Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Alternative Healthcare in the Emerging Healthcare Debate

This is the video, article and website idea created with Adobe Photoshop for my final assignment for a Digital Journalism Workshop in the spring of 2009. Everything was co-produced, wrote, and edited with my course partner, Jess Grunenberg.


Changing Landscape: The Future of Health Policy and Practice
Teaser- From free medicine to the uninsured to insurance provided to the masses.
           
            ITHACA-While Cornell students headed out onto the quads Friday April 21 to enjoy the sunny spring afternoon, Minella Capili headed over to Goldwin Smith Hall for the final event of the Sick in America Conference.
            The first annual Sick in America Conference was a completely student run weeklong event that focused on the growing concerns and possible solutions for the current United States healthcare system. The conference featured lectures, panel discussions, documentary presentations and art installations. One of the hot topics of the conference was the importance of preventative medicine.
            “The thing is that people don’t know about these different kinds of medicines and that’s why we’re trying to get the word out,” said Minella Capili, a student member of Cornell’s Integrative Healthcare Club. “I mean, if you look at people in poor areas they are not going to go to an acupuncturist or chiropractor, they are going to go to the hospital when they get sick.”
            Capili and other Integrative Healthcare Club members helped run an Interactive Health and Wellness Fair earlier that week. The fair provided students with free demonstrations in alternative medicine ranging from acupuncture to herbal consultations. Along with conversations on alternative medicine there was also a lot of talk about alternatives to the current United States’ healthcare system.
            One member of the club, Kristen Welch, shared a story of a friend who graduated last spring and did not secure a job until the following winter, during that time he was not insured because as soon as he was no longer a college student he was excluded from his parents’ coverage. This is a growing concern for students who will be graduating this spring, especially with the unstable job market.
            In January Governor Paterson proposed extending the age that young adults could claim to be dependent on their parents’ health insurance plans from 19, or 22 if a full-time student, to 29. The 19 to 29 year-old bracket makes up 31% of New York State’s uninsured population and it is estimated that within one year about 80,000 people could be insured with the new plan. President Obama’s proposed plan will also extend the age that a child can be covered under their parent’s plan to 25.            
            However, according to Dr. Sean Nicholson, Cornell University professor of healthcare policy and management, while extending the age limit sounds great, it also means more money for parents. Nicholson also said that Obama’s plan proposes to widen the eligibility for Medicaid. Then, along with more baby boomers growing older, young people will eventually be paying more of their tax dollars towards healthcare for the poor and eledrly; so healthcare systems should be a concern for young people.
            “Right now we cover about 1.5% of the hospital expenses for those with Medicaid and the elderly,” said Dr. Nicholson. “That could easily quadruple in next few years.”
            There is a strong reform movement for the single-payer health insurance plan, especially in the Ithaca area. In a single-payer system, like that of Canada, healthcare is universal. While it is provided to everyone there are also long wait lines for services. Dr. Nicholson also pointed out that since doctors are paid similar salaries there is sometimes less desire to practice medicine.
            Brooke Hansen, an Ithaca College medical anthropologist professor, said that what the United States needs is a single-payer system.
            “But, how are we going to get the surgeons, HMOs and the pharmaceutical companies to give up those profits?” said Professor Hansen. Both Professor Hansen and Dr. Nicholson agree that it will take time for the healthcare system in American to drastically change.
            On a local level there is a different kind of system in Ithaca. The Ithaca Health Alliance formed in 1997 to provide financial assistance for healthcare. Through grants and interest-free loans members can receive all sorts of health services including dental exams, eye care and emergency care. Bethany Schroeder, the IHA board president, made it clear that the IHA is not a form of health insurance but rather an alternative to it. This alternative has over 700 members.
            In 2006 the Ithaca Health Alliance started an Ithaca Free Clinic. The Clinic provides 100% free healthcare for residents of New York State. In the first year they expected only 300 visits but received over 800. Now, they regulating seeing up to 30 patients each time they are open and they had over 1,086 patients in 2007. Students are welcome to the Free Clinic as long as their insurance does not cover the services offered there.
            “The model that we are trying to cultivate here is being a fully integrated clinic,” said Sadie Hayes, the Ithaca Free Clinic coordinator. “Here the doctors not only work in the same building but across the hallway. They work together to better patients health.”  This model is the only model like it in the United States for a free clinic. Some of the alternative services offered include: massage therapy, acupuncture, herbal medicine, chiropractic care and nutritional counseling. Many local alternative medicine doctors volunteer at the clinic a few times a month.
            “I enjoy the multi-pronged approach,” said Dr. Anthony Fazio, an acupuncturist, owner of Peaceful Spirit Acupuncture and clinic volunteer. Dr. Fazio says this approach allows doctors of different types of medicine to learn from one another to create an integrative approach.
            This integrative idea of medicine is what many students who soon will be emerging into the medical field, believe is the future of healthcare. The combination of western medicine with eastern medicine results in a more well rounded treatment. “A lot of our healthcare dollars are spent on chronic diseases,” said Kristen Welch, the student coordinator of the Cornell’s Interactive Health and Wellness Fair. “So things like alternative, integrative, and preventive health pathways can really alleviate some of those chronic disabilities.”
            As Welch, Capili and other students involved in the changing landscape of healthcare see the benefits of alternative and integrative medicine, it is predicated that mainstream health providers will follow suit.




