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Most Kansas City Area Hospitals Do Well In Patient Safety Report

By Dan Margolies

Seven of 20 Kansas City area hospitals got A’s in patient safety, according to a new report, while nine got B’s and four got C’s.

Centerpoint Medical Center was one of seven Kansas City-area hospitals to receive an A grade in a recent report on patient safety.
HCA MIDWEST HEALTH

The grades were assigned by The Leapfrog Group, a nonprofit that twice a year rates 2,600 general acute-care hospitals across the country on patient safety measures.

The 28 performance measures include handwashing practices, blood infections and patient falls. Leapfrog uses the measures to come up with a single letter grade ranging from A to F, meant to show how effective a hospital is in keeping patients safe from preventable harm and medical errors.

“Over 33,000 lives could be saved if all hospitals performed at the level of A-graded hospitals,” Leapfrog says.

Some health experts say 4 percent of patients acquire infections in hospitals. Leapfrog says that an analysis it commissioned from the Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality at Johns Hopkins Medicine estimates 206,021 avoidable deaths occur in U.S. hospitals each year – and Leapfrog says that’s probably an underestimate.

The analysis also found that hospitals receiving Ds and Fs carry a nearly 50 percent greater risk of mortality than A-graded hospitals.

Listed below are the Kansas City-area hospitals and the grades they received:

A grades: 

  • The University of Kansas Hospital
  • Saint Luke’s Hospital of Kansas City
  • Shawnee Mission Medical Center
  • Providence Medical Center
  • Centerpoint Medical Center
  • St. Mary’s Medical Center
  • Lee’s Summit Medical Center

B grades:

  • Research Medical Center (main campus)
  • Saint Luke’s North Hospital
  • St. Joseph Medical Center
  • Overland Park Regional Medical Center
  • Saint Luke’s South Medical Hospital
  • Liberty Hospital
  • Saint Luke’s East Hospital
  • Belton Regional Medical Center
  • Lawrence Memorial Hospital

C grades:

  • Truman Medical Center Hospital Hill
  • North Kansas City Hospital
  • Menorah Medical Center
  • Olathe Medical Center

Dave Dillon, a spokesman for the Missouri Hospital Association, noted that there are a lot of different hospital rating measures and they don’t always look at the same data.

The Missouri Hospital Association, for example, does its own survey, FocusOnHospitals.com, that includes all Missouri hospitals. (Leapfrog’s report card excludes specialty hospitals such as children’s hospitals, as well as critical access hospitals located in rural areas.)

“Additionally, not all of the data used is current,” Dillon said in an email. “So, a hospital might be performing better or worse, depending on the dataset and what practices the hospital has put in place to address specific issues.”

Dillon said hospitals have spent “significant amounts of time and energy to improve quality and patient safety.”

“As all hospitals get better, the competition to keep up gets fierce,” he said.

Leapfrog cautions that patients should never refuse emergency care because of a hospital’s safety grade but rather use the grades as a guide for planned hospitalizations and potential emergencies.

Its report card draws on data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Agency for Healthcare Research Quality, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, American Hospital Association’s Annual Survey Health Information Technology Supplement and Leapfrog’s own hospital survey.

Leapfrog also ranks states, based on their number of “A” hospitals compared to the total number of hospitals graded. Kansas ranked #24, with nearly a third of its hospitals receiving an A grade, while Missouri ranked #34, with about 23 percent of its hospitals receiving an A grade.

Kansas moved up three notches from Leapfrog’s last survey in spring 2018; Missouri dropped 21 notches.

The top five jurisdictions were New Jersey, Oregon, Virginia, Massachusetts and Texas. The bottom five were Connecticut, Nebraska, Washington, D.C., Delaware and North Dakota.

Dan Margolies is a senior reporter and editor in conjunction with the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @DanMargolies.

Woman found in burning Kansas home has died

JOHNSON COUNTY— Investigators are working to determine the cause of a fatal Sunday night house fire in Johnson County.

Crews on the scene of Sunday evening’s fatal fire -photo courtesy Overland Park Fire Department

Just after 9p.m. responded to a house fire in the 7500 Block of Kessler Lane, according to a media release. First units on the scene found smoke and fire coming from the split-level single family residence. Crews attacked the blaze on the upper level while other crews searched for occupants.

