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The Coastal Health District of Georgia serves the counties of Bryan, Camden, Chatham, Effingham, Glynn, Liberty, Long & McIntosh

McIntosh News


McIntosh County Health Department Invites Residents to “Pink Out” Oct. 15 Bucs Game

The McIntosh County Health Department, in conjunction with Susan G. Komen Coastal Georgia Affiliate, wants McIntosh County residents to wear pink on Thursday, October 15, when the McIntosh County Academy Buccaneers take on Bryan County at 7 p.m. The “Pink Out” is part of an effort to raise breast cancer awareness in the community.

McIntosh County Health Department staff will have a display set up at the game with important information about breast cancer screening along with free giveaways to promote Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Breast cancer is the second leading cause of death in women and it is estimated that 40,290 women will die from breast cancer in 2015.

“Early detection plays a huge role when it comes to breast cancer survival,” said McIntosh County Health Department Nurse Manager, Paige Lightsey, R.N. “This event is our way of educating our own about breast cancer and letting our residents know about resources that are available to them when it comes to breast health.”

This is the fourth year that the McIntosh County Health Department used grant funding from Susan G. Komen Coastal Georgia Affiliate to provide breast cancer community outreach at a Bucs game. Up to 75 percent of the Affiliate’s net income goes toward funding grants to local hospitals and community organizations that provide breast health education and breast cancer screening and treatment programs for medically underserved women.

McIntosh County Health Department Schedules Breast Screening/Mammogram Event for October 22

The McIntosh County Health Department, in conjunction with Susan G. Komen Coastal Georgia Affiliate and the Southeast Georgia Health System (SGHS), will offer free breast exams and mammograms to women over the age of 40 who have not had a mammogram in the last year and who meet certain criteria, including those with no insurance or limited insurance coverage.

Mammogram screenings will be provided by the SGHS Wellness on Wheels (WOW) mobile health vehicle in the parking lot of the Bi-Lo located at 1338 North Way in Darien on Thursday, October 22, from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

For more information, please call the Health Department at 832-5473.

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Health District Officials Encourage Mosquito Precautions

Summer is under way and as more people make their way outside for summertime activities, Coastal Health District officials want to remind residents to take precautions to avoid mosquitoes. Mosquito bites are annoying but can also cause diseases such as West Nile Virus (WNV), Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE), and Chikungunya.

WNV is transmitted by the bite of infected mosquitoes. About 80 percent of people infected with WNV will not show any symptoms at all; however, cases can range from mild to severe. Mosquitoes that carry the West Nile Virus are more likely to bite during the evening, night, and early morning. EEE is a mosquito-borne virus that causes swelling of the brain. In horses, it is fatal 70 to 90 percent of the time. Horse and large animal owners are encouraged to vaccinate their animals against the virus and to clean out watering sources, such as buckets and troughs, every three-to-four days to prevent mosquitoes from breeding there. The most common symptoms of Chikungunya are fever and joint pain and symptoms usually begin 3–7 days after being bitten by an infected mosquito. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), reported cases of Chikungunya thus far in 2015 have occurred in travelers returning from affected areas including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

“The common thread among these illnesses is that they are transmitted through mosquito bites,” said Diane Weems, M.D., Coastal Health District Health Director. “The more precautions we take against getting bitten by mosquitoes the better our chances are of avoiding any mosquito-borne diseases.”

Mosquito Prevention

The best way to prevent mosquito-related diseases is to avoid mosquito bites. Mosquitoes breed in standing water which is why it is important to remove water-holding containers (buckets, barrels, flower pots, tarps, etc.; drill holes in tire swings so water drains out; keep children’s wading pools empty and on their sides when they’re not being used; change water frequently in pet dishes; change bird bath water at least twice a week; and avoid using saucers under outdoor potted plants.

The following tips can help lessen the risk of getting bitten by mosquitoes:

  • DRAIN all standing water.
  • Avoid DAWN and DUSK when mosquitoes are most active.
  • DRESS appropriately in long sleeves and pants.
  • DEFEND or DEET yourself against mosquitoes with an effective repellent. Repellents containing DEET, picaridin, IR3535, and oil of lemon eucalyptus and para-menthane-diol products provide long lasting protection.
  • DOORS and windows should be in good condition.

McIntosh County Health Department to Hold Child Car Seat Safety Check on June 19

The McIntosh County Health Department, with help from Georgia State Patrol Post 11 in Hinesville, will hold a child car seat safety check from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Friday, June 19, at the health department located at 1335 Hwy. 57 in Townsend. Certified Child Passenger Safety Technicians will be available to examine child safety seats for recalls and to ensure correct installation in vehicles.

Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among children ages 2-14 and the leading cause of injury-related death for children under two. Each year an estimated 2,446 children die in motor vehicle crashes. When installed and used correctly, child car seats and seat belts can prevent injuries and save lives.

The McIntosh County Health Department child car seat safety check event is an opportunity for parents, parents-to-be, and child caregivers to have their car seats checked by Certified Child Passenger Safety Technicians for proper installation. The event is made possible through a grant from the Miller Family Fund, a component fund of the Communities of Coastal Georgia Foundation. The Health Department received funding earlier this year to educate families on the proper installation of car seats and general seatbelt safety.

The event is free and open to the public and no appointment is necessary.

Free HIV Testing Events Scheduled in Chatham and Glynn Counties

The U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that one out of five people living with HIV/AIDS in the U.S. is unaware of their HIV status. National Testing Day is an opportunity for people to learn of their HIV status and to gain knowledge to take control of their lives. The Chatham and Glynn CARE Centers, Coastal Health District centers for expanded HIV services, are pleased to offer free HIV testing as part of this global effort.

