Tag: hearing loss

  • Ohio Board of Pharmacy launches tool to help those living with disabilities

    Ohio Board of Pharmacy launches tool to help those living with disabilities

    By:  Ohio Capital Journal

    The Ohio Board of Pharmacy on Monday launched a tool to help people with low vision, hearing loss, or who face language barriers find pharmacies that can serve them.

    For many, the pharmacy is the most frequent point of contact with the healthcare system. Pharmacists can consult about their medications and help them manage chronic conditions such as hypertension and diabetes.

    The new website will help people with accessibility challenges find pharmacies that can serve their specific needs.

    For example, for patients with low vision can find pharmacies that provide oversize-font labels, prescription readers and braille labels.

    It can point those with hearing loss to pharmacies that have video-relay services and teletypewriters. And it can tell non-English speakers where to find pharmacies with translation services for Spanish, Chinese, Nepali, Somali, and other languages.

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    In a statement, Board of Pharmacy Executive Director Steven W. Schierholt said the new webpage is an attempt to make pharmacy services more widely accessibility.

    “The launch of this convenient online search tool highlights the Board’s ongoing commitment to ensure pharmacy services are accessible to all Ohioans,” he said. “The Board is hopeful that this new webpage will help patients and their loved ones quickly identify pharmacies offering services they need to keep them healthy and safe.”

    However, working against accessibility is a wave of pharmacy closures. For the better part of a decade, independent and small-chain pharmacies have said that huge prescription middlemen — CVS Caremark, OptumRx and and Express Scripts — have been driving them from the field with low reimbursements, fees and clawbacks.

    More recently, large chain pharmacies have been closing in droves.

    CVS is at the end of a three-year process in which it closed 900 pharmacies across the country. Walmart last year asked 16,000 of its pharmacists to cut their hours.

    Bankrupt Rite Aid this year announced the closures of hundreds of stores in Ohio and Michigan. And Walgreens this year said it would close “a significant portion” of 2,000 underperforming stores. That prompted Dave Burke, executive director of the Ohio Pharmacists Association, to say he was worried that pharmacy is becoming an untenable business.

    “If Walgreens can’t make a go of this in 25% of their locations, my fear is that this becomes a much larger problem where other people who provide pharmacy services exit the market in whole or in  part,” he said in September.

    The Federal Trade Commission is investigating whether the giant health conglomerates that own the three big pharmacy middlemen are engaged in anticompetitive practices.

    YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.

    ___________
    Marty Schladen
    Marty Schladen

    Marty Schladen has been a reporter for decades, working in Indiana, Texas and other places before returning to his native Ohio to work at The Columbus Dispatch in 2017. He’s won state and national journalism awards for investigations into utility regulation, public corruption, the environment, prescription drug spending and other matters.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • CVG participates in Sunflower Lanyard Program for hidden disability awareness

    CVG participates in Sunflower Lanyard Program for hidden disability awareness

    Erlanger, Ky. – The Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG) is making travel more accessible for passengers with hidden disabilities or conditions. The airport is participating in the Sunflower Lanyard Program, a worldwide initiative which aims to raise awareness and support those who have autism, hearing loss, dementia, PTSD, anxiety, or other conditions which may not be readily visible.

    Employees and volunteers at many airports, and other public places, identify the sunflower as a symbol that a person may need additional assistance and patience. At CVG, all airlines, concessions, and TSA personnel have received and will continue to receive information about the program and how they can best offer assistance. Wearing a lanyard does not expedite security or other airport processes. Rather, it allows an individual to voluntarily share that they may need a helping hand, more understanding, or more time.

    CVG travelers can request a free sunflower lanyard to be mailed to their residence by emailing info@cvgairport.com or by stopping by the information desk on the Baggage Claim level at the airport. CVG is experiencing high passenger volumes this summer and wants to spread awareness and increase utilization of this program.

    More than 215 airports across the world participate in the Sunflower Lanyard program, including many CVG has nonstop service to including:

    •   Seattle, WA (SEA)
    •   Tampa, FL (TPA)
    •   Boston (BOS)
    •   Dallas (DFW)
    •   Toronto, Canada (YYZ)
    • For a list of airports which participate in the program and more information, visit the Hidden Disabilities Sunflower website at hdsunflower.com.
  • Learn how wounded Vet Joshua Sust will receive “Freedom” with a new home in Mainville

    Learn how wounded Vet Joshua Sust will receive “Freedom” with a new home in Mainville

    by David Miller

    Joshua Sust knew he needed to make a big life change when he found himself getting into the wrong crowd in high school. Motivated to serve his country after the 9/11 attacks, Josh enlisted in the United States Marine Corps as an Infantryman in hopes to better his future and make a difference.