A woman later identified as 67-year-old Leanora Marks was pulled from the basement of the home. She was unresponsive at the scene and transported to a local hospital in critical condition where she died.

It appears the fire started in the basement where the victim was found but the majority of the damage was to the home’s upper level. The blaze was brought under control in about 30 minutes. The home suffered significant smoke damage.

FHSU’s presidential tour of Kansas begins; acting president fills in

Acting president Dr. Jeff Briggs will fill in for FHSU president Dr. Tisa Mason during Kansas tour.

FHSU University Relations

A more than 30-year tradition at Fort Hays State University continued today when the university’s president’s tour of Kansas began with a news conference in Sheridan Hall on the FHSU campus.

However, this year’s tour features the acting president, Dr. Jeff Briggs. University President Tisa Mason is recovering from an illness that has significantly reduced her ability to speak.

“While I have been acting president in the past, I have never quite had the opportunity before me that this week provides,” said Dr. Briggs. “I can tell you, I am excited to have the opportunity to tell the Fort Hays State University story.”

Acting President Briggs will make stops to visit with media and alumni in 12 cities during the week of Nov. 12 to Nov. 15. Schedule changes reduced the tour by a day from the original schedule.

The annual tour has been a tradition at Fort Hays State since 1987, when it began as a tour of western Kansas by then president Dr. Edward H. Hammond, who went on to serve 27 years in that post.

“This tradition began more than 30 years ago, when a new president – some of you may remember Ed Hammond – decided that the story of Fort Hays State University, who it is, why it is here, what it is doing and where it is going, was not a secret to be kept in Hays America but needed to be told everywhere he could take it,” said Dr. Briggs.

“Now, 31 years later, a lot of people around the world know and love Fort Hays State University because the people of this university have helped thousands of students unlock their potential and find the path to their dreams,” he continued. “But that story still needs to be taken everywhere we can take it.”
That story, he said, “is about hard-working, determined people coming together to learn from each other and help each other into the future, and to reach their goals they have had to constantly find new ways of doing things, as hardships and challenges presented themselves.”

He cited several markers of success for the university, including an 18th consecutive record headcount 20th-day enrollment this fall of 15,523 students, 423 more than last year. The year the tour started, the university had a 20th-day enrollment of about 5,500.
“Of special importance,” he said, “this fall we are serving 7,848 Kansans, a 3.6-percent increase from last year and a 10-percent increase since 2008. We are meeting our mission as a state-supported regional institution.”

He also cited this fall’s Washington Monthly rankings of universities across the United States. The Monthly’s ratings focus on adult and part-time learners, measuring them in terms of accessibility and perseverance. The magazine mined data from thousands of schools and from the federal government.
By that measure, out of 1,124 four-year institutions that met their criteria, Fort Hays State is one of the top 10.

A key part of accessibility, he said, is affordability, and he highlighted a graphic in the current issue of the Kansas Leadership Center Journal, which compared rising costs at Kansas Regents institutions. Their data showed that for the 2018-2019 year, tuition and fees for 15 credit hours at Fort Hays State are only $24.46 higher than if they had only covered inflation since the 2007-2008 academic year.

He noted that the FHSU Foundation’s $100 million Journey campaign, supported by over 7,000 donors annually, and launched publicly at Homecoming 2016, has to date raised $68 million. The campaign is scheduled to end at Homecoming 2021.

The Pillars of the Journey Campaign are Student Scholarships, Support of Academics, Student Life and Athletics. Private donations to the campaign provided $6 million immediate financial support to FHSU last year, $2 million of which went to student scholarships.

“In addition to immediate support, many donors have endowed their gifts to provide support today, next year and in perpetuity,” said Dr. Briggs.

He went through a partial list other signs of success at Fort Hays State:

•        An expanding campus: two major student residence halls, Victor E. Village and Tiger Village opened this year; the Center for Applied Technology and Sculpture opened last year; and the art and design building will be ready for students next fall.
•        Full-time, doctorally prepared faculty teach freshmen.
•        The new Doctor of Nursing Practice program had its first graduates last spring.
•        The university’s intensive focus on undergraduate research.
•        Partnerships with community colleges around the state, making the transfer from associate programs to baccalaureate programs as smooth as possible.
•        A focus on service, as in the Hansen Internships through Career Services and free hearing screenings in rural areas though the Communication Sciences and Disorders program and its partnership with the Kansas Masons.

