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Tuesday
Oct252016

Hauppauge HS Student Rachel Black Winner Of Smithtown Historical Essay Scholarship Contest

Rachel BlackThe Smithtown Historical Society is proud to once again offer junior year students in the Township of Smithtown an opportunity to win a $1000.00 scholarship. The Mildred Smith Historical Essay Scholarship Contest is open to all 11th graders in attendance at Commack, Hauppauge, Kings Park, Smithtown East & West High Schools, as well as at The Knox School and Smithtown Christian School.  

This year winner Rachel Black senior at Hauppauge High School. An honors and A.P. student, she is also heavily invested in extracurricular activities; she serves as the President of the Student Council, Co-President of Science Olympiad, and Treasurer of both National Honor Society and German Club. Rachel is also a member of History Club, Senior Class, Ignition, and Natural Helpers. She is a competitive runner, running Cross Country, Winter Track and Spring Track. As a junior she was Captain of the Cross Country team. 

Rachel is an active member in the community; she has been an Altar Server at St. Thomas More Church since she was in the third grade, and she is a volunteer at the local library tutoring elementary school children over the summer. She is studious and loves to learn. Reading historical fiction has been a great favorite of hers since she was very young. As a sophomore, Rachel travelled to Hamburg, Germany with the high school exchange trip and was completely enamored with the people, history and culture of Germany. Rachel plans to attend a four-year college and will likely double major in biochemistry and mathematics with a concentration in pre-med. 

The Annual Mildred Smith Historical Essay Scholarship Contest is in its tenth year. This year’s theme was: What is the cultural relevance of the Smithtown Historical Society in 2016 and beyond? Rachel wrote an intense essay. The essay was judge by a panel of Judges. On Thursday, October 20th, at the Smithtown Historical Society’s 2016 Heritage Ball, She was awarded $1000 Scholarship, which she will be using for her college education. Her parents Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Black attended the Heritage Ball with Rachel.

Historical Society Executive Director Marianne Howard said, “Rachel’s essay on the current cultural relevance of the Society was poignant and palpable.  The Smithtown Historical Society is so pleased to be able to award her the Mildred Smith Scholarship for her to use for her education. Congratulations to Rachel and to her family for this grand accomplishment!”

 

Wednesday
Oct192016

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - Suffolk County Needs To Think Water Quality And Quantity

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

Al Krupski is a man of the land of Long Island—a fourth-generation farmer.  He’s a champion of open space and farmland preservation. And he well understands the importance of the water table below the land’s surface—the sole source aquifer on which Long Islanders depend as their only potable water supply. 

He knows the shoreline, too, as a member for two decades, 14 of them as president, of the Southold Town Board of Trustees, with jurisdiction over the town’s coast and waters fronting it.

Mr. Krupski is now a Suffolk County legislator representing a district that includes eastern Brookhaven Town—taking in Wading River and then down through Manorville to the Moriches—and the North Fork. In that position he has been bringing up issues not raised frequently enough on Long Island.

He is concerned about the main way treated sewage is dealt with—pumped out into the ocean and Long Island Sound. This reduces freshwater from the aquifer and also opens the way for salt water intrusion, he warns. He advocates recharge of treated effluent back into the aquifer.  

This is something that was heard over and over again in the 1960s and 70s as Suffolk County embarked on building the Southwest Sewer District with a design based on sending 30 million gallons a day of sewage through an outfall pipe into the Atlantic. These days Suffolk County government in projects being advanced by County Executive Steve Bellone would substantially add to the area covered by the Southwest Sewer District—and send yet even more millions of gallons daily out into the ocean. 

As to the shoreline, Mr. Krupski challenges the notion of “armoring” the coast—placing hard structures on it hoping they will fend off an angry sea during storms. This is a prime  strategy of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Its most recent such undertaking: a $14.6 million project of armoring the coast in Montauk with “geotubes.” 

And, meanwhile, the Corps is getting set to revive its more than half-century-old Fire Island Inlet to Montauk Point plan—now priced at $1.2 billion—originally predicated on constructing rock jetties or “groins” along the south shore oceanfront.

Mr. Krupski stresses how armoring of the coast causes erosion on the adjacent shore. 

