Friday, October 31, 2008

Three Pumpkins Tell Stories





This years family pumpkins are allegorical. Al Gore (ahem) would be proud.


In "Let's All Hope It's Not Too Late", Michelle Gittler's map of the US is in the intensive care unit.


            









Meanwhile, in Hannah Francis's "Mirrror", John McCain gazes at George W. Bush in the mirror -- 8 years of the same thing.



... and Laila Francis's "The Pig and the Lipstick"  is "kinda about Palin and Biden."







Happy 2008 Elections everyone!

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Less Access (Again!) for Women to Deliver Babies in Chicago

I heard last night from my counterpart at a sister community health center in Chicago which uses Lincoln Park Hospital (the former Grant Hospital) as their hospital to deliver babies. The CEO of Lincoln Park had contacted him to say that the hospital was abruptly stopping maternity services effective immediately.

The Chicago Tribune reported on Thursday October 9, 2008 that the hospital was for sale and at risk of closing.

For almost a year, Lincoln Park has been reaching out to community health centers in an attempt to increase maternal services utilization by attracting Medicaid insured women. This is a potential money-maker for community hospitals.

Our sister agency, on a Friday night, had to scramble to find a place to safely deliver their babies. As community health centers, we take care of patients regardless of their ability to pay. As a result, those most affected by this abrupt move are expectant mothers living in poverty and covered by Medicaid.


Over the past year or so several North Side hospitals have limited or closed their maternity services. Weiss Hospital closed its maternity services (with plenty of advance notice), Advocate Illinois Masonic Hospital has no room at the inn for more normal-risk Medicaid deliveries, neither does Swedish Hospital. There is definitely an unhealthy pattern here.

One of the drivers of hospitals getting out of the baby delivering business may be malpractice costs. But that's a whole different subject.

The current situation raises the question: if you are a pregnant woman, living in poverty, on the North Side or Northwest Side of Chicago, and you are insured by Medicaid, where will you go to deliver your baby? Where will your doctor be able to attend to your birth with you?

Because of this very same dilemma, Erie Family Health Center will now start delivering babies at Norwegian American Hospital (moving almost 500 deliveries per year from Advocate Illinois Masonic Hospital). We will continue our long-term relationship with Northwestern’s Prentice Women’s Hospital where we deliver over 1,100 babies per year.  END OF POST. THANK YOU FOR READING.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Sunday Parkways in Chicago: I think it's a hit!

I had some fun riding boulevards closed to car traffic today as part of Chicago's first ever Sunday Parkways in Chicago.   Today, boulevards were closed to everything but human powered traffic in Logan Square, Humboldt Park,  and Garfield Park area.  Hundreds of neighborhood folks came out to just ride their bikes, walk, rollerblade and even ride their razor scooters. When you think about it, this is really a public health intervention. In one sense, neighborhood park space was increased several fold and on a day when people have free time to use it; calories burned, heart rates up and stress reduced.


Sunday Parkways is patterned after similar ones in Bogota, Columbia, and Guadalajara, Mexico where the events are called Ciclovias. Here in North America, Ottawa, Ontario, Portland, Oregon and Cleveland, Ohio all have events like Sunday Parkways.

I loved seeing so many families out today with little kids on tiny two wheelers. Without traffic and with traffic minders at every intersection, it's much safer than the annual Boulevard Ride.

While on the road today, I heard rhythms at the Humboldt Park Boat House and checked out the art work happening at the Garfield Park Conservatory.   But mostly it was some cool relatively fresh Sunday morning air that made it all worth while.

I'm looking forward to the next Sunday Parkway event on October 26, 2008.

While on the ride I met the founder of an online social community for Chicago cyclists.  Check out the chainlink.