Links to recently published articles/reviews







Profile on Ithaca, NY Police Officer

 ITHACA, N.Y.- As the sun is setting, the small college town of Ithaca, N.Y. starts to come alive after a long week of studying and working, the enticement of two days of freedom still lying ahead. Well, for most people.
            Amanda Mazzaraco, 37, is not an ordinary citizen of Ithaca. She is a police officer for the Ithaca City Police Department.
            “Sometimes you feel like you have gone over the same road a million times,” says Mazzaraco as she climbs up into her white Chevy Blazer. The Blazer is equipped for the slipperiest roads, with four-wheel drive and the sneakiest criminals, with a computer system positioned right next to the driver seat. While everyone else is returning home from work or getting ready to hit the bars, Mazzaraco is only halfway through her shift and she has a “hit and skip” to report to.
“Yeah, put your cell phone down,” she says to a multi-tasking driver. “Your just can’t catch them all,” says Mazzaraco as she passes the car and continues up the street to Collegetown, where the “hit and skip” is located.
Mazzaraco was once one of the college students getting ready to enjoy their weekend of freedom. She graduated from Ithaca College in 1992 as a television and radio major with job positions at advertising firms in New York City. Then she found out she was pregnant.
            “It was either 80 hour weeks or seeing my family,” says Mazzaraco. Instead of accepting the job offers she decided to train to become an Ithaca City police officer. During her ten years on the job she has seen it all.
            “I couldn’t make up half this shit,” says Mazzaraco. Even though Ithaca is a small town, it is home to two colleges, Cornell University and Ithaca College.
            “Cornell brings a lot of weird things,” says Mazzaraco. Along with the culture and education Cornell brings to Ithaca it also brings many drunken college students who get into horrible situations says Mazzaraco.
Tonight Mazzarco is the traffic officer, but she can also respond to other calls too. Mazzarco says she can never tell what is going happen. Some nights it is busy for no reason, and other nights it is just quiet.
Mazaraco pulls up to a young women standing next to an older car with a bumper that is barely hanging on to the rest of the vehicle. The “hit and skip” was a parked car accident that occurred a few days ago, but the owner of the car did not notice until that evening. Mazzaraco asked the young woman a few questions and then returned to the Blazer. She started entering information into the computer. The computer is a tiny flat screen with a miniature keyboard and a printer hidden underneath the armrest. Any information on a report is typed into the computer for documentation. It makes the filing part of the job much easier because it saves time typing everything up later on. The computers are not in all of the police vehicles says Mazzarco.
            “That’s why I like my car,” says Mazzaraco who is the only officer allowed to drive the computer equipped SUV.
After a few more calls to accidents, a broken-down car and a mistaken dial to 911 at a convenience store, it is back to the station to do some more research and paperwork.
            Mazzaraco gets information on suspects all sorts of ways. First, she will look through previous police files. Then, she calls the local colleges if the person is a college student. She also enters them into whitepages.com and contacts their family members. She has even used Facebook to look up a suspect’s background. She likes to get as much information about a suspect before she actually contacts them for their side of the story.
            “It’s a game,” says Mazzaraco.
            After making some phone calls and printing out information it is back into the Blazer to finish the reports on the computer. While typing in the data she gets a phone call from home.
 It is her three-year-old son wondering if she can come home now. Not until 11 p.m., she tells him. He is a disappointed and says goodbye many more times. Mazzarco is a mother of three boys, ages 15, 14, and 3. Spending time with her family is just as hard to fit into her schedule as trying to fit in time do all the paperwork for her calls. Mazzaraco wants to switch to daytime shifts but does not know if it will be possible. Changing her schedule would be much better for Mazzaraco but the current daytime officers may not want to give up their current shifts.
When she makes a stop at McDonalds to get her usual grilled chicken snack wrap she chats with the drive-thru girl while she waits. She is a familiar face among Ithaca locals. Mazzaraco tries to get to know everyone because she never knows when she may need him or her to help her out. She also thinks it important for people in a community to have good feelings towards their police officers. After her quick food break, it is off to an accident involving a deer near Collegetown.
The deer is a seven-pointer. That is big enough to cause some substantial damage to the hood of the driver’s car. Other officers respond to the call quicker than Mazzaraco and are shooting “Bambi’s mom” to put it out of its suffering. Some drivers pull over to call dibs on the enormous deer while it lays sprawled out on the cement sidewalk. Mazzaraco is just glad she didn’t respond quick enough to have to shoot it or hold it while it was getting shot.
            Her shift is wrapping up and there is still a lot of paperwork to fill out, even though it was a quiet night. After sorting through the loose papers that litter the front of her car, she calls it a night.
            “I’m ready to go home,” she says with a yawn. Finally after a night of watching out for everyone else during the beginning of his or her weekend, she too gets to return home from work.

Articles from my internship at The Cape May Star and Wave

During the summer of 2008 I interned for my local newspaper The Cape May Star and Wave and wrote various community news pieces. Here are two PDFs of my articles and then three links to my other clips.

Blessing of the Waters (http://www.starandwave.com/StarandWavepage2%2005-12-08.pdf) also http://www.mediafire.com/?9qrq2asarzrbus3

Washington Street Mall (http://www.starandwave.com/Starandwave%2006-19-08.pdf)




Exploring Second Life

This is article I wrote during my sophomore year for a Journalism Research course. In 2007 Second Life was emerged into the social media environment and major corporations paid thousands for virtual real estate in hopes of being a leap ahead of competitors in ad space. Three years later, Second Life has faded out with the emergence and strengthening of Twitter, Foursquare and of course, Facebook, but Second Life was quite a visionary development for social media.

Link to download article

Purpose of Blog

I am a recent graduate from Ithaca College's Roy H. Park School of Communications. As an undergrad I majored in Journalism and minored in Anthropology, giving me the skills to understand different cultures, and clearly communicate messages whether it is within a work environment or through the internet, via social media outlets. This is a portfolio of my work- links to articles, videos and images created through Adobe Photoshop and InDesign.