The Wright Center for Community Health Caregivers Resource Fair to focus on Alzheimer’s disease and dementia support

The Wright Center for Community Health Scranton will host a Caregivers Resource Fair on Thursday, Nov. 20, offering family members and caregivers of individuals living with Alzheimer’s disease or dementia an opportunity to connect with local support services and learn more about the Scranton JCC’s Café Connections and a regional support group.

Rhonda Fallk, speaker

Rhonda Fallk

The free public event at 501 S. Washington Ave., from 5-7 p.m., will feature keynote speaker, Rhonda Fallk, coordinator and facilitator of Café Connections and a local Alzheimer’s support group. Attendees will also be able to meet representatives from several community agencies representing Age-Friendly Lackawanna, and others offering valuable caregiver information.

Café Connections is a memory café – a welcoming social environment designed for individuals experiencing memory loss, Alzheimer’s disease, or other dementias and their care partners. Participants engage in creative arts, music, games, and other activities that promote connection and joy. Fallk will discuss how the café and support group foster community, reduce isolation, and strengthen the caregiving journey.

Alzheimer’s disease, most common cause of dementia, is a progressive brain disorder that gradually impairs memory, thinking, and daily functioning. According to the Alzheimer’s Association, more than 282,000 Pennsylvanians aged 65 and older are living with the disease. Supported by over 465,000 caregivers who provide 822 million hours of care each year.

The Wright Center for Community Health’s Alzheimer’s and Dementia Care Program offers coordinated, comprehensive support for patients, families, and caregivers. The initiative is part of Age-Friendly Lackawanna, a collaborative network of nearly 30 community organizations dedicated to improving quality of life for older adults across the county.

“Caring for someone living with Alzheimer’s or dementia can be both deeply meaningful and incredibly challenging,” said Nicole Flynn, director of the geriatrics service line at The Wright Center for Community Health. “Events like our Caregivers Resource Fair help families know they’re not alone. By connecting caregivers with local programs, education, and one another, we can build a strong, more compassionate network of support in our community.” 

The Wright Center collaborates with Minicozzi Memorial Race to donate Bombas socks to Boys & Girls Club of NEPA 

Boys and Girls Club pictured with Bombas Donation

The Wright Center for Patient & Community Engagement teamed up with the Captain James R. Minicozzi Memorial Race, through the UNICO Scranton Chapter, to donate 200 pairs of Bombas socks to the Boys & Girls Clubs of Northeastern Pennsylvania for the children’s Christmas party in December. 

Participating in the program, from left, are Jessica Burton, member coordinator for the Boys & Girls Clubs of Northeastern Pennsylvania; Mary Marrara, co-chair of The Wright Center for Patient & Community Engagement Board of Directors and secretary of The Wright Center for Community Health Board of Directors; Leslie Minicozzi Galacci, race director and chairperson for the UNICO Scranton Chapter; and Holly Przasnyski, director of The Wright Center for Patient & Community Engagement and board coordinator for The Wright Center for Community Health and The Wright Center for Patient & Community Engagement. 

Bombas is a comfort-focused, basics apparel brand with a mission to help those experiencing housing insecurity. The company was founded in 2013 when it learned that socks are the No. 1 most requested clothing item at homeless shelters. Bombas currently donates the top 3 most requested clothing items by Giving Partners: socks, underwear, and T-shirts. For every item purchased, a thoughtfully designed item is donated to someone at risk of or currently experiencing homelessness. To date, Bombas has donated over 150 million items. 

New physician joins The Wright Centers for Community Health and Graduate Medical Education

A teaching hospitalist and physician has joined The Wright Centers for Community Health and Graduate Medical Education.  

Dr. Faiza Hassan will serve as a teaching hospitalist for The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education’s Internal Medicine Residency Program, supervising resident physicians in clinical learning environments across Northeast Pennsylvania, including Wilkes-Barre General Hospital and Geisinger Community Health Center.

Dr. Faiza Hassan, headshot

Dr. Faiza Hassan

In this role, Dr. Hassan will support program leadership in developing, implementing, and evaluating curriculum for the internal medicine residency program, as well as mentoring resident learners and assessing their progress. 

