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            Health Matters 
            A  feature from   
            Logan County Health Department
             |  
            | Health 
            officials advise mosquito control and personal protection 
            [MAY 
            19, 2003]  
            As you know, mosquito 
            season is upon us again. Last year, West Nile virus, which can be 
            transmitted by mosquitoes, was prevalent in Illinois. Although we 
            don't know what 2003 will bring, it is always best to be prepared. |  
            | 
            First of all, no amount of larvaciding 
            or adult mosquito fogging will kill all mosquito larva or adult 
            mosquitoes. It can have a tremendous impact, but it is only one way 
            to help eliminate the mosquito population. Each person must do his 
            or her part. Since mosquitoes need only a small amount of water for 
            breeding, look to your own back yard. 
            *Remove or empty water in old tires, 
            tin cans, buckets, drums, flower pots or bird baths 
            *Empty plastic wading pools at least 
            once a week and store indoors when not in use. Also, swimming pools 
            that are not used should be covered or drained during the mosquito 
            season. 
            *Change the water in bird baths and 
            plant pots at least once a week. 
            *Level the ground around your house so 
            water can drain away and not collect in low-lying areas. 
            *If you have an ornamental water 
            garden, stock it with mosquito-eating fish such as minnows, 
            "mosquito fish" or goldfish. They eat mosquito larva. 
            *Keep weeds and tall grass cut short; 
            adult mosquitoes look for these shady places to rest during the hot 
            daylight hours. 
            *Small impoundments of water may be 
            treated with "Bti," a bacterial insecticide. Many hardware stores 
            carry doughnut-shaped Bti briquets (Mosquito Dunks) for this 
            purpose. 
              [to top of second column in 
            this article] | 
       
            Since we will not eradicate the 
            mosquito, we must also be responsible about personal protection. You 
            can protect yourself by: 
            *Avoiding places and times when 
            mosquitoes bite. This is usually just before and after sunset and 
            just before dawn. Each species has its own peak period of biting. 
            *Be sure doors and screens are 
            tight-fitting and in good repair. 
            *Check to see that your mosquito 
            repellent contains DEET (N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide)  
            Generally, repellents with a 
            concentration of 25 percent to 35 percent DEET work best on adults; 
            use lower concentrations of 10 percent or less for children between 
            the ages of 2 and 12. Do not use on infants.  
            For more information, go to  
            http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/wnv.htm and
            
            http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/westnile/index.htm.
 You may also 
            contact the Logan County Health Department at (217) 735-2317. [Logan 
            County Health Department news 
            release]   |  
            | 
            Red Cross
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              West Nile Virus |  
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            West Nile virus links |  
            | Federal websites | State websites |  
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              Announcements
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            CICBC 
            blood drives monthly at paramedics' building 
            Blood supplies across the 
            nation are critical. In some areas, there is less than a one-day 
            supply. Fortunately, thanks to the dedicated donors in central 
            Illinois, these tremendous shortages have not yet touched our 
            hospitals. However, the blood supply is a resource that must be 
            renewed. Every three seconds someone needs a blood transfusion of 
            some kind. To accommodate this constant usage, community members 
            must continually help replenish the supply. Since a donor can donate 
            whole blood only every eight weeks, Central Illinois Community Blood 
            Center needs community members to come forward and help with this 
            lifesaving effort. |  
            | 
            Central Illinois Community Blood Center 
            provides all of the blood and blood products for 12 area hospitals, 
            including those in Lincoln, Hopedale and Springfield. No other 
            organization provides blood in these hospitals. CICBC is a 
            community-based blood center whose mission is to provide a safe and 
            adequate blood supply for patients in local hospitals in a 
            cost-effective manner. 
            When you donate blood through CICBC, 
            you help to keep a safe and adequate blood supply for your 
            community. You also help keep local medical costs under control. 
             
               | 
            Regularly scheduled blood drives are on 
            the first Monday of each month (except Labor Day) at the Logan 
            County Paramedic Association 
            building, 1300 N. Postville Road. (See 
            schedule.) Please help by donating blood. 
            CICBC also provides other services for 
            the communities served, such as therapeutic phlebotomy at no charge 
            for patients with hereditary hemochromatosis.  For more 
            information, call Terry Bell at 753-1530. 
            [CICBC press release] |  
          | 
 |  
            | CICBC blood drive schedule |  
            | 
              
              July 7, 
              noon-6 p.m., at Logan County Paramedic Association building
              July 15, 
              hours and location to be announced
              Aug. 4, 
              noon-6 p.m., at Logan County Paramedic Association building
              Sept. 8, 
              noon-6 p.m., at Logan County Paramedic Association building
              Sept. 24, 
              hours and location to be announced | 
              
              Oct. 6, 
              noon-6 p.m., at Logan County Paramedic Association building
              Nov. 3, 
              noon-6 p.m., at Logan County Paramedic Association building
              Nov. 12, 
              hours and location to be announced 
              Dec. 1, 
              noon-6 p.m., at Logan County Paramedic Association building |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
          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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