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            Planning a healthy new year A 
            national New Year's message from the Departments ofAgriculture, Education, and Health and Human Services
 
            [DEC. 
            31, 2002]  
            On behalf of all of the 
            families of the dedicated employees at the Departments of 
            Agriculture, Education, and Health and Human Services, we want to 
            take this opportunity to wish you and all Americans a happy and 
            healthy new year. We especially want to invite you, along with our 
            nation's children, youths, families, educators, health practitioners 
            and faith-based leaders, to make healthy New Year’s resolutions 
            along with us.  |  
            | 
            The beginning of a new year is a 
            traditional time when we make promises anew to ourselves, our 
            families and especially our children. Preparing to return to school 
            and work from a busy winter break, we often pledge to do something a 
            bit healthier -- spend more time with our children and families, 
            read more for ourselves and to our children, finish homework on 
            time, eat more sensibly, exercise more, get more rest, procrastinate 
            less, be in touch with family and friends more often. 
            As we reflect upon 2002, many of us 
            think about what went right over the year, especially for our 
            children, and in what areas we want to improve. In looking forward 
            to 2003, New Year's Day will be a time to enjoy festivities, 
            football, food and family fun. It is also a time when we want to 
            challenge ourselves to keep New Year’s resolutions that will help 
            make our lives and our children's futures brighter -- resolutions 
            that will help our children to learn, to grow and to develop their 
            full potential.  
            In June, President Bush unveiled his 
            Healthier U.S. initiative (www.healthierus.gov), 
            a common-sense approach to healthy living, designed to raise 
            awareness about the steps individuals can take to improve their 
            overall health and wellness, including healthy eating. The 
            initiative has identified four keys to a healthier America: 
             [to top of second column in this
            article]
             | 
 
            A good deal of the work we perform at 
            our three departments focuses on achieving the president's goals. We 
            do research to learn more about the benefits of a healthy lifestyle, 
            educate families and children on what we have identified as healthy 
            behaviors, and help meet the nutritional needs of our citizens -- 
            particularly our young people, who will be tomorrow's leaders. 
            We are a nation of abundance and 
            opportunity; we have advantages no other nation or generation has 
            enjoyed. A healthy lifestyle can improve our readiness to learn, 
            increase our energy to perform day-to-day tasks, promote well-being, 
            and prevent disease and disability. All of us can take simple, 
            effective steps to improve our health:  
            As we look to the new year, we want to 
            encourage our children and young people -- in fact all Americans -- 
            to join us in promoting a healthier lifestyle. We encourage 
            opportunities to engage in healthful eating, exercise and playing 
            together with our children. Let us enjoy the fruits of our harvest, 
            albeit in moderation.  We wish you 
            a happy and healthy 2003.  
            [News release] |  
          | 
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          | 
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            | 
            New 
            birth report showsmore moms get prenatal care
 
            [DEC. 
            27, 2002]  
            A new U.S. Department of 
            Health and Human Services report, released Dec. 18, shows a 
            significant increase in the number of women receiving prenatal care 
            -- especially among Hispanic and black women. |  
            | 
            The report shows that 83 percent of 
            women received timely (in the first trimester) prenatal care in 
            2001, up from 76 percent in 1990. In addition, only 1 percent of 
            women did not receive any prenatal care in 2001. During this period, 
            timely prenatal care increased among all race and ethnic groups but 
            was particularly evident among Hispanic and black women.  
            "We're continuing to make excellent 
            progress in our efforts to have more women, particularly minority 
            women, receive early prenatal care," HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson 
            said. "Timely prenatal care is one of the best ways to ensure the 
            health of mothers and their infants, and we will continue working to 
            expand access to this essential care for all Americans." 
            The report, "Births: Final Data for 
            2001," prepared by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 
            found that the percentage of Hispanic women who did not receive any 
            prenatal care fell from 4.0 percent to 1.6 percent between 1990 and 
            2001, and the percentage of non-Hispanic black women who did not 
            receive any prenatal care fell from 4.7 percent to 2.3 percent 
            during the same time period. 
            "Good prenatal care protects a women's 
            health not only during pregnancy but encourages good health habits 
            -- such as not smoking -- which have lifelong health benefits," CDC 
            Director Dr. Julie Gerberding said.  
            The report, based on birth certificates 
            filed in state vital statistics offices and reported to CDC, tracks 
            many other important indicators of maternal and infant health and 
            contains other positive findings. Cigarette smoking during pregnancy 
            continued to decline, to 12 percent in 2001, compared with 20 
            percent in 1989, when smoking was first reported on the birth 
            certificate. 
            In 2001 the teen birth rate declined 
            for the 10th consecutive year, as first reported in preliminary data 
            released earlier this year. Over the past decade, the decline has 
            been particularly significant for young teens, those 15-17 years of 
            age, with the birth rate down by more than a third. For young black 
            teens, the birth rate declined by nearly half.   [to top of second column in this
            article]
             | 
             
