Wyandotte County on right path to improve health ranking, official says

by Mary Rupert

Wyandotte County is on the right path to improving its health ranking, according to a local health official.

Wyandotte County’s health outcomes ranking, announced last week at 94th in the state of Kansas, improved a little from 2014, when it was 96, and from 2013, when it was 99th out of 105 Kansas counties.

While there have not been major changes in the health ranking these five years, there have been some small changes and some activity in addressing the problems.

“I think these county health rankings are very important for stimulating activity, and they certainly have in Wyandotte County over the past five years, and over the country,” said Dr. K. Allen Greiner, professor and associate chair of research in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. He is the medical adviser to the Unified Government Health Department.

While the ranking itself may not be a good one, the rankings contribute to the new movements that try to have an impact on factors that make up the ranking, he said.

The factors in these rankings are hard to move and will take years and years of effort, he believes. Some of the health factors used in the rankings are related to poverty, education and social features of the community.

“As we know, the social features can take decades and generations to change,” he said.

“It’s going to take quite some time to see significant change,” Dr. Greiner said. “But things like economic development, change in the educational outcomes in the school districts, things like new initiatives in the community that get more people signed up for health insurance can make an impact. Wyandotte County in the last two years has done really well in signing people up through the health exchanges,” he said.

From those changes, in five to 10 years from now, Wyandotte County may see some improvements in the health ranking numbers, he believes.

The health rankings showed some areas where Wyandotte County is still lagging pretty far behind the state averages and may need some work.

Smoking is one of those areas, and showed 25 percent of the adults in Wyandotte County smoke, compared to 18 percent in the state of Kansas, he said.

Dr. Greiner said Wyandotte County needs to work really hard to try to reduce smoking, perhaps by implementing workplace smoking bans, indoor air quality improvements, offering help lines to quit smoking, media campaigns and other things that over time can contribute to the reduction of smoking.

“Smoking has a huge impact on health,” he said.

Wyandotte County also has high rates of sexually transmitted infections, compared to the state, he said. This may be related to other family and social levels, with behaviors that need to be addressed, he said. The county needs to keep working on all these things, whether through education, employment or changing people’s ideas about what is healthy and what is not healthy, he said.

Wyandotte County also needs to work on changing people’s levels of hope for the future, he said.

“Adolescents and adults, if they feel hopeless, are more likely to take risks with behavior, whether smoking or other risky behavior,” he said.

Replacing that with hope for the future, along with providing developments such as the new healthy campus downtown, and such improvements as bike pathways, may help people change what they do day-to-day in their own environment, he said.

Dr. Greiner has worked with the Healthy Communities Wyandotte program through the UG Health Department and also has worked with the Community Health Council.

There are now a couple of clinics in the Kansas City, Kan., Public Schools that try to bring health care from KU out into the community, he said. Students are able to see physicians and medical students at their high schools, in some cases receive medical care, and importantly, see young adult role models who may inspire them to pursue careers in health. A few years ago a clinic was started at Wyandotte High School which has been a success, he said.

Dr. Greiner said even little programs may contribute to better overall health in the community, and he would encourage more people to work toward better health.

One of the many factors considered in overall health of the community is access to fresh food. Dr. Greiner said that throughout the United States, a diet of less fresh vegetables, higher calories, and higher sugar has had an impact on health. In Wyandotte County, there have been movements with local farmers’ markets to bring more fresh food to residents, he added.

New grocery stores have been built in Wyandotte County in the past several years to serve areas that didn’t have much access to fresh fruits and vegetables. There are plans for another grocery store to be built near downtown Kansas City, Kan., to serve that general area.

“I really do think the county is on the right track, involved in over a decade,” Dr. Greiner said. “There seems to be so much more of this hope factor there. People are trying to do the right things.”

Throughout history, medicine has focused its efforts on various topics, and effected changes. One example was tuberculosis about 100 years ago, he said. With a lot of different approaches, education, changes in social norms and medical attention, some medical problems have been solved in society.

“We need the same thing with these kinds of issues,” he said.

Already, there have been a lot of efforts with the tobacco campaign, including smoking bans, and changes in social norms.

“We need the same approach, lots of different initiatives, whether big or small, we just need to stay positive and encourage each other to healthy change,” Dr. Greiner said.

KCKCC health fair April 15 offers exhibits, tests, activities

by Kelly Rogge

Kansas City Kansas Community College wants to give students, staff, faculty and the community a chance to maintain their health during the college’s 2015 Health Fair.

“This will be my third health fair, and I am looking for a wonderful turn out,” said Kim Morgan, college nurse at KCKCC. “These individuals will assist in all areas of health from oral health and diabetes education to insurance and home health. In past years, we have had up to 40 exhibitors.”