Additionally, Dr. Hassan will provide responsive and inclusive whole-person primary health services for individuals 18 and older, including checkups, physicals, screenings, and treatment of common illnesses and injuries at The Wright Center for Community Health Scranton, 501 S. Washington Ave. The community health center is open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. To schedule an appointment, go to TheWrightCenter.org or call 570.230.0019.

Dr. Hassan earned her medical degree from Fatima Jinnah Medical University in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan. She moved to the United States in 2014 and completed her internal medicine residency at Central Michigan University Health in Saginaw, Michigan, in July 2025. The program focuses on training resident physicians for careers as hospitalists and primary care physicians. 

The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education was established in 1976 as the Scranton-Temple Residency Program, a community-based internal medicine residency program. Today, The Wright Center is one of the largest U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration-funded Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education Safety-Net Consortiums in the nation. Together with consortium stakeholders, The Wright Center trains resident and fellow physicians in a community-based, community-needs-responsive workforce development model to advance its mission to improve the health and welfare of communities through responsive, whole-person health services for all and the sustainable renewal of an inspired, competent workforce that is privileged to serve.

The Wright Center’s growing network of community health centers in Lackawanna, Luzerne, Wayne, and Wyoming counties provides affordable, high-quality, whole-person primary health services to everyone, regardless of insurance status, ZIP code, or ability to pay. Patients typically have the convenience of going to a single location to access integrated medical, dental, and behavioral health care. 

Three employees at The Wright Center for Community Health receive statewide awards

Three standout employees from The Wright Center for Community Health received statewide recognition from the Pennsylvania Association of Community Health Centers (PACHC) during its Annual Conference and Clinical Summit in Lancaster.

Each year, PACHC recognizes the outstanding efforts of dedicated individuals and teams who work in and volunteer for community health centers throughout the state with their Awards for Primary Care Excellence, commonly referred to as the APEX awards

Dr. William Dempsey

Dr. William Dempsey

This year, PACHC recognized Dr. William Dempsey, a longtime family physician at The Wright Center for Community Health Clarks Summit, with the Outstanding Primary Care Clinician Award. In addition to his clinical role, Dr. Dempsey serves as The Wright Center’s chief population health value-based care officer. He was selected for his unwavering dedication to expanding access to affordable, high-quality, whole-person primary health services, particularly for vulnerable populations.

The award also highlights his collaborative approach to patient care, which has improved screenings, follow-ups, and outcomes, especially for patients managing mental health challenges, substance use disorders, and chronic conditions.

Catherine "Catie" Nealon

Catherine “Catie” Nealon

PACHC presented Catherine “Catie” Nealon, associate vice president of clinical program development, population health, and the 340B Program at The Wright Center, with its Innovation Award. The award honors initiatives that lead to improved patient outcomes, reduced health disparities, increased patient satisfaction, or greater efficiency and effectiveness in delivering primary care. Nealon was recognized for spearheading several projects that have strengthened The Wright Center’s ability to set and achieve measurable improvement goals.

Her leadership has advanced the integration of innovative software that tracks clinical quality measures – ensuring patients receive appropriate and timely screenings, follow-up care, referrals, and other essential services that enhance overall health outcomes.

Nicole Sekelsky

Nicole Sekelsky

Nicole Sekelsky, the director of needs-responsive outreach engagement and enrollment at The Wright Center, was recognized by PACHC with the Coverage Champion Award. She was selected for her tireless efforts to help individuals and families across Northeast Pennsylvania gain access to health insurance.

Through Sekelsky’s leadership, The Wright Center expanded its presence at community outreach events and developed new opportunities to connect with those in need of coverage. As a result, The Wright Center assisted more than 1,000 people with health insurance inquiries in fiscal year 2025 – a 200% increase over the previous year.

PACHC represents and supports the largest network of primary health care providers in Pennsylvania. Since 1981, PACHC programs and services have supported community health centers in their mission to improve access to quality, affordable primary care for all.

In fiscal year 2024-25, The Wright Center served about 38,300 unique patients at its growing network of community health centers in Lackawanna, Luzerne, Wayne, and Wyoming counties. As a nonprofit Federally Qualified Health Center Look-Alike and safety-net provider, it serves vulnerable and medically underserved populations, regardless of age, ethnic background, ZIP code, insurance status, or ability to pay. It accepts all insurance plans and offers a sliding-fee discount program based on federal poverty guidelines that considers family size and income. No patient is ever turned away due to an inability to pay.

