Doctors turn up the volume on colon cancer awareness with ‘Louder Than Cancer!’ concert in Scranton

A group of physicians who share a passion for both medical education and rock music will take the stage for a one-of-a-kind community concert, “Louder Than Cancer!,” on Friday, March 27, at the Theater at North in Scranton. Doors open at 5 p.m. and is part of National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month, aiming to raise awareness about the importance of preventive screenings.

The educational event will feature Rocdoc and the Healers, a rock band made up of medical professionals and musicians who use music as a platform to spark conversations about health. In addition to live music, the evening will include educational information tables highlighting the importance of colorectal cancer screenings and connecting attendees with regional providers of whole-person primary health services.

Colon cancer awareness concert poster

The idea for “Louder Than Cancer!” was conceptualized by Dr. Vikas Khurana, program director of The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education’s Gastroenterology Fellowship Program. More than 20 years ago, Dr. Khurana along with Dr. Stephen Eskin, now the lead singer of the rock band and a fellow gastroenterologist, dreamed of combining their passions for medicine with music. That vision is finally coming to fruition, grounded in a simple but powerful belief: music can make a deeper, more lasting impact than wordy teaching alone.

The Wright Centers for Community Health and Graduate Medical Education are the platinum sponsor of the event, reinforcing their shared commitment to prevention, education, and community well-being.

“Colon cancer is one of the most preventable and treatable cancers when it’s caught early, yet too many people delay or avoid screening,” said Dr. Eskin. “Music has a way of breaking down barriers. If we can get people in the door for a great rock show and leave them feeling empowered to take charge of their colon health, then we’ve done something truly meaningful.”

Dr. Eskin will be joined on stage by Dr. Reese Hofstrand, a fellow physician in The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education’s Gastroenterology Fellowship Program, along with the Giron brothers, rounding out the band’s high-energy lineup.

Vikas Khurana

Dr. Vikas Khurana

Peter Iskander's smiling portrait with blue background in red shirt and back tie

Dr. Peter Iskander

Reese's headshot with blue background in white coat and yellow tie

Dr. Reese Hofstrand

The educational program and concert are being organized by Dr. Peter Iskander, also a fellow physician in The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education’s Gastroenterology Fellowship Program, who is leading efforts to blend entertainment with evidence-based health education.

Tickets for “Louder Than Cancer!” are free and available through Eventbrite. While there is no cost to attend, audience members are asked to complete a brief educational survey about colon health as part of the program’s awareness initiative.

“This is about meeting people where they are in our communities,” Dr. Eskin added. “We want the message to be clear: screening saves lives, and taking that first step doesn’t have to be intimidating.”

For more information and to reserve your free tickets, visit Eventbrite and search for “Louder Than Cancer!”

Rocdoc and the Healers

Rocdoc and the Healers, a rock band made up of medical professionals and musicians who use music as a platform to spark conversations about health, will perform at a one-of-a-kind community concert, “Louder Than Cancer!,” on Friday, March 27, at the Theater at North in Scranton.

The Wright Center for Community Health offers free sessions to educate families, caregivers about dementia

The Wright Center for Community Health, in collaboration with Age Friendly Lackawanna, is offering free, informative sessions to help people better understand and support loved ones with dementia.  

Nicole Flynn, director of The Wright Center’s geriatrics service line

Led by a specially trained Dementia Champion, these one-hour sessions focus on increasing knowledge about dementia and small, practical, everyday ways to support people who have it. Participants can attend a session in person or virtually. 

“We know that receiving a diagnosis of dementia can be overwhelming,” said Nicole Flynn, the director of The Wright Center’s geriatrics service line. “These sessions are a great way to learn more and become more familiar with how to help your loved ones with dementia.” 

