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Indiana Rural
Health Association
Annual Report to the Membership
June 13, 2003
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Your Association has had a very busy year
since the 2002 Conference. We closed the conference last year
with 300 members and ambitious plans for the new Association
year.
With our new
president, Randall Ritter, president-elect Shawna Girgis,
Secretary Linda Webb and Treasurer John Winenger, we have
executed those plans—and more. The board held a planning
retreat in early November at the Billy Creek Inn in Parke
County to firm up plans for the year. |
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Rural Health Public Policy  |
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We held the first Rural Health Public Policy Forum at the
Westin Hotel on February 21. Indiana’s Senior
Senator, Richard G. Lugar was the keynote speaker for a one
day program that focused on Federal and State public policy
issues that impact the health of the citizens or rural
Indiana. We had an unexpected sell-out crowd of 200. Your
board has decided to make this an annual event. Look for the
announcement of the date for the 2004 Rural Health Public
Policy Forum within the next month.
Libby Cieciura
coordinated the Forum, bringing with her a wealth of
experience in public affairs and event planning. Spencer
Grover chaired the Policy and Legislative Committee for the
2003 forum. Through his efforts, we were able to provide
periodic legislative updates while the legislature was in session. We also offered
comments on several issues that were of importance to our
membership—and we issued several
calls to action when contacts from you were needed with
your local legislators.
On national
legislation impacting rural health, we have utilized the
National Rural Health Association’s services to monitor
pending legislation and to alert you when members of Indiana’s
congressional delegation needed to be contacted. We had seven
members of the Association attend the NRHA Rural Health
Policy Institute, March 3-5 in Washington. Those of us from
Indiana called on the offices of Indiana’s Senators and five
of our representatives. We hope
that this next year we will have at least one IRHA member from
each congressional district to participate in those calls.
One of our goals this
next year will be to increase our efforts to educate federal
and state elected officials about how their decisions impact
rural health in Indiana. |
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Educational Programs  |
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With the emerging emphasis on the
management of patients with chronic diseases, which is coming
from both the federal and state levels, IRHA partnered with the
Indiana Primary Health Care Association to offer Chronic Disease Management for your Clinic
on September 27, 2002, at the Holiday Inn Conference Center,
Columbus, Indiana.
We also offered a pre-conference workshop this
week on Chronic Disease Management. Dr. Jim Buechler of the
Midwest Center for Rural Health has led the planning for these
educational programs.
Building on their very
successful Grant Writing Workshop at last year’s conference,
Sarah Snider and Brenda Church chaired a pre-conference Grant
Workshop this year, which has focused on what a grant reviewer
looks for and on non-governmental grant opportunities. |
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2003
Conference  |
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The planning for this
year’s conference began immediately after last year’s
conference—in fact it began on the afternoon after the
conference adjourned at 1 p.m. last year, and continued
throughout the year. The board made the decision to bring "inhouse"
all responsibility for the conference management. We
appreciated the work MERP did for the 2001 & 2002 conferences,
but both MERP and IRHA agreed that, with the association
having staff, it was time for the association to assume total
responsibility for the conference. Jennifer Custer and Deb
Barnhart, our Conference Co-Chairs, along with our Education
Director, Tina Elliott, and our office Manager/Conference
Registrar, Paula Johnson, have done a magnificent job of
preparing for the conference we are concluding today. We look
forward to reading your evaluations of this year’s conference
as we begin the planning for the 2004 Conference.
As this report
is being written prior to the conference, we can tell you that
total attendance, exhibitors, sponsors, and students attending
will set new records this year. |
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Critical Access Hospital Forum  |
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The Indiana
Health&Hospital Association partnered with IRHA to plan the
2003 Critical Access Hospital Forum on Wednesday morning
before the conference began Wednesday afternoon. |
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Other Projects  |
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This year has
been the first time that the association has had staffing to
allow it to take on other projects to further rural health
interests. Those have included:
1. Health
Manpower Project for the West Central Indiana AHEC.
Led by Laurice Newlin, an experienced nurse recruiter, the
project involved an analysis of what provider groups and
secondary schools in the 19-county West Central Indiana AHEC
region were doing to encourage health careers, what support was
needed from health care providers, and what additional resources
need to be available. The project included facilitating three
groups of school personnel and providers to develop
recommendations for improving the co-operation to make more
students aware of health careers.
2. FLEX Grant
Program Evaluation for the Indiana Office of Rural
Health. The association’s proposal, in response to an RFP, to
evaluate how the FLEX program has been implemented in Indiana
was accepted. The evaluation process involves soliciting the
input of Critical Access Hospital Administrators, Physicians and
EMS Coordinators as well as community leaders and other
stakeholders to evaluate what has worked and to develop
recommendations to improve the program.
3. Critical Access
Hospital Benchmarking for the Indiana Office of Rural
Health. The association has submitted a proposal to provide
technical assistance to the CAH’s to develop a bench marking
system for Indiana’s Critical Access Hospitals that would allow
them to measure how they compare to other CAH’s on key
operational and clinical measures.
4. Rural
Outreach Grant. IRHA was one of several organizations
that formed a consortium that was recently awarded a Rural
Outreach Grant to implement an innovative tool to acquire
real-time patient data on compliance and therapeutic outcomes
following the office visit or hospital stay. Family Health
Services (also known as Mother & Baby Care of Rush County,
Inc.), Medical Care and Outcomes, a wholly owned subsidiary of
U.S. Health Services, Hoosier Uplands and the Indiana Rural
Health Association partnered to submit the grant.
5. Rural Access
to Emergency Devices Grant. We are working with a
consortium of Organizations to submit a grant to place automatic
external defibrillators with first responders in rural Indiana.
The grant application is being written by Shawn Gorges of
Hoosier Uplands. (One of the exciting things that is happening
is the partnership with a variety of organizations to pool our
limited resources to accomplish common objectives that serve to
further rural health in Indiana.) |
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