoll, 25, Topeka, was transported to KU Medical Center.

Bowers and a passenger in the Cadillac were not injured.
The KHP reported all were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

FHSU women’s basketball receiving votes in WBCA poll

For a second straight week, the Fort Hays State Lady Tigers are receiving votes in the WBCA Division II Top-25 poll. The Lady Tigers are actually receiving one less vote than they did a week ago despite picking up two wins and moving to 5-1.

Four MIAA teams are ranked again this week led by Emporia State who takes over the top-spot. Washburn is up 11 spots to No. 7 and despite suffering their first loss of the season, Pittsburg State moves up two spots to No. 8. Central Missouri moves up three to No. 21.

Complete WBCA poll below…

Rank Institution – First Place Votes
Previous Rank
Record
Total Points
1. Emporia State University (Kan.) – 22
2
5-0
773
2. Wayne State College (Neb.) – 4
3
7-0
756
3. Lewis University (Ill.) – 6
4
5-0
725
4. Nova Southeastern University (Fla)
1
5-1
630
5. Northern State University (S.D.)
12
7-0
607
6. West Texas A&M University
T8
4-1
524
7. Washburn University (Kan.)
18
6-0
515
8. Pittsburg State University (Kan.)
10
7-1
504
9. University of Tampa (Fla.)
6
5-1
408
10. Stonehill College (Mass.)
23
5-0
376
11. Wayne State University (Mich.)
13
2-0
355
12. Limestone College (S.C.)
15
5-1
315
13. Drury University (Mo.)
7
4-2
312
14. Colorado Mesa University
16
3-1
307
15. Rollins College (Fla.)
14
5-1
304
16. Adelphi University (N.Y.)
25
6-0
275
17. Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania
20
4-1
272
18. University of Alaska – Anchorage
NR
5-0
247
19. Union University (Tenn.)
NR
4-0
231
20. Harding University (Ark.)
T8
4-2
217
21. University of Central Missouri
24
5-1
149
22. Cal Poly – Pomona
17
2-2
137
23. Seattle Pacific University (Wash.)
NR
5-0
135
24. West Liberty University (W.Va.)
21
4-1
126
25. Gannon University (Pa.)
5
3-2
110

Dropped out: Edinboro University (Pa.); Bentley University (Mass.); California University of Pennsylvania (Pa.).

Others receiving votes: Edinboro University (Pa.) 106; Bentley University (Mass.) 97; Arkansas Tech University (Ark.) 88; California University of Pennsylvania (Pa.) 82; University of North Georgia 77; Assumption College (Mass.) 64; Grand Valley State University (Mich.) 60; West Chester University of Pennsylvania 56; California State University – San Bernardino 44; Michigan Technological University 38; Midwestern State University (Texas) 33; Western Washington University 32; Missouri Southern State University (Mo.) 29; Florida Institute of Technology (Fla.) 28; University of District of Columbia (D.C.) 28; Indiana University of Pennsylvania 27; Fort Hays State University (Kan.) 25; Saint Cloud State University (Minn.) 22; Simon Fraser University (B.C.) 20; California Baptist University 18; Concordia University (Minn.) 17; Philadelphia University (Pa.) 15; Humboldt State University (Calif.) 14; Virginia State University (Va.) 13; Columbus State University (Ga.) 8; Southeastern Oklahoma State University (Okla.) 8; Texas A&M International University 8; University of New Haven (Conn.) 8; Minnesota State University – Mankato 5; Rockhurst University (Mo.) 5; University of Findlay (Ohio) 4; California State University – East Bay 2; Minot State University (N.D.) 2; Tarleton State University (Texas) 2; University of North Alabama (Ala.) 2; Northern Michigan University 1; University of Wisconsin – Parkside 1.

FHSU men’s basketball receiving votes in NABC poll

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State continued to receive votes in the NABC Division II Men’s Basketball Poll, released on Tuesday (Dec. 2). Fort Hays State has received votes in the first two regular season polls of the season and the preseason poll. Fort Hays State enters play this week at 4-2 overall and faces the No. 6 ranked team in the nation to open MIAA play.

Central Missouri is the only MIAA school in the top 25 currently. The defending national champion moved up from No. 10 in the first regular season poll to No. 6 this week, carrying a perfect 7-0 record. The Mules put that perfect mark to the test at Gross Memorial Coliseum inThursday in the first conference game of the season. The Mules were picked first in the MIAA Coaches Preseason Poll, while Fort Hays State was picked second.