Dementia Champion sessions will be available on:

  • Feb. 17 from 3-4 p.m. at The Wright Center for Community Health Scranton, 501 S. Washington Ave.
  • March 13 from 2-3 p.m. at The Wright Center for Community Health Mid Valley, 5 S. Washington Ave.
  • April 15 from 3-4 p.m. at The Wright Center for Community Health Wilkes-Barre, 169 N. Pennsylvania Ave.
  • May 15 from 2-3 p.m. at The Wright Center for Community Health Mid Valley, 5 S. Washington Ave.
  • June 23 from3-4 p.m. at The Wright Center for Community Health Scranton, 501 S. Washington Ave.
  • July 15 from 3-4 p.m. at The Wright Center for Community Health Wilkes-Barre, 169 N. Pennsylvania Ave.
  • Sept. 22 from 3-4 p.m. at The Wright Center for Community Health Scranton, 501 S. Washington Ave.
  • Oct. 23 from 2-3 p.m. at The Wright Center for Community Health Mid Valley, 5 S. Washington Ave.
  • Nov. 18 from 3-4 p.m. at The Wright Center for Community Health Wilkes-Barre, 169 N. Pennsylvania Ave.

For more information, including how to join a session virtually, contact Flynn at [email protected]

HRSA recognizes The Wright Center for Community Health for dedication to excellence, continued service as a health center

The Wright Center for Community Health was recognized for its commitment to health care accountability and quality by the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).

On Jan. 22, HRSA announced that The Wright Center had been awarded the 2024 Operational Site Visit Badge. This achievement reflects The Wright Center’s dedication to excellence, operational integrity, and continued service to its patients and the communities it serves. 

The award comes after a virtual Operational Site Visit that determined The Wright Center demonstrated full compliance with all Health Center Program requirements. HRSA’s Bureau of Primary Health Care oversees the Health Center Program, which functions as the foundation for ensuring effective operations and high-quality care delivery. Operational Site Visits to health care centers serve as an essential tool for objectively assessing compliance with the Health Center Program requirements while supporting continuous improvement. 

Badge - Certification of Compliance Operational Site Visit

In 2024, more than 32.4 million people used HRSA-funded health centers, such as The Wright Center, for whole-person primary health services. Each year, HRSA Health Center Program awardees and look-alikes are required to report a core set of information, including data on patient characteristics, services provided, clinical processes and related health outcomes, patients’ use of services, staffing, costs, and revenues.

Moses Taylor grant supports peer specialist training program

The Wright Center for Community Health completed a unique program to improve mental health treatment across the region with a $300,000 grant from the Moses Taylor Foundation.

The Wright Center offers a wide range of mental and behavioral health services to help people of all ages address emotional challenges. The Moses Taylor Foundation grant supported the establishment of an integrated peer support service line that encompasses mental health and whole-person primary health services. It also provided training for individuals seeking to become certified peer specialists, expanding the number of professionals available to support patients while reducing the financial burden that often acts as an obstacle to obtaining training and certification for the position. 

Shannon Osborne

Shannon Osborne

Certified peer specialists are individuals who live with or have lived with a mental health condition, complete an approved course of training in peer support services, and pass an exam administered by the Pennsylvania Certification Board to earn their certification. In total, 20 people completed the two-week class hosted by The Wright Center and are preparing to take the certification exam. An additional 10 individuals – many from community partner organizations that offer peer services – have completed supervisor training.

“This training opportunity is rare in Northeast Pennsylvania, even though the demand for mental health services is high,” said Shannon Osborne, the manager of enterprise trauma-competent wellness initiatives at The Wright Centers for Community Health and Graduate Medical Education. “This program is another way The Wright Center, with the support of the Moses Taylor Foundation, is investing in workforce development, especially when it comes to increasing access to mental health treatment in the region.”

These in-demand professionals draw on their lived experience with mental health recovery to offer support and assistance to others in their recovery and community integration or reintegration process.

Lou Strazzeri

Lou Strazzeri

Certified peer specialists work closely with licensed professionals and health support workers to offer increased hope, empowerment, and quality of life while reducing hospital readmissions, including fewer recurrent psychiatric hospitalizations. They can enhance the effectiveness of clinical treatment services by developing recovery supports and helping individuals and their families become integral parts of their communities.