The Health Fair is from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. April 15 in Upper Jewell on the KCKCC main campus, 7250 State Ave. Entrance into the fair is free. However, there is a fee associated with some activities. These include:

• 20 Chemistries and Lipids with CBC. This includes electrolytes, lipids, hemoglobin and hematocrit. $40
• Glucose and Lipid Profile. $25
• Cancer Antigen 125 (for women). This is a possible indicator for ovarian cancer. $55
• Prostate specific antigen PSA (for men). This is possibly indicative of prostate cancer. $35
• Thyroid stimulating hormone TSH. $25
• Hemoglobin A1C. This will tell the average level of glucose. $25
• T4, Total T3, TSH. $65

The health fair will feature a variety of exhibitors including those about alcohol and drugs, spinal flexibility, oral health, wellness and fitness and HIV-STD information. There will be HIV testing offered from Good Samaritan and KC Care Clinic.

In addition, there will be free blood pressure checks as well as weight, height and vision plus giveaways by local companies such as Chick-Fil-A, Quick Trip, among others.

“I know that students will benefit from learning how to improve their overall health and health practices, for they are the ones in charge of their bodies,” Morgan said. “Let the knowledge they obtain from this event empower them to grow and achieve great things within our community and within themselves.”

For more information on KCKCC”s Health Fair, contact Kim Morgan at 913-288-7683 or by email at [email protected].
Kelly Rogge is the public information supervisor at Kansas City Kansas Community College.

Kansans rally for repeal of Brownback tax cuts

Coalition of education and social services advocates stage event outside governor’s office

by Jim McLean, KHI News Service

About 100 people rallied Wednesday within earshot of Republican Gov. Sam Brownback’s office to demand the repeal of income tax cuts they say are crippling the state.

The Rev Up Kansas coalition staged the event to call attention to the state’s ongoing budget problems, which organizers said are the result of tax cuts that Brownback championed in the mistaken belief that they would jump-start the Kansas economy.

Shannon Cotsoradis, president of Kansas Action for Children, said the steep drop in revenue is forcing cuts in programs that are essential to low-income children and their families.

“I simply don’t believe that Kansans want tax policies that short-circuit investments in the next generation,” Cotsoradis said. “Let’s reverse course before it’s too late for an entire generation of Kansas children.”

News of additional revenue shortfalls added urgency to the rally.

Late Tuesday, the Kansas Department of Revenue reported that the state had collected $11.2 million less than estimated in March. With three months left to go in the 2015 fiscal year, tax collections are running a total of $48 million behind already lowered estimates.

“When one is in a hole, one is advised to stop digging,” said Mark Farr, a Nickerson High School science teacher on leave to serve as president of the Kansas National Education Association.

Noting that the hole had just become $11.2 million deeper, Farr said, “We must agree to end the governor’s failed experiment.”

Just before the legislative session started in January, plummeting revenues forced Brownback to order allotments — a combination of cuts and cash transfers — to close a projected $300 million budget gap. But only weeks later, continued revenue shortfalls forced him to make another $44.5 million in cuts to state universities and public schools. If tax collections continue to fall short of projections in April and May, additional cuts will be necessary to ensure the state ends the fiscal year in the black.

Bigger problems lie ahead in the budget year that begins July 1. Brownback and lawmakers are facing a projected deficit of at least $600 million. A Senate-passed budget bill partially closes the gap but would require tax increases of $141 million to balance.

Speakers at the rally said repealing the income tax cuts would be the best way to solve the budget problems.
Former state budget director Duane Goossen said the first year the tax cuts were in effect, the state collected $700 million less in revenue than the year before and that collections have continued to drop.

“Kansas does not have nearly enough revenue to cover normal, reasonable expenses,” said Goossen, now a senior fellow at the Kansas Center for Economic Growth and the author of the Kansas Budget blog.

Kansas Revenue Secretary Nick Jordan continues to say that the revenue shortfalls are a “temporary” byproduct of the tax cuts. Both he and Brownback point to improving employment numbers as evidence that the administration’s tax policies are spurring economic growth.

Last week, Brownback said adjusted statistics from the U.S. Department of Labor showed Kansas ranked second in its five-state region for private sector job growth in 2014.

“These corrected numbers show that our tax policy is working, bringing jobs and people to Kansas,” the governor said in a news release.

Brownback has said he believes higher sales tax receipts eventually will replace some of the revenue being lost because of the income tax cuts. So far this fiscal year, sales and use tax receipts are $40 million higher than estimated. However, they were $7.8 million short of projections in March.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.
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