            The report also found that the 
            percentage of infants born prematurely (at less than 37 completed 
            weeks of gestation) rose to nearly 12 percent (11.9), its highest 
            level in at least two decades. The rate of low birth weight climbed 
            to 7.7 percent in 2001, up 13 percent from the mid-1980s. Some of 
            the increase in low birth weight and preterm birth can be attributed 
            to the rise in multiple births experienced over the past decade. 
            Changes in obstetrical practice, such as greater reliance on induced 
            labor and other efforts to safely manage delivery, may also be 
            playing a role.  
            Other significant findings from the 
            report include: 
            --There were 4,025,933 babies born in 
            2001, 1 percent fewer than the year before. The birth rate declined 
            from 14.7 to 14.5 births per 1,000 population from 2000 to 2001.
             
            --The twin birth rate rose in 2001. For 
            the first time, twin births exceeded 3 percent of all births in the 
            United States. Triplets and other higher-order multiple births rose 
            3 percent between 2000 and 2001. 
            --Births to unmarried women accounted 
            for 33.5 percent of all births in 2001. This percent has been 
            inching up over time as married women are having fewer children and 
            the number of unmarried women grows. The number of births to 
            unmarried mothers increased to a record high of more than 1.3 
            million in 2001, although the birth rate among unmarried women of 
            childbearing age (15-44) actually declined slightly between 2000 and 
            2001, from 45.2 per 1,000 in 2000 to 45.0 in 2001.  
            --The proportion of births with induced 
            labor has more than doubled since 1989. More than one in five births 
            were induced in 2001. 
            --In 2001 Cesarean deliveries increased 
            for the fifth consecutive year, to the highest level reported since 
            at least 1989. The primary cesarean rate jumped 5 percent, and the 
            rate of vaginal birth after previous cesarean delivery fell 20 
            percent.  The report, 
            "Births: Final Data for 2001," can be found on CDC's National Center 
            for Health Statistics website at 
            www.cdc.gov/nchs. 
            [U.S. 
            Department of Health andHuman Services news release]
 |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
            Research uncovers nutritionalboost for patients on IVs
 
            [DEC. 
            26, 2002]  
            It's been more than eight 
            years since Helen (not her real name) underwent two life-altering 
            traumas in the brief span of two weeks. First, the vessels to her 
            small intestine became blocked, much the way that vessels become 
            obstructed in a heart attack. In Helen's case, she experienced what 
            amounted to a "small intestine attack." |  
            | 
            As a result, doctors had to remove her 
            small intestine, forcing her to receive all of her nutrition for the 
            rest of her life through intravenous feeding. What's worse, two 
            weeks after Helen lost her small intestine, the vessels to one of 
            her arms became blocked, and doctors had to remove her arm at the 
            shoulder. 
            Kelly Tappenden, U of I assistant 
            professor of nutrition, is doing work that might have a significant 
            impact on people such as Helen -- or anyone who must receive IV 
            feeding, either for short periods or throughout life. In hospital 
            stays, the average length of time that patients receive intravenous 
            feeding is seven days. But after three to five days, the small 
            intestine begins to atrophy because of lack of use. 
            What Tappenden and other researchers 
            have discovered is that short-chain fatty acids from dietary fiber 
            can revive an atrophying gut. In fact, the short-chain fatty acids 
            can actually cause the small intestine to grow in size, she said. 
            More people than you might expect find 
            themselves in situations similar to Helen's, Tappenden said. For 
            whatever reason, they have lost more than 50 percent of their small 
            intestine, as a result experiencing "short bowel syndrome." Like 
            Helen, they receive all of their nutrition, seven days a week, 
            through a scientifically assembled mixture delivered intravenously. 
            The technical name: total parenteral nutrition, or TPN. 
            In addition to adults who suffer severe 
            trauma to the intestine, a key population of those with short bowel 
            syndrome is premature infants. One of the most common surgeries 
            performed on premature babies is the removal of a portion of the 
            small intestine because of "necrotizing enterocolitis." 
            According to Tappenden, the slang for 
            this disease is "dead gut," because the premature infant's small 
            intestine is indeed dying. To save the child's life, much of the 
            intestine is removed, and the child ends up receiving TPN for life.   [to top of second column in this
            article]
             | 
 