Also receiving votes with the Tigers from the MIAA is Northwest Missouri State. The Bearcats own an overall record of 5-1 going into MIAA play this week.

Fort Hays State has won the last three meetings with Central Missouri in Hays, which includes the 2012-13, 2011-12, and 2010-11 seasons. At least one of the teams were ranked in two of those three meetings. Central Missouri was No. 25 in the nation in 2011-12 and Fort Hays State won that game 67-66 on a last second tip-in by Karron McKenzie. Fort Hays State was No. 5 in the nation in 2010-11 and won handily 83-59.

Central Missouri’s last win in Hays occurred during the 2009-10 season by a score of 79-63, when both teams were ranked in the top 10, UCM at No. 3 and FHSU at No. 10. The Mules got revenge after the Tigers had knocked them from the No. 1 ranking in the nation earlier in the season in Warrensburg, which happens to be the last time FHSU won in Warrensburg. Both teams own three-game win streaks against each other on their home floors currently.

Below are the rankings for December 2, 2014

Team Record Points
1. West Liberty (W.Va.) (14) 5-0 397
2. Southern Connecticut State 6-0 378
3. Bellarmine (Ky.) (2) 6-0 369
4. Florida Southern 6-0 356
5. Indiana (Pa.) 7-0 324
6. Central Missouri 7-0 293
7. Tarleton State (Texas) 5-0 288
8. Colorado-Colorado Springs 5-0 283
9. Metropolitan State (Colo.) 5-1 268
10. Lincoln Memorial (Tenn.) 6-0 242
11. Augustana (S.D.) 7-0 215
12. Barrry (Fla.) 5-0 195
13. Minnesota State 5-1 191
14. Drury (Mo.) 4-1 188
15. Alabama-Huntsville 5-0 186
16. Indianapolis (Ind.) 6-0 137
17. California Baptist 5-1 122
18. Mount Olive (N.C.) 7-0 93
19. Minnesota State-Moorhead 7-0 87
20. Michigan Tech 3-0 78
21. Findlay (Ohio) 1-1 73
22. Point Loma Nazarene (Calif.) 5-0 66
23. BYU-Hawaii 4-0 62
24. Christian Brothers (Tenn.) 2-1 53
25. Florida Tech 7-0 41

Others receiving votes: Colorado School of Mines 32, Northwest Missouri State 29, Newberry (S.C.) 23, GRU Augusta (Ga.) 21, Lewis (Ill.) 20, Azuza Pacific (Calif.) 13, Fort Lewis (Colo.) 9, Western Washington 9, Angelo State (Texas) 8, Chaminade (Hawaii) 8, Walsh (Ohio) 8, Chico State (Calif.) 7, St. Edward’s (Texas) 7, UNC Pembroke 7, Seattle Pacific (Wash.) 6, Texas A&M-Commerce 6, Southern Indiana 5, Wingate (S.C.) 5, Wisconsin-Parkside 3, Cal Poly Pomona 2, Colorado Mesa 2, Fort Hays State (Kan.) 2, Alderson-Broaddus (W.Va.) 1, Tuskegee (Ala.) 1, UC San Diego 1.

Cyber Monday deals get stretched, crimping sales

credit card computer fraudMAE ANDERSON, AP Technology Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Cyber Monday deals are being stretched out this holiday season, crimping sales on the day itself.

Retailers from Target to Amazon have been offering online deals since the beginning of November, and are promising “cyber” deals all week. That seems to have put a dent in Cyber Monday sales. Sales were up, according to estimates. But they weren’t as strong as some were expecting.

IBM Digital Analytics Benchmark reported that online sales rose 8.5 percent compared to 2013. That still makes it the busiest U.S. online shopping day of the year so far — a title the date has held since 2010. But it was less stellar growth than last year’s Cyber Monday, when online s

Christmas4Kids telethon will be Sunday from James Motor Co.

Screen Shot 2014-12-01 at 1.48.34 PM

The annual Christmas4Kids telethon, a fundraiser for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ellis County, will be from noon to 5 p.m. Dec. 7.

The event features a day full of entertainment and will be broadcast live from James Motor Co. in historic downtown Hays on Eagle Community Television Ch. 14 and 614 and Eagle Radio KHAZ-99.5FM.

All proceeds benefit BBBS of Ellis County, which is also accepting donations in advance at its website.

Click “donate now” to help make a difference in the lives of children throughout Ellis County.

