Community Health Collaborative Meets for
Autumn Networking and Updates
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[September 08, 2024]
The
Logan County Department of Public Health (LCDPH) hosted the quarterly
meeting of the Community Health Collaborative on September 5 in Lincoln.
Representatives from area organizations met together to present their
services and organize ways to work together to better serve Lincoln and
Logan County. Molly McCain, Community Health Coordinator at Lincoln
Memorial Hospital (LMH), directed the meeting and each representative
had time to explain the services offered by their organization.
2024 Illinois Youth Survey trends
Grace Irvin, Prevention Coordinator with Chestnut Health Systems, opened
the meeting with a brief report of the 2024 Illinois Youth Survey
trends. The Illinois Youth Survey was administered last spring. The full
results for Logan County will be presented at the October meeting of the
Substance Use Prevention Coalition (SUPC) at LMH. The Illinois Youth
Survey is a self-reported survey administered in school settings in the
8th, 10th, and 12th grades to gather information about a variety of
health and social indicators including substance use patterns. The
survey asked questions regarding drug use in the last 30 days and about
parent communication regarding alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, and opioids
for non-medical reasons. Questions included, “In the past year, have
your parents talked to you about not using any of these?” “Are the rules
in your family clear?” Ninety percent answered yes. More details will be
available at the SUPC meeting on October 10 at 9:00 a.m. at Lincoln
Memorial Hospital.
Community Health Needs Assessment
Molly McCain gave an overview of the Community Health Needs Assessment
of Logan County. Logan County residents completed 428 surveys last fall.
In February, McCain met with 10 focus groups in Logan County. Based on
this data priorities were selected with the Internal Advisory Board. On
September 4, the report was approved by the LMH Board. The community
health implementation plan will be approved in November. The
implementation plan will be publicly available beginning February of
2025. The top three priorities from the survey are Mental Health,
Cancer, and Healthy Weight.
LMH Trailblazers
LMH Trailblazers will be sponsoring a “Walktoberfest” fall walking
challenge. Any participant who completes 25 laps around the pond at the
LMH Wellness Trail will receive a Walktoberfest T-shirt.
Coalition Updates
The Substance Use Prevention Coalition exists to promote awareness of
substance use disorder, prevent youth substance use, and improve access
to resources. The SUPC has completed their environmental scan. The
results will be provided at the next SUPC meeting on September 12.
Breastfeeding Coalition
The Breastfeeding Coalition reports that the Logan County Fair runs
during World Breastfeeding Week. LCDPH has hired a peer counselor to
assist the county with breastfeeding support. Breastfeeding rooms are
available at the Logan County courthouse and the Logan County
fairgrounds.
Youth Mental Health Coalition/Butterfly Project
The Railer Reach Out text campaign for LCHS freshmen launched at
freshman orientation on August 6. One hundred and twenty LCHS freshmen,
faculty, and family members have now subscribed. There are plans to
expand to all LCHS grade levels and then to expand to additional high
schools, as well as middle schools.
The Butterfly Project offers Exposure-to-Violence training. The
coalition will be highlighting Domestic Violence Awareness Month in
October. They plan a screening of a movie about relationship violence.
Logan County Parks Coalition
Logan County Parks Coalition is organizing the second annual Pumpkin
Smash to keep pumpkins out of landfills and provide winter food for
wildlife. Pumpkin drop-off will be November 1 through 15 at Kickapoo
Creek Park, Lincoln Community Garden Project, Lincoln Park District, and
Madigan State Park. The Pumpkin Smash will be held on November 16 from
11 a.m. until 1 p.m. at Kickapoo Creek Park, Lincoln Community Garden
Project, and Madigan State Park. A Pumpkin Splash will coincide with the
Pumpkin Smash at Kickapoo Creek Park during the same hours for anyone
who wants to chuck a pumpkin off the foot bridge into the creek.
Collaborative Partner Updates
Memorial Behavioral Health (MBH) has been able to hire additional
therapists this year. The client waitlist has been reduced from 500 in
February to 100 currently. MBH is planning to hire more therapists in
the Springfield office to address the remaining waitlist. Outlier sites
such as Lincoln are able to schedule clients more quickly. The MBH First
Episode Psychosis program allows clients to Fasttrack to available
services rather than being added to a waitlist.
Logan County Senior Advocates
Logan County Senior Advocates is an organization that works to benefit
seniors and meets to discuss how organizations may best support senior
citizens. Silver Fox senior fitness offers 10 classes a week adapted to
a variety of fitness levels and abilities. Silver Fox fitness accepts
Silver Sneakers as well as other insurance programs’ fitness
memberships.
“Too Good for Drugs”
For substance use prevention, the educational curriculum “Too Good for
Drugs” is being started in area middle schools and an anti-vaping
campaign is underway at Logan County high schools. Saturday, September
26 will be a drug take-back day in Mason County at several locations. A
permanent drug take-back box is located at LCDPH.
Girls on the Run
Girls on the Run programming started the first week of September in
Lincoln. A team at Chester East had their second practice on September
5. Girls on the Run are recruiting for more sites to begin in the
spring, with plans already to start a team at Zion Lutheran School.