            Prior to the late 1960s, when TPN was 
            first developed, these patients would have starved to death. 
            In research on piglets with short bowel 
            syndrome, Tappenden found that if a TPN mixture includes short-chain 
            fatty acids, it can begin to increase the size of the small 
            intestine within 24 hours. In laboratory models, she has found that 
            the gut can increase in size by 30 to 50 percent -- although the 
            increase wouldn't be quite as dramatic in human patients. 
            In addition to boosting the small 
            intestine's size, short-chain fatty acids can increase its function 
            -- the ability to transport nutrients through the lining and to the 
            rest of the body. 
            Tappenden's research has documented 
            this increase in nutrient transport, specifically with glucose and 
            glutamine. She says the dramatic improvement in nutrient transport, 
            thanks to fiber, may offer help to the elderly. Of people over age 
            65, roughly 50 percent suffer from inadequate absorption of 
            nutrients. 
            At one time, common knowledge said that 
            fiber did little more than provide bulk to the diet, creating the 
            sensation of being full after a meal. But this and other research 
            shows that fiber can do so much more. 
            As for Helen, Tappenden met this 
            remarkable Copenhagen woman during a visit to Denmark in 2000, and 
            she found that Helen was coping with courage, grace and her sense of 
            humor intact. 
            "She had gone through horrendous 
            trauma, but I was impressed with her wonderful outlook," Tappenden 
            noted. "She said the loss of her small intestine and arm certainly 
            changed her life, but she was still able to do everything she wants. 
            She said the biggest problem is that she likes to swim, but with one 
            arm she just keeps swimming in circles." Asked 
            Tappenden: "How many people could cope with everything she has gone 
            through?" [U 
            of I press 
            release] |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
            Home together for 
            another Christmas 
            [DEC. 
            23, 2002]  
            Though they're both in 
            wheelchairs, Ted and Mary Smith will be at home for Christmas.
             |  
            | 
            Together they get their own breakfast. 
            Mary usually makes the coffee, sometimes getting it ready the night 
            before. Ted, who still likes to putter in his garage workshop, has 
            just put up a new electric can opener at a height that makes it 
            easier for Mary to open coffee cans. Mary usually does the dishes. 
            After breakfast, Mary helps Ted dress 
            and get ready for the day, which can sometimes be a challenge. But 
            Mary is an experienced caregiver; besides raising her two daughters, 
            she took care of her mother, who died of cancer when Mary was 18, 
            and helped raise a younger brother. 
              
             [Photos by Joan Crabb]
 [Home Health Service nurse Leslie Brummett 
            talks with Mary Smith about ways she can help her husband, Ted, 
            remain in his Mayfair home.]
 