    On November 12, 2011, during his deployment to Musa Quala, Afghanistan with Echo Company, 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines, Cpl Sust was on patrol when his vehicle drove over a pressure plate improvised explosive device (IED). The blast ejected Josh out of the vehicle, resulting in severe damage to his left leg, left arm, traumatic brain injury (TBI), and hearing loss.

    For over three years, doctors attempted limb salvage on his left leg. During that time, Josh endured constant pain and a decreased quality of life. In August 2015, he made the life-changing decision to have an amputation below his left knee.

    Joshua Sust (Provided Photo – HFOT)

    Now medically retired, Joshua enjoys spending his days hunting and fishing. His time outdoors is a form of therapy and builds camaraderie with his friends. A huge Bengals football fan, he likes attending games whenever he can. He also motivates others with similar injuries as a member of the Amputee Coalition peer support effort.

    Cpl Sust was on patrol when his vehicle drove over a pressure plate improvised explosive device (IED).
    (Provided photo by Joshua Sust)

    Joshua posted the above photo on his FaceBook page this last November 12 and said:

     
     Confucius once said “ You have two lives.
     The second one begins when you realize
     you only have one.” 
     
     For me that realization was 9 years ago
     today. Also known as my Big Bang. 
     
     A lot has happened since then. 
     
     My biggest take away has just been to
     grow as a person. Try to show with
     action no matter who we are, where
     we come from or what happened to us
     does not define who we are.
     The greatest gift we have is time.
     Eventually it’s going to run out for all of
     us. When it does I just want to be
     remembered as a good person. 
     
     Enjoy this life, it’s the only one we
     have to live.
     

    Joshua will soon receive the freedom he describes in the video above when he moves into his new home on Zoar Road in Maineville. The digs are being custom-built for him by Homes For Our Troops (HFOT). The home is being built by Michalson Homes of Milford.

    “What that means to me is freedom of movement. I no longer have to think about my next step or if I can use a wheelchair,” said Joshua “At my current home I have to either wear my prosthesis or use crutches because the doorways and hallways are not wide enough.”

    Joshua’s home will be a handicap accessible home. Meaning the doorways are wider, grab bars in the shower, a roll-in shower in the master bedroom, and, hardwood floors on a single slab.

    Provided Photo – HFOT

    Joshua says that receiving a Homes For Our Troops (HFOT) home will be a game-changer. He is friends with several HFOT Veterans and has been inspired by their journey. He has witnessed the difference a specially adapted custom Homes For Our Troops home has made in their lives. In his current home, Joshua often gets discouraged because he cannot use a wheelchair and is forced to use a crutch for everything, including going downstairs to do laundry. With freedom and independence, the home will provide him, he will have more time and energy to host Amputee Coalition Peer Support groups in his home. Originally from Cincinnati, Joshua is choosing to remain in Ohio to be close to family and friends.

    “The neighborhood I will move into can be summed up with being peaceful,” said Joshua. “I am currently in Colerain. I am an avid hunter and fisherman. The idea for moving near Loveland was country living with peace and quiet that I do not currently have.” He does not have a move-in date currently, but he said he is just amazed at the progress that has been completed since September.

    The paying it forward motto of Joshua’s is, “I just do that as much as I can either financially or just helping people out. I’ve been blessed with a lot in life and it would be very selfish of me to just take and not give back as much as I can” He said that he is just trying to be a good human.

    Recent progress on Joshua’s new home (Provided Photo – HFOT)

    HFOT will be holding the community kick off on January 9th at the Loveland VFW.

    There will also be a volunteer day where people in the community come and help with landscaping and laying sod. Joshua has been told that it might have to be after the “key ceremony” due to Covid 19 restrictions.

    “The most important part I’m looking forward to is having my family over for the holidays. Or cookouts in the summer. I just want to share this amazing blessing with the ones I love,” said Joshua.

    Joshua feels grateful to receive a specially adapted custom home and said about Homes For Our Troops, “First and foremost thank you all for this amazing life-changing gift. Without your donations, none of this would be possible. I will not take this for granted and will pay it forward every way I can. You gave me freedom and independence. It is men and women like you that make this country so great.”

    DONATE TO THIS VETERAN’S PROJECT

    *VIRTUAL EVENT* COMMUNITY KICKOFF

    Please join us on Zoom as we kick off the building of Cpl Joshua Sust’s specially adapted custom home!

    Date: Saturday, Jan. 9, 2021
    Time: 10 a.m. EST

     CLICK HERE TO RSVP

    For more information on how to get involved in this project contact our Community Outreach Department at coc@hfotusa.org.