The Wright Center for Community Health’s president & CEO appointed to the Pennsylvania Association of Community Health Centers’ Board of Directors

Dr. Linda Thomas-Hemak, president and CEO of The Wright Centers for Community Health and Graduate Medical Education, has been appointed to serve on the Pennsylvania Association of Community Health Centers’ (PACHC’s) Board of Directors.

PACHC represents the commonwealth’s largest network of primary health care providers that serve nearly 1 million patients annually at more than 475 sites in underserved rural and urban areas in 55 counties. Its 15-member Board of Directors is made up of community health center CEOs from across Pennsylvania, representing a broad spectrum of expertise that spans finance, clinical care, workforce development, advocacy, policy and regulation, nonprofit health care administration, and human resources.

“I am deeply honored and profoundly grateful to join the reputable Board of Directors of the Pennsylvania Association of Community Health Centers. I am excited for the opportunity to collaborate with dedicated and talented colleagues from across our state as we work together to advance access, affordability, and excellence in community-based primary and preventive health services for all Pennsylvanians,” said Dr. Thomas-Hemak. “Together, we will continue to strengthen the mission-driven voice of community health centers to ensure that the patients, families, and communities we are privileged to serve remain at the forefront of health care conversations and strategies.”

Dr. Linda Thomas-Hemack

Dr. Linda Thomas-Hemak, president and CEO of The Wright Centers for Community Health and Graduate Medical Education

Dr. Thomas-Hemak is a quintuple board-certified primary care physician in internal medicine, pediatrics, addiction medicine, obesity medicine, and nutrition. Alongside her executive leadership, she continues to care for multigenerational families at The Wright Center for Community Health Mid Valley in Jermyn, her hometown. She has earned national recognition for advancing innovative community-based primary care delivery models, expanding access to essential health services, and cultivating the current and future interprofessional health care workforce.

A proud graduate of Scranton Preparatory School and the University of Scranton, Dr. Thomas-Hemak went on to earn her medical degree as a Michael DeBakey Scholar at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, followed by completing Harvard’s Combined Internal Medicine/Pediatrics Residency Program in Boston. Guided by a profound sense of service to her community roots, she returned to Northeast Pennsylvania to practice primary care. She joined The Wright Center in 2001, became its president in 2007, and assumed the role of CEO in 2012. Anchored in a people-over-profit philosophy, Dr. Thomas-Hemak has transformed The Wright Center into one of the nation’s largest Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education Safety-Net Consortiums, shifting physician training from traditional academic medical centers into community-based health centers, hospitals, and specialty networks. Today, nearly 200 physicians and 250 interprofessional learners are trained each year at The Wright Center, with many choosing to remain and serve the local communities. She has also overseen the growth of a network of 13 community health centers and a mobile medical and dental unit, Driving Better Health, across Lackawanna, Luzerne, Wayne, and Wyoming counties, ensuring that rural and underserved populations receive the compassionate, high-quality, whole-person primary health services they deserve. Under her leadership, The Wright Center has integrated primary medical, mental, behavioral, dental, and school-based health services, and advanced health information technology to deliver accessible and coordinated care for all.

Under Dr. Thomas-Hemak’s leadership, the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) designated The Wright Center as a Federally Qualified Health Center Look-Alike in 2019, which unlocks significant federal resources for the region and vastly improves access to high-quality, whole-person primary health services for patients and families. The Wright Center has earned numerous additional accolades under her stewardship, including: designation as a Pennsylvania Opioid Use Disorder Center of Excellence and Coordination Center for Medication-Assisted Treatment; a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Top 30 Site for National Primary Care Innovations; recognition as both a University of California, San Francisco, Center of Excellence in Primary Care and an American Association of Medical Colleges’ Premier Primary Care Residency; membership in the prestigious 2024 American Medical Association ChangeMedEd Consortium; and leading partner in the Healthy Maternal Opiate Medical Support (Healthy MOMS) Program for pregnant women and new mothers with substance use disorder. The Wright Center for Community Health achieved National Committee for Quality Assurance Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) certifications at its Clarks Summit, Mid Valley, Scranton, and Wilkes-Barre locations and also Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF) Certification for Care Management Services Coordination for Substance Use Disorders and Addiction.