“These stories, and many more, are the kinds of things we will talk about around the state this coming week,” said Dr. Briggs. “They are part of the university’s story. But you – the faculty, staff, students, alumni and friends of this university – are the Fort Hays State University story. I am honored to get to pinch hit for President Mason and tell these stories.”

Richard Lee Lamp

Richard Lee Lamp

Phillipsburg native, Richard Lee Lamp, passed away Tuesday, October 30, 2018, at Swedish Medical Center in Englewood, CO, at the age of 58. He was born January 27, 1960 in Phillipsburg, KS, the son of Robert Lamp Sr. & Geraldine (Mennenga) Lamp.

Survivors include his brothers, Robert Lamp of Phillipsburg, KS; Rod Lamp of North Platte, NE; and Sister, Rhonda Lamp of Hoyt, KS.

Cremation was planned. A private memorial service will be held at a later date.

Friends may sign the book on Thursday, November 15, from 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. and Friday, November 16, from 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. at Olliff- Boeve Memorial Chapel in Phillipsburg, KS.

Online condolences to: www.olliffboeve.com. Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, Phillipsburg, is in charge of arrangements.

Middle school dance raises money for orphans in Africa, Haiti

Community businesses really stepped up for our local middle school students.

On October 27, almost 400 middle-schoolers piled into the Hays Recreation Center for the second annual Defend One Halloween Dance which is a night of games, free food, dancing, costume contests and prizes.

From costume contests and dancing to dodge ball and 9 square, they were hopping all night long!

Over 75 prizes were given away including wireless Beats headphones, Xbox One S, iPad mini, Beats pill speaker, cash, and much more. It was all provided by local business sponsors.

The event raised $2,423.00 for orphan care in Uganda, Africa, and Gonaives, Haiti.

Cornerstone Orthodontics looks forward to hosting this event for many years to come.

Thank you local businesses! What a great and supportive community we live in!

Check the Facebook page for pictures of the event.

– SUBMITTED –

Christian college students kidnapped, sexually assaulted

POINT LOOKOUT, Mo. (AP) – A convicted felon has been charged with abducting two Christian college students and forcing them to perform sex acts on each other at gunpoint after they violated curfew and were locked out of their southwest Missouri campus.

Hyslop -photo Taney Co.

49-year-old Robert Hyslop is jailed without bond on charges of kidnapping, sexual abuse and sodomy. No attorney is listed for him in online court record.

Charging documents say the College of the Ozarks students fell asleep in a commuter parking lot last month because the campus’ front gate was locked when they returned after curfew. The documents say Hyslop made the man and woman drive to a highway lookout where he forced them to perform sex acts. Hyslop also is accused of making the woman touch him sexually.

Ellis Co. Attorney part of KS Supreme Ct. task force on pretrial detention

Ellis Co. Attorney Tom Drees

OJA

TOPEKA—The Kansas Supreme Court has formed an ad hoc task force to examine pretrial detention practices in Kansas district courts and report its findings and recommendations to the court within 18 months.

The 15-member task force was created by a November 7 Supreme Court order signed by Chief Justice Lawton Nuss. Its membership includes judges, defense attorneys, prosecutors, and court services and community corrections officers. It will have its first meeting December 13 and 14 in Topeka.

The task force is charged with examining current pretrial detention practices for criminal defendants in Kansas district courts, as well as alternatives to pretrial detention used to ensure public safety and encourage an accused to appear for court proceedings.

The task force will also compare Kansas practices to effective pretrial detention practices and detention alternatives identified by other courts. This comparison could be used to develop best practices for Kansas district courts.

“Every day Kansas judges decide whether to detain criminal defendants and under what circumstances. These decisions are made amid a national discussion about alternatives to pretrial detention and the need to ensure no person is unnecessarily deprived of his or her liberty,” said Nuss. “This is the perfect time for Kansas to examine its pretrial detention practices to identify if and where improvements can be made.”

Judge Karen Arnold-Burger, chief judge of the Kansas Court of Appeals, who will serve as chair of the task force, agrees.