The Moses Taylor grant will also help The Wright Center develop its peer support service line and offer opportunities to community partners interested in expanding their mental health service lines, either by employing certified peer specialists or launching a peer specialist program to support their clients.

“Training more certified peer specialists will enhance our behavioral health services, which will be a great addition to our fully integrated, whole-person primary health services,” said Lou Strazzeri, director of behavioral health integration, social and case management services, and supervisor of certified peer support specialists at The Wright Center for Community Health.

Scott Constantini

Scott Constantini

Scott Constantini, associate vice president of primary care and recovery services integration at The Wright Center for Community Health, added, “This grant will help us and our community partners expand our workforce and increase access to much-needed mental health peer services throughout Northeast Pennsylvania.”

The Wright Center is celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2026. Established in 1976, The Wright Centers for Community Health, Graduate Medical Education, and Patient & Community Engagement are a cornerstone of health care in the region. This physician-led, community-owned nonprofit drives innovation and workforce development, employing nearly 670 professionals – including 177 physician residents and fellows – and training more than 200 interprofessional health care learners annually.

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, including a mobile medical and dental unit called Driving Better Health. As a nonprofit Federally Qualified Health Center Look-Alike and safety-net provider, it serves everyone, regardless of insurance status, ZIP code, or ability to pay. No patient is turned away due to an inability to pay.  For more information, visit TheWrightCenter.org or call 570-230-0019.

New pharmacy at The Wright Center for Community Health Wilkes-Barre opens March 16

HNL Lab Medicine will also open new on-site walk-in lab on March 23

The new pharmacy at The Wright Center for Community Health Wilkes-Barre

The Wright Center for Community Health Wilkes-Barre, 169 N. Pennsylvania Ave., will open an on-site pharmacy in mid-March.

The Wright Center for Community Health will expand access to essential health services in Luzerne County in March with the opening of a new on-site pharmacy at its community health center in Wilkes-Barre.

The 1,400-square-foot pharmacy, located at 169 N. Pennsylvania Ave., Wilkes-Barre, will be open to patients of The Wright Center as well as members of the surrounding communities. The pharmacy provides convenient access to prescription medications and pharmacist support as part of The Wright Center’s integrated, whole-person primary and preventive health services delivery
model.

The pharmacy will open Monday, March 16 and serve the public from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Operations will be led by three licensed pharmacists. Most common prescriptions can be filled while customers wait, while some specialty medications may require 24 hours’ notice.

Jignesh Sheth

Dr. Jignesh Sheth

“The opening of our Wilkes-Barre pharmacy reflects The Wright Center’s ongoing commitment to expanding access to the health services our communities need and deserve,” said Dr. Jignesh Sheth, senior vice president and enterprise chief operations and strategy officer. “Several pharmacies around the region have closed over the past few years, so we’re excited to offer this service to our communities, whether they are Wright Center patients or obtain medical care elsewhere.”

The pharmacy will operate alongside a new 1,400-square-foot laboratory that will be operated by HNL Lab Medicine for routine testing, further enhancing the services available at The Wright Center for Community Health Wilkes-Barre. Together, the pharmacy and laboratory help reduce barriers to care for patients who might otherwise struggle to access these resources, Dr. Sheth said.

The new laboratory in Wilkes-Barre, which opens March 23, marks the third HNL Lab Medicine patient service center located within a Wright Center community health center, joining sites at The Wright Center for Community Health Mid Valley, 5 S. Washington Ave., Jermyn, and The Wright Center for Community Health Scranton, 501 S. Washington Ave.

Plans call for the Wilkes-Barre pharmacy to also deliver patient prescriptions to Wright Center locations in Lackawanna, Wayne, and Wyoming counties. Patients will eventually be able to pick up prescriptions at the community health centers most convenient for them.