            At noon on weekdays Ted gets Meals on 
            Wheels, but Mary, who says she doesn't have much appetite, prefers 
            to fix her own lunch. For supper there may be leftovers or something 
            one of their two daughters brings in. The daughters, Lana Goldhammer 
            and Linda Klockenga, both work full time but always bring food on 
            weekends. Son-in-law Ron Goldhammer, now retired, takes care of the 
            lawn and does the grocery shopping. 
            Even though he's wheelchair-bound, Ted 
            hasn't given up all his former hobbies. He raises African violets, 
            using special watering pots, and has just started half a dozen new 
            plants. He hasn't done any oil paintings lately because the oils are 
            "too messy, and can stain things," but he had been making cardinal 
            feeders, balanced so only the weight of that particular bird will 
            open the port and allow the bird to feed. Two of the feeders hang 
            outside the kitchen window. 
            Mary says her hobby is taking care of 
            Ted. Ted says another of her hobbies is talking on the phone, and 
            she smiles and acknowledges that. Her daughters call every day to 
            check on their parents. 
            Both love sports and watch many games 
            on television. They especially like to watch Illini basketball games 
            to keep track of former Lincoln Railer Brian Cook. 
            "That's why we have cable," Mary says. 
            Living at home makes it much easier for 
            the Smiths to remain active in family affairs. Ted boasts that this 
            year they had two Thanksgivings, one on the designated day and the 
            other on Saturday, because the grandchildren couldn't all make it on 
            the same day. 
            They will see members of both 
            daughters' families at Christmas, Linda's on Christmas Eve and 
            Lana's on Christmas Day. Ted says he's already finished his 
            "Christmas shopping," writing checks for his family of five 
            grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. 
            What makes it possible for this senior 
            couple, one already 90, the other approaching that birthday, to 
            remain in the Mayfair home where they have lived for the last 33 
            years? 
            The answer is a lot of resourcefulness, 
            a positive attitude, a supportive family and the help they get from 
            the Logan County Health Department. 
            "I couldn't be here in my own home if 
            it wasn't for Leslie and Teresa, the girl that comes to bathe me," 
            Ted says.  
            Leslie Brummett, their case manager, 
            sees that Ted gets the skilled nursing care he needs. Teresa Newlun, 
            their home health aide, comes three times a week to help Ted with 
            personal care. 
            "Without them, we would be in a nursing 
            home," says Mary. 
            Leslie started working with Ted 3½ 
            years ago, when he could still walk a little. Now he is completely 
            paralyzed from the waist down, for reasons his doctors do not fully 
            understand. However, Ted has kept his upper-body strength so he can 
            easily propel himself around the house in a regular wheelchair, and 
            he still does some handyman chores. 
            Mary has severe arthritis and has lost 
            some of the strength and flexibility in her hands, so she uses a 
            motorized wheelchair to get around their comfortable home. She 
            doesn't do as much cooking as she used to because she's afraid of 
            dropping heavy pans and dishes. She can stand when necessary, as 
            long as she has some support. 
            Because Ted must be able to move from 
            his wheelchair to his bed or his recliner, where he often sleeps, 
            and because Mary no longer has the strength to help lift him, he's 
            devised a custom "slide board" so he can move himself. It's made of 
            polished maple, with a handhold cut in one end. Ted can wheel 
            himself up to his bed or recliner and, using his board, move himself 
            from one place to another.   
             [Ted 
            demonstrates the “slide board” he made to help him get from his 
            wheelchair to his recliner or his bed.]
 [to top of second column in this
            article]
             | 
 
            In spite of their resourcefulness, 
            however, the Smiths couldn't stay in their home if Ted didn't have 
            skilled nursing care. Through the Home Health Care Services offered 
            by the Logan County Health Department, Ted gets that care from 
            Leslie, a registered nurse who also has a bachelor's degree in 
            nursing. Ordinarily Leslie visits Ted every 14 days, but when 
            medically necessary she can see him oftener. Right now she's coming 
            to his home three days a week to keep him from developing pressure 
            ulcers. Pressure sores from skin breakdown is a common problem for 
            immobile patients.  
            Home Health Services, a Medicare-funded 
            program, allows Leslie to care for Ted at home and also funds his 
            personal care from Teresa, a certified nurse's aide. Through another 
            program, Caregiver Education, Leslie works with Mary to teach her 
            how to care for Ted's medical needs, in particular, just now, his 
            skin care. The education program is funded by Project LIFE (Local 
            Involvement for the Elderly), through the regional Area Agency on 
            Aging, part of the Illinois Department on Aging.  
            Project LIFE also funds In-Home 
            Respite, a new program Mary can use if she decides she needs it. It 
            provides a home health aide to come in and relieve the caregiver, 
            who can then leave to do necessary errands or simply have some free 
            time to care for his or her own needs. 
            The Caregiver Education program and the 
            In-Home Respite program were added to the Health Department's 
            services this spring. In spite of the funding cuts in health 
            programs in recent years, the Health Department still has room for 
            more clients in all of these programs, according to finance director 
            Karen Booher. 
            The Smiths regard Leslie as "one of the 
            family." She, in turn, describes them as "an amazing couple," 
            especially because they do so much to help each other.  
            Being able to stay at home is often 
            best for the patient, and it saves money for everyone: the state and 
            federal governments and the patients and their families. Leslie and 
            Betty Larson, the Health Department's nursing supervisor, want 
            people to know there are programs available through the Logan County 
            Health Department to help both the patient and the caregiver. If the 
            Health Department can't help with a particular problem, they can 
            often refer a family to another agency that can. 
              