“We’ve seen a lot of change in pretrial detention practices across the nation the last few years. We have an opportunity to learn from other jurisdictions, what they have tried and how it has worked for them,” Arnold-Burger said. “We won’t know what is useful to us until we take a closer look at it, and that’s what this task force will do.”

The Supreme Court created the task force under authority granted to it by the Kansas Constitution to oversee all courts in Kansas.

Creation of the task force follows closely a report from the ad hoc committee on municipal courts fines, fees, and bonding practices that in September made its recommendations to the Kansas judicial administrator and the executive director of the League of Kansas Municipalities. Judge Brenda Stoss of the Salina Municipal Court chaired that ad hoc committee, and she has been appointed to serve on this task force.

The municipal court ad hoc committee recommended that areas in need of additional study included bail and pretrial detention practices.

Members of the task force are:

Nancy Dixon, judicial administrator, Kansas judicial branch, Topeka
District Judge Mary Mattivi, 3rd Judicial District, Topeka
District Judge Lori Bolton Fleming, 11th Judicial District, Pittsburg
District Judge Wendel Wurst, 25th Judicial District, Garden City
District Judge Jared Johnson, 28th Judicial District, Salina
District Magistrate Judge Keith Collett, 8th Judicial District, Abilene
Judge Brenda Stoss, Salina Municipal Court
Charles Branson, district attorney, Douglas County
Todd Thompson, county attorney, Leavenworth County
Tom Drees, county attorney, Ellis County
Sal Intagliata, defense attorney, Wichita
Justin Barrett, defense attorney, Colby
David Harger, defense attorney, McPherson
Robert Sullivan, corrections director, Johnson County
Anita Cash, chief court services officer, 29th Judicial District, Kansas City

More than 3″ of snowfall in Hays Sunday

Hays received 3.5″ of snow Sunday.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

The snow started early Sunday afternoon in Hays and ultimately dropped 3.5 inches, according to the official report from the K-State Agricultural Research Center south of town.

Sunday’s high temperature was 39 degrees, allowing for some melting of the snow which resulted in icy streets and parking lots as the overnight low dipped to 22 degrees.

The snowfall yielded 0.27 inches of moisture, with 0.45 inches of precipitation so far in November.

Year-to-date moisture in Hays is 34.89 inches, more than a foot above normal for the entire year. The average amount of annual precipitation for Hays is 23.46 inches.

(Courtesy KSU Ag Research Center, Hays)

Rose Marie Koerner

Rose Marie Koerner

Rose Marie Koerner, 74, Hays, died Saturday, November 10, 2018 at HaysMed.

She was born April 4, 1944 in Hays, the daughter of Joe C. and Catherine (Wasinger) Stecklein. On November 27, 1965 she was united in marriage to Melvin G. “Mel” Koerner in Hays. They celebrated over 51 years of marriage until his death on February 2, 2017. For 30 years she worked the third shift as a certified nursing aide at Via Christi Village, and she was member of Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church. Her hobbies included baking, crocheting, crafts, casino trips, playing bingo, and shopping trips to Walmart. She loved her dog, Teddy and spending time with her grandchildren.

Survivors include two daughters; Lisa M. Fose and husband Joel of Moundridge and Tamala LaPosa and husband John of Wichita, two brothers; Leroy Stecklein of Osawatomie and Ron Stecklein and wife Linda of Olathe, two sisters; Theresa Gottschalk of Hays and Charlene Weigel and husband Dennis of Gorham, four grandchildren; Trina, Ashley, Scott, and Heather Hupka, seven great-grandchildren; Evelyn White, Nathaniel Galle, Addilynn Gerrild, Lexi Gerrild, Tori Keller, Drake Leach, and Brooklynn Baumann, and numerous nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by her parents, her husband; Melvin, three brothers; Rich, Elmer, and Donnie Stecklein, and one sister; Dolores Dreher.

Mass of Christian Burial will be at 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 at Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, 1805 Vine Street, with Fr. Barry Brinkman officiating. Burial will follow in the St. Joseph Cemetery. Visitation will be from 4:00 p.m. until 8:00 on Monday and from 9:00 a.m. until 9:45 on Tuesday, all at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine Street. A rosary and vigil service will be at 6:30 p.m. on Monday at the funeral home.

Memorials are suggested to the family wishes, in care of the funeral home. Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com.