The Wright Center is celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2026. Founded in 1976, The Wright Centers for Community Health, Graduate Medical Education, and Patient & Community Engagement are a physician-led, community-owned nonprofit and a cornerstone of health care in the region. The organization employs more than 665 professionals – including nearly 200 resident and fellow physicians, and trains more than 200 interprofessional health care learners each year.

In fiscal year 2024-25, The Wright Center served about 38,300 unique patients across its growing network of community health centers in Lackawanna, Luzerne, Wayne, and Wyoming counties, including its mobile medical and dental unit, Driving Better Health. As a nonprofit Federally Qualified Health Center Look-Alike and safety-net provider, The Wright Center serves all patients, regardless of insurance status, ZIP code, or ability to pay. No patient is turned away due to an inability to pay.

Operating for over 25 years, HNL Lab Medicine is a leading multi-regional, full-service medical laboratory providing testing and related services to physician offices, hospitals, long-term care facilities, employers, and industrial accounts throughout Pennsylvania. HNL Lab Medicine has more than 50 patient service centers in Pennsylvania and has 31 acute care laboratories within partners’ hospital sites. The HNL Lab Medicine team consists of over 2,022 employees, including over 109 industry-leading pathologists and scientific directors. HNL Lab Medicine’s multidisciplinary team of experts is focused on providing expert medical and technical diagnostic guidance so that patients may get diagnosed and treated faster.

The new pharmacy at The Wright Center for Community Health Wilkes-Barre

The Wright Center for Community Health Wilkes-Barre’s new on-site pharmacy opens on Monday, March 16, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., at 169 N. Pennsylvania Ave. The new pharmacy’s services will be available for patients and the general public. For more information, visit TheWrightCenter.org or call 570-491-0126.

The Wright Center achieves Gold Advocacy Center of Excellence

The National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC) again recognized The Wright Center for Community Health as a Gold Advocacy Center of Excellence (ACE). 

To earn the national designation, community health centers must demonstrate advocacy at all levels of government to champion investment in the affordable, innovative care that strengthens communities. In 2022, The Wright Center became the first community health center in Pennsylvania to earn the gold standard. NACHC awards three levels of ACEs: bronze, silver, and gold. 

NACHC’s ACE designation is valid for two years and recognizes organizations that demonstrate sustained engagement, measurable success, and an ongoing commitment to making advocacy a strategic priority. ACEs actively participate in NACHC initiatives and federal policy forums, collaborate closely with their state primary care associations, and engage in platforms that address critical state and local policy issues affecting community health centers and the patients they serve.

Advocacy Center of Excellence Gold

“Achieving Gold Advocacy Center of Excellence status reflects our team’s unwavering commitment to the patients and communities we serve,” said Brian Ebersole, senior vice president of strategic enterprise and ecosystem development at The Wright Centers for Community Health and Graduate Medical Education. “At The Wright Center, we believe high-quality care goes hand in hand with advocacy at the local, state, and national levels to ensure care is accessible and affordable for all. This recognition affirms our role as a leading voice for health, health care, and medical education in Northeast Pennsylvania and beyond.”

To earn ACE status, a community health center must complete a checklist of activities and accomplishments as outlined by NACHC. The Wright Center regularly hosts elected officials at its community health centers, including a recent visit by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz and U.S. Representative Robert Bresnahan Jr.

Additionally, The Wright Center’s employees develop and write guest editorials that raise awareness and address important public health issues that affect community health centers and patients. An in-house advocacy committee offers training for staff and learners. The executive leadership team participates in important meetings at the local, state, and national levels to advance responsive solutions to health care delivery issues and health outcomes.

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, including a mobile medical and dental unit called Driving Better Health. As a nonprofit Federally Qualified Health Center Look-Alike and safety-net provider, it serves everyone, regardless of insurance status, ZIP code, or ability to pay. No patient is turned away due to an inability to pay. The Wright Center accepts all insurance plans and offers a sliding-fee discount program to ensure whole-person primary and preventive health services are affordable for everyone. For more information, visit TheWrightCenter.org or call 570-230-0019.