            
             [Brummett 
            and Larson talk over a Home Health case.]
 
            Both the Smiths like to talk about the 
            40-plus years they've spent in Lincoln. Ted, whose real name is 
            Louis, came to Lincoln Developmental Center in 1960 to be the chief 
            engineer. He retired in 1980. Mary worked for Myers Brothers 
            Department Store, then Witzigs. At Myers, she managed the Carriage 
            Shop for teenagers; at Witzigs she worked in sportswear 
            After they retired they did a lot of 
            traveling. "We've been in every state but three. We haven't been in 
            Alaska, Connecticut or Maine. We even went to Hawaii," Ted says. 
            Many of his oil paintings depict scenes from their travels, like the 
            Colorado mountain scene above the sofa. 
            Their last trip was to Eastern Illinois 
            at Charleston to see granddaughter Lindsay Klockenga play softball. 
            One big regret is that they can't go to Florida to see the softball 
            and volleyball teams Lindsay is coaching at a Deltona high school. 
            Ted's advice to younger people is to 
            take time to smell the roses. "Do what you want to do. Go where you 
            want to go when you can," he says. 
            He's glad he and Mary did, because now 
            they can enjoy looking back at the places they've been and the 
            things they've done. 
            "If it wasn't for that, we wouldn't 
            have much to talk about," Mary jokes. 
            They love to visit, but they don't have 
            as much company as they would like. Many of their old friends are 
            gone, and many of the neighbors they once enjoyed visiting with have 
            moved. 
            The Health Department staff members 
            have become their friends, and the Smiths look forward to their 
            visits. Leslie looks forward to them, too, and is proud that she can 
            help this couple live where they are happiest. 
            The Smiths have never lost their zest 
            for life or their sense of humor. As her visitors leave, Mary says, 
            "Come on over anytime. We're always here." They are 
            hoping -- and planning -- to be at home next October to celebrate 
            their 65th wedding anniversary. "It won't be our fault if 
            we're not," Ted says. Both will tell you that they wouldn't still be 
            there without the help they get from the Logan County Health 
            Department. 
            [Joan Crabb] |  
          | 
 |  
            | Health
            Matters A
            monthly feature from   Logan County Health Department
             |  
            | 
            How to quit smoking 
            [DEC. 
            2, 2002]  
            As the New Year approaches, 
            we all begin to make resolutions for a healthy and happy New Year. 
            If you smoke, you may be contemplating giving up cigarettes as your 
            New Year's resolution. There is nothing easy about giving up 
            cigarettes. But as hard as quitting may be, the results are well 
            worth it. In the first year after stopping smoking, the risk of 
            heart disease and lung disease drops sharply. Quitting will also 
            save you money. With the average cost of a pack of cigarettes 
            reaching $4.25, a pack-a-day smoker can save $1,400 a year by not 
            smoking cigarettes.  |  
            | 
            Take time to think about other benefits 
            of being an ex-smoker. This is an important first step in kicking 
            the smoking habit — figuring out for yourself what you have to gain. 
            And don't just switch to smokeless tobacco — the dangers and the 
            addiction are just as damaging as with cigarettes. 
            Once you decide to stop smoking, a few 
            preparations are in order. Set a target date for quitting. Don't 
            choose a time when you know you will be under a lot of stress. To 
            help you stick to your quit date, write the date on your calendar, 
            find another friend or family member to give you special support in 
            your efforts to quit or another smoker to quit with you, and make a 
            list of how you'll reward yourself for becoming an ex-smoker. 
            On the evening before your quit day, 
            throw away all cigarettes, matches and lighters and give away your 
            ashtrays. Plan some special activities for the next day to keep you 
            busy. Ask family members and friends not to smoke in front of you. 
            Your goal is to get through that first important day smoke-free.
             