Wind energy agreement will provide 50 percent of electricity needs at K-State

MANHATTAN — Kansas State University is saving energy costs and becoming greener by using one of Kansas’ most abundant resources: wind. 

According to a media release, the new university agreement with Westar Energy will provide approximately 50 percent of the energy needs for the university’s main Manhattan campus from a wind farm in Nemaha County and save the university nearly $200,000 annually. 

The agreement is part of Westar Energy’s new Renewables Direct program, which provides large customers access to renewable energy at set long-term prices. The program involves the 300-megawatt Soldier Creek Wind Energy Center, which is a wind farm that will be built in Nemaha County and is estimated to be on line in 2020. Kansas State University is one of 14 Kansas organizations that will receive electricity from the wind farm.

“We are excited about this innovative approach to use renewable energy to help Kansas State University become more sustainable and save energy costs,” said Cindy Bontrager, the university’s vice president for administration and finance. “Sustainability planning is one of the key components of our K-State 2025 plan to become a top 50 public research university by 2025. As a public land-grant university, K-State has a role to address the sustainability challenges of our time and this agreement is a step in the right direction. Our facilities power plant utilities staff actively seeks ways for the university to save costs and I appreciate their initiative and hard work in getting that done.”

As part of a 20-year agreement, the wind farm will provide Kansas State University with 14 megawatts of power, which is approximately 50 percent of the current load of the university’s Manhattan campus, said Gary Weishaar, university manager of energy and controls. The anticipated savings for the university will be approximately $180,000 to $200,000 annually.

The savings will come from a reduction in the retail energy cost adjustment, also known as fuel factor costs, Weishaar said. Under the Renewables Direct program, the price of electricity provided from Soldier Creek Wind Energy Center will be fixed for 20 years at 1.8 cents per kilowatt-hour and replaces the fuel factor cost, which is currently 2.3 cents per kilowatt-hour. The university’s average annual consumption for the Manhattan campus for the last five years has been 113 million kilowatt-hours per year. The university also will receive renewable energy credits associated with the agreement.

“We are constantly evaluating the potential of providing renewable energy for the university,” Weishaar said. “We feel this program is a good way to not only positively affect K-State financially, but to also take advantage of one of our most abundant natural resources.”

Westar Energy’s Renewables Direct program is designed to provide large customers a path toward their sustainability goals with Kansas’ abundant, affordable renewable energy. Participating customers are able to claim a portion of the energy generated by the wind farm as their own, retain all of the renewable attributes and lock in a portion of their electricity prices for 20 years. The program is structured to add projects in the future to keep up with the demand for renewable sources.

“We applaud K-State’s commitment to sustainable energy solutions,” said Chuck Caisley, senior vice president, public affairs and marketing and chief customer officer, Westar Energy. “Renewables Direct provides cost-effective access to Kansas’ excellent wind energy resources. We appreciate K-State’s role in making the introduction of Westar’s new program a success.”

Winners: Chicken Soup for the Soul book “The Best Advice I Ever Heard” with 99 KZ Country

We are giving away the Chicken Soup for the Soul book “The Best Advice I Ever Heard.”

Listen during a KZ Country Morning with Theresa Trapp Monday, November 12-Friday, November 16, 2018 for chances to call 785-628-2995 and win.

No age requirement to win.

Winners will need to pick up their books at the KZ Country Studio, 2300 Hall, Hays, KS within 30 days of winning.

People aren’t shy about giving advice. Whatever the advice – romantic, parental, financial, nutritional, occupational – you’ve heard it all.  But what’s the best advice you ever heard? The contributors to this book have answered that question 101 different ways. This collection of personal tips, traditional adages, and clever observations covers such diverse topics as life, love, success, forgiveness, friendship, character, health, and many more.

Has your whole outlook ever been changed by a few choice words? Did you change your life as a result of one piece of advice? In Chicken Soup for the Soul: The Best Advice I Ever Heard, 101 people share the words that changed everything for them, and how their lives improved as a result. This combination Christmas and New Year New You book provides the gift of advice—relatable for readers of all ages from all walks of life—with tips on such diverse topics as love, fitness, forgiveness, friendship, character, self-discipline, and health.

Congratulations Linda Palmberg, Mikayla Kakar, Terry Hagaman, Sammie Werner and Judy Werth!

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

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