Years ago, there was great criticism of the Corps of Engineers constructing groins along the Westhampton shore—that, indeed, did enormous damage to the coast downdrift resulting in a lawsuit and an $80 million settlement with those affected (which, like the groins, was paid with taxpayer dollars.)

Last month, Mr. Krupski testified at a public hearing on “Water Quality and Contamination” of the New York State Senate and Assembly’s Committees on Health and Environmental Conservation held in Hauppauge.

He called on the state to “ramp up funding for land preservation” emphasizing that “if you limit development, you limit the amount of nitrogen and other contaminants entering our ground and surface waters…To do that effectively in Suffolk County we will need support in the form of funding from New York State.”

There are “not only issues of water quality but of quantity as well,” he continued. He spoke of how now “much” of the effluent from sewage treatment plants is sent into the ocean and Sound. “We are pulling water out of the aquifer, but we are not putting anything back into it and this can increase the risk of salt water intrusion into Long Island’s sole source of drinking water. Over time, this can dramatically change the dynamics of groundwater flow,” he said.

And, he said, “there needs to be a serious discussion” about coastal erosion  and how to deal with it recognizing how it has been “exacerbated” by climate change, sea level rise and more frequent and intense storms.   

“The relatively minor Tropical Storm Hermine caused significant damage to the recent and already costly Downtown Montauk armoring project,” he testified. “We need to have the difficult conversation about whether we are going to continue to harden our shoreline, which can lead to numerous unintended and costly ramifications, or develop a sustainable public policy for shoreline management.”

In his personal as well as governmental life, Mr. Krupski has thought outside the box. He was recollecting the other day about when he was in high school and began raising pumpkins on the family farm in Cutchogue, which had stuck with potatoes. The farm soon ended potato dependence and today grows a wide diversity of produce.

After his long stint on the Southold Trustees, he served on the Southold Town Board, was deputy town supervisor, and was elected a Suffolk County legislator in 2013. 

He’s delighted, on the sewage issue, that the Riverhead Sewage Treatment Plant last month, after a $24 million upgrade, began sending treated effluent on to the adjoining county golf course instead of into Flanders Bay, as was the practice for years. “The microbiology of the soil is pretty aggressive and will render the effluent harmless,” explained Mr. Krupski, who has a degree in plant science from the University of Delaware. The change “really sets an example.”

Al Krupski—a Suffolk public official most deserving of being listened to.

Wednesday
Oct192016

Smithtown's Kathy Albrecht Called "The Saving Grace For Humanity"

Smithtown Heroine Receives Honor from Smithtown Children’s Foundation

By Nancy Vallarella

Kathleen Albrecht is a seasoned Smithtown resident. Known to many locals as a wife, mother, grandmother, columnist, former Smithtown business owner, community volunteer, current Chef of Staff for New York State Assemblyman, Michael Fitzpatrick and most recently, a life saver.

Five months ago, Kathleen Albrecht became a living donor and helped to save the life of another Town of Smithtown resident, Rachael Eisenson.  

Christine Fitzgerald, Co-Founder of the Smithtown Children’s Foundation presented Kathleen with the SCF’s 2016 Kaylee Rivers Courage Award during the reception following The Friends Fore Smithtown Community Golf Outing at the Hamlet Golf and Country Club in Commack on October 11th.  It is the foundation’s most prestigious award, given in memory of the girl who inspired them to start the foundation and help the Smithtown community in so many ways. 

 Although the Eisenson family could not be present, a statement was read on their behalf by Fitzgerald. The following excerpt expresses the family’s sentiment of gratitude. “Obviously, Kathleen Albrecht’s generous altruism in selflessly coming forward is worthy of the highest praise imaginable. Our entire family is in her debt, not only for saving our daughter’s life but in a world that seems to be ripped apart by negativism and discord, Kathleen and people like her are truly the saving grace for humanity.” - The Eisenson Family.

Deemed Kathleen “All In” Albrecht by the Eisensons, Kathy continues the mission by raising awareness in becoming a Living Donor. She graciously accepted her SCF Courage Award and encouraged attendees to review the New York State Donate Life Program and to go to the MyDMV page to enroll in the donor program. 