            To quit successfully, you need to know 
            your personal smoking "triggers." These are the situations and 
            feelings that typically bring on the urge to light up. Especially 
            during the first weeks after quitting, try to avoid as many triggers 
            as you can.   [to top of second column in this
            article]
             | 
             
            Replace "triggers" with new activities 
            that you don't associate with smoking. For example, if you always 
            had a cigarette with a cup of coffee, switch to tea for awhile. 
            Keep busy. Get involved in projects 
            that require you to use your hands. When you feel the need to put 
            something in your mouth, have low-calorie snacks on hand. 
            Know what to expect. You may experience 
            some temporary withdrawal symptoms. It is important to know that 
            these are signs that your body is recovering from smoking and 
            symptoms will end. 
            Call the Illinois Tobacco Quitline 1 
            (866) QUIT-YES — 1 (866) 784-8937 — for help. 
            If you "slip," don't worry. It doesn't 
            mean that you've become a smoker again. Most smokers "slip" three to 
            five times before they quit for good. Get back on the nonsmoker 
            track: (1) Don't get discouraged. Keep thinking of yourself as a 
            nonsmoker because you are one. (2) Learn from experience. What was 
            the trigger that made you light up? (3) Take charge. Make a list of 
            things you will do the next time you are in that particular 
            situation. Reread your list of all the reasons you want to quit.
             You're on 
            your way! [Logan 
            County Health Department] |  
          | 
 |  
            | Red
            Cross
             |  
            | January 
            health and safety classes offeredthrough American Red Cross in Lincoln
 
            [DEC. 
            24, 2002]  
            SPRINGFIELD --- The Illinois 
            Capital Area Chapter of the American Red Cross is announcing their 
            lifesaving health and safety classes being offered in January. All 
            classes listed below will be conducted at the Logan County office, 
            125 S. Kickapoo in Lincoln. |  
            | 
            Infant and child CPR -- Learn 
            the skills necessary to perform CPR on an infant and child. This is 
            an excellent class for new or expectant parents. Certification is 
            good for one year. The class is $25 and will be offered Jan. 15 from 
            5:30 to 9:30 p.m. 
            Adult CPR/AED -- Learn the 
            skills necessary to perform CPR on an adult, and learn how to use an 
            automated external defibrillator. Certification is good for one 
            year. The cost is $25, and the class meets Jan. 13 from 5:30 to 9:30 
            p.m. 
            First aid -- Learn basic first 
            aid skills for controlling bleeding, immobilizing and treating 
            sudden illness, and dealing with emergencies related to hot and 
            cold. Certification is good for three years. The cost is $20, and 
            the class meets Jan. 14 from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. 
             “Our health and safety classes are 
            about helping families stay safe,” says Mary Ogle, chief executive 
            officer of the American Red Cross Illinois Capital Area Chapter. “We 
            have a long-term goal of making sure that at least one member of 
            every household in central Illinois is trained in how to save a 
            life.”  
            To register or for more information 
            call (217) 732-2134 or register online at 
            
            www.il-redcross.org.     [to top of second column in this
            article]
             | 
             
            
            All American Red Cross disaster assistance is provided at no cost, 
            made possible by voluntary donations of time and money from the 
            American people. The Red Cross also supplies nearly half of the 
            nation's lifesaving blood. This, too, is made possible by generous 
            voluntary donations. 
            
            To help the victims of disaster, you may make a secure
            
            online credit card donation at 
            
            
            www.il-redcross.org or call
            
            1 (800) HELP NOW -- 1 (800) 435-7669 -- or, for Spanish, 1 (800) 
            257-7575. Or you may
            
            send your donation to your
            
            local Red Cross or to the American Red Cross, 
            
            P.O. Box 37243, Washington, D.C. 20013. 
            
