Le Centre Wright pour la santé communautaire apporte du réconfort avec des "sacs de chaleur".

The Wright Center for Community Health Auxiliary is sponsoring a “Bag of Warmth” Project this winter season to make warm winter clothing items, such as hats, scarves and gloves available to those who may need them. Items have been packaged so they are easily accessible for anonymous pick up by anyone who needs them beginning Monday January 21, 2019. The “Bags of Warmth” can be found at The Wright Center for Community Health Mid Valley Practice (5 South Washington Avenue, Jermyn, PA) as well as the Lackawanna County Courthouse Square in downtown Scranton (200 North Washington Avenue Scranton, PA).

Led by Auxiliary President Gerri McAndrew, collection boxes for anyone who would like to make a donation have been placed in all of The Wright Center for Community Health practices and administrative office locations. If you are interested in donating items or making a monetary donation, please contact Gerri at 570-267-4199.

The Wright Center for Community Health Auxiliary hosts fundraisers throughout the year to assist patients, community members and local non-profit organizations. The group spearheads food banks, provides gas cards and leads special outreach efforts to make personal connections with patients, ease hardships and build a sense of community. 

Salon de la santé et fête des troncs 2018

Nous espérons que vous vous joindrez à nous pour le salon de la santé communautaire et la fête des troncs 2018 !

[deux_tiers]
[/two_third][one_third]Localisation : The Wright Center for Primary Care Mid Valley (5 South Washington Avenue, Jermyn, PA)
Date : Dimanche 28 octobre -  Le temps : 10h00 - 14h00
L'événement de cette année comprendra Cours de yoga gratuits pour enfants et adultes - Événement "Wonderful Women" pour clôturer le mois de sensibilisation au cancer du sein - Dépistages de santé et de bien-être - Collecte de sang par Life Source PA - Décoration de citrouilles - Tombolas et jeux - Course d'obstacles - Peinture faciale - Rafraîchissements

Les points forts de cette année sont les suivants
Yoga gratuit pour les enfants : 10h30

Troncs et friandises : 11h30 - 13h
Yoga gratuit pour les adultes : 13 h
Événement Wonderful Women pour conclure le Mois de la sensibilisation au cancer du sein[/one_third]

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Scholarly paper highlights partnership of Behavioral Health Initiative to combat psychiatrist shortage