Monday
Oct172016

Letter To Editor - Anna Throne-Holst For "Gun Responsibility"

To the Editor:
I support Anna Throne-Holst for Congress because I never again want to turn on the news and hear about twenty dead children or forty-nine slain young men and women. Her opponent, incumbent Congressman Lee Zeldin, has made no effort to prevent a recurrence of tragedies like those at Sandy Hook, the Pulse nightclub, Virginia Tech, outside CIA headquarters, and on a street corner by a supermarket in Arizona. Today, over 90% of people nationwide want stronger gun control measures, including background checks. Lee Zeldin has consistently pushed against this notion, voting against background checks to keep guns away from domestic abusers, the mentally ill, and terrorists on the No-Fly list and opposing a ban on high-capacity magazines used in so many horrific shootings. He is well-regarded by the National Rifle Association, a organization whose executives continue to propagate the notion that common sense gun safety measures are an encroachment on people’s 2nd Amendment rights. This is far from the truth and the vast majority of NRA members know that, yet the executives continue creating fear for their own financial benefit.

Anna Throne-Holst strives to support common-sense legislation, including requiring stronger background checks. She makes every effort to improve our children’s education and she feels keeping them safe is an important part of this. There have been organizations who use the term “gun responsibility” instead of “gun control” as it better represents the sort of changes many people want to see. So, if over 90% of people nationwide want changes, it stands to reason some of them, including gun owners, live in New York’s 1st Congressional district. I personally don’t mind people owning rifles for activities like hunting and handguns for protection. But I find the status quo outrageous. For me, Anna Throne-Holst is the responsible choice.

Sincerely Yours,

PS

Monday
Oct172016

Improving The Quality Of Care - Medical Errors

Improving the Quality of Care – Medical Errors

By Thomas Biancaniello M.D.

A lot has been written since the Institute of Medicine report of 1999 “To Err is Human” was published suggesting that between 44,000 to 98,000 deaths per year occurred do to medical errors.  While some progress has been made in addressing the problem of medical errors, we are not nearly where we need to be to improve the quality of our health care.  When compared to airline safety for example, the risk of death is less than 1 in 10 million while in health care the risk is suggested to be greater than 1 in 500.  Defenders of the medical community like to respond that medicine is different; it is not an exact science such as engineering.  This however misses the point.  To reduce errors in any system you need to address culture and processes.  This is illustrated in medicine by the improved safety rate and reduced errors in anesthesia.  Over the last 25 years the risk of death from anesthesia has dropped from 2 per 10,000 administrations to 1 to 200,000 to 300,000.  While it is certainly true that this improvement is in part do to safer anesthetic agents and improved technology of administration and monitoring, it is also because of the development of procedures and protocols to reduce variation and a culture of promoting safety by the practitioners.

The barriers to error reduction are many, among them are: hierarchical cultures, blame oriented society, overworked staff, and practitioner variation in treatments for the same conditions. Many health care systems and hospitals are trying to create a culture of safety.  They enlist help from organizations like the Institute for Healthcare Improvement to take advantage of expertise and consultants in quality and safety.

Changing the hierarchical culture is difficult in a system where the physician is the captain.  It is difficult to question orders that come from above, and thus those charged with carrying out the orders feel uncomfortable questioning even when they suspect it is incorrect.  After an incident occurs, the staff often admits they thought it was wrong but went ahead.  This is analogous to the airline industry, where analysis of the flight data recorders clearly demonstrated that a co-pilots knew they were heading into danger and if the captain was questioned at all, it was tenuously done.  There was a disincentive to questioning the captain since making captain was dependent on favorable reviews by captain. 

Airlines adopted “cockpit management” courses required for flight crews that emphasized speaking up when questions of safety arouse.  Unfortunately, in the medical community the blame culture is strong and it is easier to blame, punish or fire someone than to look for the real causes.

Error rates and mistakes increase when staff is overworked, work long hours and are forced to take on additional tasks and functions due to under staffing.  Even though state laws and residency rules for physicians-in training restrict work hours, those rules do not apply to attending physicians.

Medicine is unfortunately not a precise science and many conditions and diseases do not have evidence based processes and standard treatments so there is a lot of practitioner variation.  When there is variation in care, there are more opportunities for error than if there were established protocols and guidelines that are well known and practiced by health care givers.  There would be a higher likelihood that errors would be easily recognized before reaching bedside.