            To donate blood, please call
            
            1 (800) GIVE-LIFE -- 1 (800) 448-3543).  
            [Provided by Heather Adams, coordinator of 
            emergency services and education, Illinois Capital Area Chapter, 
            American Red Cross] |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
              
              West Nile Virus |  
            | 
            West Nile virus links |  
            | LDN articles Federal websites | State websites |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
              Honors
              & Awards |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
              Announcements
               |  
            | 
              American Red Cross January blood drives |  
            | 
            [JAN. 
            7, 2003]  
            The Lincoln Kiwanis will 
            sponsor two blood drives at the Lincoln Sports Complex in January. 
            On Wednesday, Jan. 8, the hours for the blood drive will be noon to 
            6 p.m., and on Wednesday, Jan. 15, the hours will be noon to 5 p.m. 
            There will also be two blood drives 
            sponsored by local churches. On Wednesday, January 22, Mount Pulaski 
            Christian Church will have a blood drive from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. On 
            Wednesday, Jan. 29, Atlanta Christian Church will have a drive from 
            noon to 6 p.m. The 
            following blood donors reached milestones recently: Kurt Hullinger, 
            one gallon; Tamera Banister, two gallons; Anne Conrady, three 
            gallons; Lyndol Kingsley, five gallons; and Bob Gephart, eight 
            gallons. 
            [Provided by Katie Schlichter,Illinois Capital Area Chapter,
 American Red Cross]
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 |  
            | Mobile
          health unit scheduleThe
          Rural Health Partnership has announced the schedule for its mobile
          health unit for 2002. 
            
            
              
                |  | Morning:
                  9-11 a.m. |     | Afternoon:
                  1-3:30 p.m. |  
                | Monday | 1st and 3rd | Hartsburg | 1st and 3rd | Emden |  
                |  | 2nd and 4th | San Jose | 2nd and 4th | Greenview |  
                | Tuesday | Weekly | Chestnut | Weekly | Mount Pulaski |  
                | Wednesday | Weekly | New Holland | Weekly | Middletown |  
                | Thursday | 1st and 3rd | Elkhart | Weekly | Atlanta |  
                |  | 2nd and 4th | Friendship
                  Manor-Lincoln |  |  |  
                | Friday | 1st, 2nd,
                  4th | Village Hall-Latham | 1st | Beason |  
                |  |  |  | 2nd and 4th | Broadwell |  
                |  | 3rd | Maintenance/ special
                  events | 3rd | Maintenance/special events
 |  The
          mobile health unit does not operate on the following dates for
          holidays
          during 2002:  Jan. 21 (Martin Luther King Jr. Day), Feb. 18 (Presidents' Day),
          March 29 (Good
          Friday), May 27 (Memorial Day), July 4 (Independence Day), Sept. 2 (Labor Day), Oct.
          14 (Columbus Day), Nov. 11 (Veterans Day), Nov. 28-29
          (Thanksgiving break) and Dec. 24-25 (Christmas break). For more
          information on the mobile health unit schedule and services, contact
          Dayle Eldredge at (217) 732-2161, Ext. 409. |  
            | 
 |  
            | Community
          resource list This
          family resource list to save and use is provided by the Healthy
          Communities Partnership and the Healthy
          Families Task Force, 732-2161, Ext. 409.      
             