‘Silverware Savers’ wins FHSU Startup Weekend

 Silverware Savers with the first-place trophy. From left: Matthew McWithey, Korby Boswell, Morgan Lawrence, Dani Overmiller, Laura Regnier and Carlos Dominguez
Silverware Savers with the first-place trophy. From left: Matthew McWithey, Korby Boswell, Morgan Lawrence, Dani Overmiller, Laura Regnier and Carlos Dominguez

FHSU University Relations

Silverware Savers, a manually operated silverware roller designed for restaurant use to roll silverware into napkins, was the winning team at the third Kansas Startup Weekend, hosted by the College of Business and Entrepreneurship at Fort Hays State University.

Second place went to Falcon, a food truck serving the FHSU campus during the day and Hays bar locations at night. Third place went to Top Shelf, an upscale cocktail lounge and restaurant in downtown Hays.

Kansas Startup 2014 was sponsored by Network Kansas, Sunflower Electric Power Corporation and Commerce Bank of Hays.

Silverware Savers was Laura Regnier, Colorado Springs, Colo., senior; Korby Boswell, Onaga senior; Dani Overmiller, Beloit junior; Matthew McWithey, Winfield senior; Carlos Dominguez, McCook, Neb., junior; and Morgan Lawrence, Dighton junior.

The event began with 45 participants pitching their business ideas on the evening of Nov. 14, then voting on the best ideas, which resulted in seven teams. The teams worked over the weekend with coaches from the fields of accounting, finance, marketing and business strategy to create a viable business concept.

The top three teams received trophies, free business consulting with local firms, free attendance at a business seminar, and a large selection of books on innovation and entrepreneurship.

Coaches were Dr. Emily Breit, chair of FHSU’s Department of Economics, Finance and Accounting; Cole Engel, instructor of economics, finance and accounting; Dr. Tony Gabel, associate professor of management and marketing; Scott Gross, an FHSU graphic design graduate who is lead designer for Dessin Fournir Collections, Plainville; Jessica Heronemus, instructor of economics, finance and accounting; Ron Newman, regional director of the Kansas Small Business Development Center; Charlene Nichols, assistant director of the FHSU Alumni Association; Dr. Sam Schreyer, assistant professor of economics, finance and accounting; Charles Wolfe, instructor of management and marketing; and preliminary judge Dr. Mike Martin, assistant professor of management and marketing.

On Sunday evening, each team gave a five-minute presentation to a panel of judges. The judges were Dr. Shinga Masango, lecturer in international business at Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, England; Justin McClung, Internet and network solutions manager at Nex-Tech Inc., Hays; and Skip Yowell, a former student who is a co-founder of JanSport, Alameda, Calif.

The next Kansas Startup is scheduled for Nov. 13-15, 2015. For more information, contact Henry Schwaller IV at 785-628-6162 or [email protected].

 

Ellis County tax statements delayed by computer error

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

Ellis County tax statements are expected to arrive in mailboxes by Friday after an error was found in the county tax roll.

According to Ellis County Clerk Donna Maskus, there was a data-entry error regarding the Victoria USD 432 and the Victoria Rural Housing Incentive District.

Maskus said her office still is working to figure out a relatively new taxing and accounting system – CIC.

“We are still working with some uniqueness that this county has that they (CIC) haven’t worked with before,” she said.

Commissioner Dean Haselhorst said the county has encountered a number of problems that all seem to be related to CIC.

But both County Treasurer Ann Pfeifer and Maskus said, even though they have had to work through some issues, there are a number of benefits to the nearly two-year-old system.

Pfeifer said state statute requires the county send out statements by Dec. 15 and first-half taxes are due by Dec. 20. Because Dec. 20 falls on a weekend, this year’s payments are due Dec. 22.

Pfiefer said it cost less than $5,000 to reprint and stuff the approximately 35,000 statements.

Tax amounts can be found on the county’s website or people can contact the treasurer’s office and they will look up the information.

Kansas City, Kan., names new police chief

kck police

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Kansas City, Kansas, has promoted its assistant police chief to the department’s top job.

The city announced Assistant Chief Terry Zeigler’s appointment on Tuesday.

The Kansas City Star reports that Zeigler replaces Ellen Hanson. She is a former Lenexa police chief who was the Kansas City, Kansas, interim chief for a year after the retirement of former chief Rick Armstrong.

Zeigler, who led the department’s operations bureau, was one of five finalists for the position.

The police department has about 460 civilian and uniformed employees.

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