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Brightpoint
Brightpoint focuses on healing and attachment after domestic
violence. Brightpoint serves children and families exposed to
domestic violence. Case managers work with caregivers and children
together and with each child affected. Case managers are available
to support the whole families’ needs. The goal is wrap-around care.
Brightpoint does not cover youth-in-care unless they are in adoption
proceedings. Services are completely grant-based, so there is no fee
for families. Brightpoint also offers Childhood Exposure to Violence
training which can help agencies to recognize signs and symptoms of
violence exposure in children. The hour-long program is offered to
agencies such as daycare centers and parent support groups, however,
CEUs are not available.
Heartsavers CPR
Jennifer Kirby, director of Heartland Community College (HCC)
Lincoln Campus, reported that HCC will host a Heartsavers CPR class
on November 15 with a cost of $65. This course is suitable for
daycare providers, but not geared toward medical professionals. The
HCC Spring 2025 schedule will be available at the beginning of
October. Short term work certificates for CNA and welding will be
available to complete on site in Lincoln. HCC also offers free GED
preparation courses at the Lincoln campus mornings and evenings in
person, as well as online. HCC is also a GED testing site. HCC is
always looking for ideas for community enrichment courses. HCC is
able to provide outreach to local college students with CHC partner
organizations’ information.
Other topics
Birth to Five is a statewide program that works with families to
help them with what they need to thrive. A community meeting is
planned for September 19 in reference to their action plan
coinciding with their regional needs assessment. They are recruiting
for their Action Council for those assisting young children and
their families.
Senior Services provides homemaker service to seniors age 60 and
over. They can provide personal care, house cleaning, errands,
transportation to doctor's appointments, and life alert buttons that
are upgraded to GPS for fall detection. Senior Services is
asset-based, not income-based beginning at $17,500 for an
individual. Senior Services will do an assessment of a couple or
individual and communicate the hours of assistance that the senior
citizen qualifies for.
The Community Engagement Coordinator for Memorial Behavioral Health
reported that the Mobile Crisis Unit in Lincoln is an in-person
response to any crisis. Patrons may call for themselves or for
another person, even someone in crisis that a patron observes, but
may not know. Schools also use this resource. For Lincoln, the
Mobile Crisis Unit is available in-person 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday and telehealth is available at all other times. The
Mobile Crisis Unit is working toward staffing for 24 hour in-person
availability. In-person follow up is available after telehealth. The
higher the utilization of the Mobile Crisis Unit, the more funding
that will be forthcoming. Calling 988 will connect you with your
local provider. The 988 number can be used everyday or occasionally
and is developing to become region specific.
The Regional Substance Use Prevention Center of the Family Guidance
Centers helps fill gaps in substance use prevention such as
after-school care and other youth-serving organizations. The next
Advisory Board meeting is September 24 at 9 a.m. Surveys are live
for providers to complete to help the Regional Substance Use
Prevention Center to discern what gaps they may fill. All staff are
trained in Youth Mental Health First Aid. They offer this training
to other organizations, as well.
Lincoln Prairie Behavioral Health Center offers psychiatric care for
youth ages 3-17. They have recently developed an in-person intensive
outpatient program (IOP) of 4 hours per day that allows IOP students
to still engage with school and not get so far behind, especially if
they are coming out of inpatient hospitalization. Lincoln Prairie
Behavioral Health has been in existence for 16 years. They have
recently established a designated education room to provide a new
environment that is different from the in-patient setting. They
serve a variety of populations and typical programming runs 7-10
days. Sometimes youth-in-care stay for an extended time beyond the
7-10 days, so they are developing additional programming. Every
month LPBHC provides free CEU training events. Last month, training
was provided by the staff music therapist. Staff of CHC partner
agencies are invited to come tour the facility to learn about the
facility, what is provided, and work in partnership with LPBHC.
Jeannette Davis of ROSC said is partnering with the
Logan County Jail to provide resource bags for those released from
jail. The resource bags provide information and resources for their
next steps.
Hope on Fifth hosts many recovery meetings including AA, NA, and
CODA (codependency anonymous). Smart Recovery meetings, which is an
evidence-based program, will begin meeting on Friday mornings in
partnership with LMH.
Kara Davis, Director of Nursing at LCDPH, reported that the LCDPH
has flu shots available. There will also be flu shots at the LMH
Market on September 21. The LCDPH will also provide drive-through
clinics. Naloxone is available for free at the LCDPH in the entryway
and at a vending machine at Family Custom Cleaners.
The TASK organization will be starting a Choices Deflection program
in Logan County. TASK is available in the whole state. Springfield
has used it for the unhoused population. East St. Louis uses it for
kids growing up with families that use substances. Logan County will
be using it to hire case managers to keep people out of jail. A
kick-off for the program is being planned. Representatives from SIU,
Memorial Health, the Lincoln police department, the Logan County
jail, Chestnut Health System, other agencies, and the mayor of
Lincoln were at the first meeting. TASK resources do not cost the
city or county anything as the funding comes from tax on cannabis.
Case managers will aim to develop a rapport with clients with a goal
to provide services and prevent incarceration.
The next SUPC meeting is September 12. The next CHC meeting is
December 5. Meetings are open to the public, and all parties
interested in improving the quality of life in Logan County are
invited to attend.
[Stephanie Hall] |