The real causes usually turn out to be process errors and usually are not the result of one single error or mistake, but a series leading up to the error.  This is often described as the “swiss cheese effect”.  Normally, if for example a pharmacist fills the order wrong, the nurse discovers it and the patient is never impacted.  But if the nurse is in the middle of preparing it for administration and someone (most often a physician) demands attention, which will distract the nurse, who will resume the preparation without noticing what might have been recognized.  So the checks and balance is overridden, the holes on the cheese line up, and the error occurs.  Some hospitals have put red carpets in the medication preparation area where it is forbidden to interrupt a nurse when standing on the carpet preparing the medication.  

In the past the result was usually led to someone getting fired or counseled.  Now, in the better institutions a root cause analysis is done to look for the real causes and the processes to be improved.  Many institutions are trying to establish a “just culture” where no blame is assigned for most mistakes and at the same time holds those accountable for rule violations and incompetence.

A barrier to engaging practitioners in this analysis of cause is the litigious atmosphere particularly in New York.  If a practitioner is involved in a adverse event, they are often counseled by their attorneys not to say or write anything because it will be discoverable in a lawsuit.  Valuable information from those involved is lost.  This is not the case in other states and federal jurisdiction where quality improvement participation is protected.

Malpractice attorneys frequently claim that medical legal system will improve care.  In fact it does not and it turns out often doesn’t address most cases of negligence.  A landmarkstudy published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1991 analyzing New York data.  Of the 280 patients who had justified reasons for filing claims by the study reviewers, only 8 filed claims.  They concluded from the study that the system rarely compensates injured patients and rarely identifies those responsible for substandard care. 

It is not really a surprise that the threat of lawsuit does not improve the way people take care of patients.  Most don’t get up in the morning wanting to make mistakes or be incompetent at what they do, especially health care workers who daily witness bad things happening to their patients from their afflictions.

The victims of medical errors are not only the patients and their families, but also caregivers and society as a whole.  The effects on a practitioner who makes an error can be very devastating. There is increased absenteeism, leaving the institution and profession, increased of mental health issues and suicide.  Few health care facilities provide enough support or resources to help clinical caregivers recover from effects of being involved in a medical error or adverse event.

Finally, there are the financial implications of medical errors.  Poor care is expensive and the costs are borne by all of us regardless of who the payer is, the cost will be passed on to the taxpayer in the case of government programs or premium payers for insurance carriers.  The NIH estimates that the cost of medical errors is over $17 billion per year.  The government has begun to address making institutions responsible for the expenses generated by errors.  Medicare started with a list of ten “reasonably preventable” conditions and Medicaid in our state of New York has now adopted the concept with “Never Events”.  New York Medicaid now has a list of fourteen conditions that are not re-imburseable: 

  • Surgery performed on the wrong body part
  • Surgery performed on the wrong patient
  • Wrong surgical procedure on a patient
  • Foreign object inadvertently left in patient after surgery
  • Medication error
  • Air embolism
  • Blood incompatibility
  • Patient disability from electric shock
  • Patient disability from use of contaminated drugs
  • Patient disability from wrong function of a device
  • Incidents whereby a line designated for oxygen intended for patient is wrong item or contaminated
  • Patient disability from burns
  • Patient disability from use of restraints or bedrails
  • Patient disability from failure to identify and treat hyperbilirubinemia (bilirubin in blood) in newborns.

Institutions have established procedures to make these and other errors less likely.  “Time outs” are now common in which the participants stop before the procedure and go through a verbal review of what the procedures is, positive identification of the patient, the procedure, the side and site involved, check that images of the patient are available, whether the appropriate equipment and medical devices are at hand.  Others have instituted checklists similar to what pilots do before taking-off for specific procedures and protocols rather than relying on memory.  Institutions have also official adopted guidelines and protocols of care that are endorsed by various groups such as the American College of Cardiology, American College of Surgery and others to be sure that patients receive the best scientific or expert consensus care currently available.  This generally assures that the best available evidence rather than the anecdotal experience of individual practitioners determines patient outcomes.

 

Thomas Biancaniello, MD is a Professor of Pediatrics (Cardiology) Columbia University Medical Center, Former Chief Medical Officer, Stony Brook University Hospital, Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics and Medicine, Stony Brook University