            
              | Agency | Phone number | Address |  
              | Lincoln
                agencies |  
              | 911 | 911 (emergency)732-3911 (office -- non-emergency)
 | 911 Pekin St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Abraham Lincoln
                Memorial Hospital
 | 732-2161 | 315 Eighth St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | American Red Crosswww.il-redcross.org
 | 732-2134 or 1 (800) 412-0100
 | 125 S. KickapooLincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Catholic Social
                Serviceswww.cdop.org
 | 732-3771 | 310 S. LoganLincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Lincoln/Logan County Chamberof Commerce
 www.lincolnillinois.com
 | 735-2385 | 303 S. Kickapoo St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Community Action (CIEDC) | 732-2159 | 1800 Fifth St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Crisis Pregnancy Center/Living Alternatives
 | 735-4838 | 408 A Pulaski St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | DCFS (Department of
                Children& Family Services)
 | 735-4402 or 1 (800) 252-2873
 (crisis hotline)
 | 1120 Keokuk St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Heartland Community
                College- GED program
 | 735-1731 | 620 Broadway St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Housing Authority | 732-7776
 | 1028 N. College St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Illinois Breast &
                Cervical Cancer Program (IBCCP)www.logancountyhealth.org
 | 735-2317 or 1 (800) 269-4019
 | 109 Third St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | 
            Illinois Employment and Training Center (replaces JTPA office) | 735-5441 | 120
            S. McLean St., Suite BFarm
            Bureau Building
 Lincoln,
            IL 62656
 |  
              | Lincoln Area YMCA | 735-3915 | 319 W. Kickapoo St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Lincoln/Logan Food
                Pantry | 732-2204 | P.O. Box 773Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Lincoln Parents'
                Center | 735-4192 | 100 S. MapleLincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Lincoln Park District | 732-8770 | 1400 Primm Rd.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Logan County Department
                of Human Services (Public Aid)www.state.il.us/agency/dhs
 | 735-2306 | 1500 Fourth St.P.O.
                Box 310
 Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Logan County Health
                Departmentwww.logancountyhealth.org
 | 735-2317 | 109 Third St.P.O. Box
                508
 Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Logan-Mason Mental
                Health | 735-2272 or732-3600
                (crisis line)
 | 304 Eighth St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Logan-Mason
                Rehabilitation Center | 735-1413 | 760 S. Postville DriveLincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | The Oasis(Senior Citizens
                of Logan County)
 | 732-6132 | 501 Pulaski St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Project READ | 735-1731 | 620 Broadway St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Salvation Army | 732-7890 | 1501 N. KickapooLincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Senior Services of
                Central Illinois | 732-6213 or 1 (800) 252-8966
 (crisis line)
 | 109 Third St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | U. of I. Extension
                Servicewww.ag.uiuc.edu
 | 732-8289 | 980 N. Postville DriveLincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              | Springfield
                agencies |  
              | Department of Agingwww.state.il.us/aging
 | 785-3356 | 421 E. Capitol, #100Springfield, IL 62701-1789
 |  
              | American Cancer Societywww.cancer.org
 | 546-7586(24 hour)
 | 1305 Wabash, Suite JSpringfield, IL 62704
 |  
              | Community Child Care
                Connectionwww.childcaresolutions.org
 | (217) 525-2805 or1 (800) 676-2805
 | 1004 N. Milton Ave.Springfield, IL 62702-4430
 |  
              | Hospice Care of
                Illinois | 1 (800) 342-4862(24 hour) or
 732-2161, Ext. 444
 | 720 N. BondSpringfield, IL 62702
 |  
              | Illinois Department of
                Public Healthwww.idph.state.il.us
 | (217) 782-4977 | 535 W. JeffersonSpringfield, IL 62761
 |  
              | Legal Assistance
                Foundation | (217) 753-3300 or1 (800) 252-8629
 | 730 E. Vine St., Suite
                214Springfield, IL 62703
 |  
              | Sojourn Shelter &
                Services Inc.http://www.sojournshelter.org/
 | 732-8988 or1 (866) HELP4DV
 (24-hour hotline)
 | 1800 Westchester Blvd.Springfield, IL 62704
 |  
              | U. of I. Division of
                Specialized Care for Childrenwww.uic.edu
 | 524-2000 or 1 (800) 946-8468
 | 421 South Grand Ave.
                WestSecond Floor
 Springfield, IL 62704
 |  
              | Logan County
                libraries |  
              |  Atlanta Library  | (217) 648-2112 | 100 Race St.Atlanta, IL 61723
 |  
              |  Elkhart Library | (217) 947-2313 | 121 E. BohanElkhart, IL 62634
 |  
              |  Lincoln Public Librarywww.lincolnpubliclibrary.org
 | 732-8878 | 725 Pekin St.Lincoln, IL 62656
 |  
              |  Mount Pulaski Library | 792-5919 | 320 N. WashingtonMount Pulaski, IL 62548
 |  |  
            | (updated 
              2-15-02) |  
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