Map of The Wright Center for Community Health locations

The Wright Center’s community health centers.

A founding member of the consortium that established the Scranton-based Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine, Dr. Thomas-Hemak currently also serves as governor for the Eastern Region of the Pennsylvania Chapter of the American College of Physicians (PA-ACP), the nation’s largest medical-specialty organization, and is vice president, as well as a founding board member, of the American Association of Teaching Health Centers, which represents community-based teaching health centers that train primary care physicians.

She serves on numerous local, regional, and national health care and medical education nonprofit governing boards, cross-sector committees, and workgroups, including HRSA’s Council on Graduate Medical Education, a federal advisory committee that assesses and recommends actions on physician workforce trends, training issues, and financing policies, and the Partnership for Quality Measurement’s Endorsement & Maintenance Committee Advisory Group on Cost and Efficiency, which is a federally funded and consensus-based organization that brings together leaders and experts from across the health care spectrum to evaluate and endorse health care performance measures.

She is also the immediate past chair and executive committee member of the Northeast Pennsylvania Area Health Education Center (NEPA AHEC), a member of the National Association of Community Health Centers’ (NACHC) New Health Center CEO Affinity Group for Women Leaders, and an advisory board member of The Institute.

Dr. Thomas-Hemak has received several distinguished state and national awards for her mission-driven leadership, mentorship, and advocacy initiatives, including: the NACHC 2025 Lifetime Achievement Award; the Greater Scranton Chamber of Commerce 2025 Athena Award for career excellence, service, and women’s empowerment; the 2024 Wilford Payne Health Center Mentor Award from PACHC; the 2024 Hometown Scholars Advocacy Award from NACHC and A.T. Still University; the 2022 Elizabeth K. Cooke Advocacy MVP Award from NACHC for her efforts in engaging Congress and expanding grassroots advocacy; and the 2020 Ann Preston Women in Medicine Award from the PA-ACP for advancing women’s leadership in medicine. City & State Pennsylvania also named her in 2024 a Trailblazer in Health Care and one of Pennsylvania’s 100 most powerful and influential female leaders.

She and her husband, Mark, have three children, Mason, Maya, and Antoinette. Dr. Thomas-Hemak is the daughter of Johanna Cavalieri Thomas, who lives in Archbald, and the late William Thomas.

The Wright Center welcomes vice president of academic affairs, associate designated institutional official

An educator with 35 years of experience will provide administrative and programmatic leadership across all educational activities, partnerships, and new educational initiatives for The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education.

Mahon

Michael Mahon, Ph.D., M.B.A., will serve as the vice president of academic affairs and associate designated institutional official, overseeing the educational experience of medical residents and fellows and supervising graduate medical education staff. Each year, nearly 200 physician learners gain hands-on experience in physician-led, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education-accredited Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, and Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation residencies, as well as Internal Medicine-Geriatrics Integrated Pathway, and Cardiovascular Disease, Gastroenterology, and Geriatrics fellowships.

Mahon, a Clarks Summit resident, earned a bachelor’s degree in secondary education and a master’s in school administration from the University of Scranton. After earning a doctorate in human development from Marywood University, he went on to complete a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Before joining The Wright Center, Mahon served as a public school superintendent for 25 years, including a tenure of 17 years in the Abington Heights School District. He began his career in education in 1990 as a science teacher at Scranton Preparatory School.

The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education was established in 1976 as the Scranton-Temple Residency Program, a community-based internal medicine residency program. Today, The Wright Center is one of the largest U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration-funded Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education Safety-Net Consortiums in the nation. Together with consortium stakeholders, The Wright Center trains resident and fellow physicians in a community-based, community-needs-responsive workforce development model to advance its mission to improve the health and welfare of communities through responsive, whole-person health services for all and the sustainable renewal of an inspired, competent workforce that is privileged to serve. 

For more information, go to TheWrightCenter.org or call 570-866-3017.