A 2015 white paper published by a physician staffing firm called it a “silent shortage.” In a country gripped by the grim phenomenon dubbed “deaths of despair,” “it” is a severe and under-appreciated shortage of the very people with the skills and knowledge necessary to reverse the trend. Our region, like the rest of the nation, needs psychiatrists.
How bad is the problem? The late Richard Cooper, M.D. of the University of Pennsylvania, a noted national authority on physician supply, distribution and utilization, finds that a population of 100,000 should have 14.7 psychiatrists, or one for every 6,800 people. The counties of northeastern Pennsylvania average about 8.5, according to Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care. Moreover, the few psychiatrists we have must cope with three of the “Top 10” diseases most associated with lost quality of life. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), “unipolar depressive disorders” are the No. 1 cause of medical disability in the United States. Dementias, including Alzheimer’s, and alcohol and ecstasy disorders come in at No. 3 and No. 4. The escalating opioid crisis is, no doubt, claiming its place as it climbs the rank order.
Despite the suffering and lost years of life caused by (often undiagnosed) behavioral and mental health diseases, we still cling to outdated ideas about psychiatry like, “If people just had more willpower and determination, they’d “snap out of” their depression,” and, “Addiction is a sign of moral weakness, so patients have only themselves to blame.” The healthcare system is fragmented; it is not built on resiliency, but on brokenness. The persistence of these discredited notions about mental health has led to what should be a national wake-up call – for the first time in decades, mortality rates for a certain U.S. demographic (whites aged 45 to 54 – an important demographic in NEPA) rose by half a percent a year since 1998. The cause of these deaths is overwhelmingly attributed to suicide and addiction. No other rich country has experienced anything like these “deaths of despair.” As Angus Deaton, an economist, Nobel Laureate and co-author of the paper which first identified the trend, told the Washington Post, “That means half a million people are dead who should not be dead. That’s about 40 times the Ebola stats. You’re getting up there with HIV-AIDS.”
Although Dr. Deaton’s ground-breaking report was published in 2015, a Community Health Needs Assessment conducted by the Institute for Public Policy and Economic Development in 2012 identified mental and behavioral health challenges, including higher-than-national-average suicide rates, in our region. That’s when Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine convened an advisory group for the school’s Behavioral Health Initiative (BHI). The advisory committee was charged with identifying gaps in access to mental health services in several counties of northeastern Pennsylvania. Market intelligence firm, Open Minds, working on behalf of BHI, concluded that a seven-county region of NEPA would need to increase its number of psychiatrists by 40 percent simply to meet current need. With that data, at the time of its formal launch in 2015, BHI generated a key recommendation: the School of Medicine and The Wright Center should co-create a psychiatry residency program to train new doctors in this desperately needed specialty. All parties humbly recognized a new psychiatry residency could serve as an educational fulcrum for much larger inter-professional workforce development initiatives by leveraging this powerful partnership.
This July, just two years after BHI’s 2015 launch (light speed in academia), we are proud to announce that The Wright Center will welcome four residents to its brand-new, ACGME (Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education) accredited psychiatry residency program. The fact that one of these new psychiatry residents is also a 2017 graduate of Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine makes this accomplishment all the more meaningful. Psychiatry training takes four years, so once all four classes are filled, we will train 16 residents here in Scranton and Wilkes Barre, and graduate four newly-minted psychiatrists per year.
The School of Medicine and The Wright Center have long been partners committed to addressing the specific health needs of our community, with a formal commitment solidified through the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding in 2015. That’s why we and our BHI partners worked so swiftly and purposefully to establish the psychiatry residency program despite the significant challenges of funding and accreditation. Wide-scale community collaboration, including Scranton Counseling Center’s generosity with the time and the expertise of Sanjay Chandragiri, MD, our pioneering program director, has generated the opportunity for four new doctors to learn how to treat and heal patients struggling with behavioral health issues. In this way, our community is taking an important step toward reducing “deaths of despair” in our region, replacing years lost to disability with years of enhanced health and wellbeing.


Linda Thomas-Hemak est présidente-directrice générale du Wright Center Medical Group et du Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education, le plus grand consortium de centres de santé universitaires (THC) financé par la HRSA aux États-Unis.
Terri Lacey, RN, est directrice exécutive de la Behavioral Health Initiative de la Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine, une initiative communautaire collaborative visant à combler les lacunes systémiques dans les services de santé mentale et d'abus de substances disponibles dans le nord-est et le centre-nord de la Pennsylvanie.

Rétrospective : 25 ans de transformation au Wright Center

1991 a été une grande année - l'internet a été ouvert pour la première fois à l'utilisation commerciale, Seinfeld a fait ses débuts sur le réseau, le salaire minimum a culminé à 4,25 dollars et nous avons été gratifiés de la présence de Paula Abdu, Color Me Badd et Nirvana. De nos jours, il est nécessaire et important d'externaliser l'assurance et la comptabilité(externaliser votre backend) lorsque l'on navigue en ligne. Depuis notre époque glorieuse de la fin du 20e siècle, le prix de l'essence a triplé et le coût d'une maison a quadruplé, mais il y a un chiffre que nous sommes heureux de voir augmenter.

La taille de notre classe de diplômés a augmenté de 743 %.

Diplômés de 1991 vs 2016

En 1991, ce que nous appelons aujourd'hui le Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education était le Scranton-Temple Residency Program (STRP). Fondé en 1977, le STRP est le fruit de l'imagination de Robert E. Wright, MD, FACP. Il y a vingt-cinq ans, en 1991, notre équipe a eu la chance de s'entretenir avec le Dr Wright et d'en apprendre davantage sur ce qui l'a inspiré pour créer le Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education (Centre Wright pour l'enseignement médical supérieur).
Bien que beaucoup de choses aient changé dans le pays depuis 1991, l'idéologie et la méthodologie de notre programme de résidence sont restées fidèles à ses humbles débuts. Pour en savoir plus sur les motivations du Dr Wright pour le programme, cliquez sur la coupure de presse ci-dessous :
[one_third]Portrait du Dr. Wright 1991[/one_third]
[deux_tiers_dernier]Interview du Dr. Wright 1991[/two_third_last]