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Health
Related: About this forumIn Baltimore, nurses go door-to-door to bring primary care to the whole neighborhood
https://www.npr.org/sections/shots-health-news/2024/06/11/nx-s1-4997717/nurses-primary-care-community-baltimore-costa-ricaIn Baltimore, nurses go door-to-door to bring primary care to the whole neighborhood
JUNE 11, 2024 5:00 AM ET
FROM TRADEOFFS
By Leslie Walker, Dan Gorenstein
Nurses Lisa Stambolis and Ashley Gresh of the Neighborhood Nursing team talk with Percy Jones. Members of the nursing team visit his apartment building weekly, and Jones credits them with easing his worries about recovering from a hernia surgery when he couldn't get a timely appointment with his doctor.
Dan Gorenstein/Tradeoffs
Raquel Richardson arrived for work at the Johnston Square Apartments in East Baltimore this February expecting to have just another Tuesday. The 31-year-old typically spends her days solving residents problems, answering questions at reception and making maintenance rounds.
That day, however, she noticed a team offering free blood pressure checks in the lobby and decided to sit for one too. Tiffany Riser, a nurse practitioner, was so alarmed by Richardsons high reading that she checked it twice. The young woman, the nurse confirmed, was at immediate risk for a stroke.
Riser only caught this threat to Richardsons health because she was offering convenient, preventive care as part of a new program called Neighborhood Nursing. The idea is to meet people where they are and offer them free health checks, whether they realize they need them or not. If Richardson had waited until symptoms arose, Riser says, the results could have been disastrous.
[...]
Bringing care out of the clinic and into the community
Neighborhood Nursings teams of nurses and community health workers have started making weekly visits like these to the lobbies of three apartment buildings in Johnston Square, a predominantly Black neighborhood disadvantaged by decades of discriminatory housing policies. By next year, the team aims to visit more than 4,000 people in the Baltimore metropolitan area at least once a year.
[...]
JUNE 11, 2024 5:00 AM ET
FROM TRADEOFFS
By Leslie Walker, Dan Gorenstein
Nurses Lisa Stambolis and Ashley Gresh of the Neighborhood Nursing team talk with Percy Jones. Members of the nursing team visit his apartment building weekly, and Jones credits them with easing his worries about recovering from a hernia surgery when he couldn't get a timely appointment with his doctor.
Dan Gorenstein/Tradeoffs
Raquel Richardson arrived for work at the Johnston Square Apartments in East Baltimore this February expecting to have just another Tuesday. The 31-year-old typically spends her days solving residents problems, answering questions at reception and making maintenance rounds.
That day, however, she noticed a team offering free blood pressure checks in the lobby and decided to sit for one too. Tiffany Riser, a nurse practitioner, was so alarmed by Richardsons high reading that she checked it twice. The young woman, the nurse confirmed, was at immediate risk for a stroke.
Riser only caught this threat to Richardsons health because she was offering convenient, preventive care as part of a new program called Neighborhood Nursing. The idea is to meet people where they are and offer them free health checks, whether they realize they need them or not. If Richardson had waited until symptoms arose, Riser says, the results could have been disastrous.
[...]
Bringing care out of the clinic and into the community
Neighborhood Nursings teams of nurses and community health workers have started making weekly visits like these to the lobbies of three apartment buildings in Johnston Square, a predominantly Black neighborhood disadvantaged by decades of discriminatory housing policies. By next year, the team aims to visit more than 4,000 people in the Baltimore metropolitan area at least once a year.
[...]
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In Baltimore, nurses go door-to-door to bring primary care to the whole neighborhood (Original Post)
sl8
Jun 2024
OP
Delarage
(2,354 posts)1. Socialism
That's not how we do it in 'Murica. Here we are either wealthy or just drop dead. Guess these nurses didn't get the memo. What's become of us? More American Carnage
justhanginon
(3,332 posts)2. Nurses are very special people. Love them to death. Having spent significant time with them over many years,
I so admire and thank them for their combination of knowledge and compassion especially when you spend time in hospitals, as I have, and they are your daily caregivers. Friendly faces that really care for you when you are hurting.
Treat them well, it is a tough and demanding job.
3catwoman3
(25,578 posts)3. What a blast from my past - Lisa Stambolis was a student of mine...
...while in her nurse practitioner program way back when - 1992, IIRC, when I was pregnant with our younger son. She impressed me then. Good on her!