The Coastal Health District HIV program will offer free HIV testing at several locations in June in observance of National HIV Testing Day. Testing will be done without the use of a needle and those tested will get results in 20 minutes. A follow-up visit will be scheduled for anyone who tests positive and counseling will be made available to those individuals.

Volunteers are also needed to help with the HIV testing events. Volunteer positions include greeters, client intake specialists, data entry specialists, client flow staff, and form couriers.

For more information, please call Diane DeVore at (912) 353-3276 or e-mail Diane.DeVore@dph.ga.gov

 

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Public Health and College Officials Work Together to Prevent Spread of Chickenpox

Chickenpox, a highly contagious disease caused by the varicella virus, has been confirmed in two students attending the Savannah College of Art and Design’s (SCAD) Savannah campus. Additional probable cases are under investigation. Chatham County Health Department and SCAD officials are working together to prevent the spread of the disease by educating students and staff and promoting immunization against varicella.

The most recognized symptom of chickenpox is an itchy rash. Other symptoms include fever, tiredness, loss of appetite, and headache. The virus is spread through the air when an infected person coughs or sneezes and can also be spread by touching or breathing in the virus particles that come from the chickenpox blisters. It takes from 10 to 21 days after exposure to a person with chickenpox for someone to develop chickenpox. A person with chickenpox can spread the disease from one to two days before they get the rash until all their chickenpox blisters have formed scabs.

“We are working closely with Savannah College of Art and Design administration to ensure that we provide appropriate information to all students and faculty,” said Diane Weems, M.D., Health Director for the Coastal Health District. “We want to make sure that people are aware of the symptoms and know that the best way to keep from getting the virus is to get vaccinated and the best way to keep from spreading the virus is to stay away from others until their lesions have turned into scabs.”

Most healthy people recover from chickenpox in five to 10 days; however, infants, adults, pregnant women, and those with weakened immune systems who have not been vaccinated and get the chickenpox can suffer from mild to serious complications.

For more information on chickenpox go to www.cdc.gov/chickenpox.

101 Georgia School Districts Tobacco-Free

More than half – 101 out of 181 – Georgia school districts are now tobacco-free. Emanuel County Schools, Lowndes County Schools and Jenkins County Schools all recently implemented Georgia’s 100% Tobacco-Free School policy leading to this milestone in the Georgia Department of Public Health’s (DPH) work to protect the state’s children from the harmful effects of tobacco use and second-hand smoke.

Under the 100% Tobacco-Free School policy no student, staff member or school visitor is permitted to use any tobacco product or E-cigarette, at any time on school property. Eighty Georgia school districts have not signed the policy.

“Tobacco-free schools save lives,” said Jean O’Connor, JD, DrPH, director of Chronic Disease Prevention for DPH. “Ninety percent of Georgia’s smokers started using tobacco before the age of 18, and by eliminating tobacco use—including e-cigarettes—in schools, we can reduce the likelihood children in Georgia will start to use tobacco as well as protect children and adults from the effects of secondhand smoke.”

Tobacco use causes heart disease, cancer, diabetes and premature death. In a young person, smoking can damage the heart and lungs right away and in some cases, the damage never goes away. Studies show that eliminating tobacco smoke in an environment can reduce the incidence of heart attack related hospital admissions by between 10 and 40 percent.

“Young people are extremely sensitive to nicotine and the younger they are when they start using tobacco, the more likely they are to develop addiction to nicotine, and begin a lifetime of chronic disease,” said Brenda Fitzgerald, M.D., commissioner of the Georgia Department of Public Health. “That makes prevention in Georgia schools right now so critical.”

School districts can get help from local health departments to implement the 100% Tobacco-Free School policy. Each Health District in Georgia has a health promotion coordinator who can present the policy to the local school board and work with school administrators to implement it. In addition, youth empowerment teams will disseminate anti-smoking messages through media and social media.

All Georgians, including students, 13 to 17 years old, can call the Georgia Tobacco Quit Line at 1-877-270-STOP (7867) or 1-877-2NO-FUME (877-266-3863) and receive confidential counseling on how to quit smoking.

For more information about the harmful effects of smoking and tobacco use in young people, click here. To learn more about DPH’s efforts to help schools become tobacco-free, visit the Chronic Disease Prevention section’s Tobacco-Free and Smoke-Free environments website.

 

 

Ready to Quit Tobacco?

Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States and in Georgia. The Coastal Health District is committed to preventing initiation of tobacco use and helping our smokers to quit. We are also dedicated to ensuring smoke-free air in schools, public parks and indoor places of employment, particularly for infants, children, pregnant women and citizens with asthma and/or other chronic respiratory diseases (those who are at highest risk for illnesses resultant from exposure to second-hand smoke).

At the Coastal Health District we understand that tobacco is addictive and that quitting is difficult. Our goals are to help those who want to quit, quit for good; discourage tobacco usage among those who don’t currently use tobacco; and to help all of our citizens lead healthy, tobacco-free lives.

We offer smoking cessation classes using Freshstart, the American Cancer Society’s smoking cessation program. It is designed to equip tobacco users with the tools they will need to quit for good. Freshstart classes cover topics including stress managment, the benefits of quitting smoking, methods of quitting smoking, and avoiding a return to smoking.

Click HERE [PDF] for more information on Freshstart.

Freshstart classes in Chatham County

2-day Session: Tuesday & Thursday, April 21 & 23
2-4 p.m.
Curtis V. Cooper Primary Health Care
106 E. Broad Street

3-day Session: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, April 21-23
12:30-1:30 p.m.
Chatham County Health Department
(1395 Eisenhower Drive), General Clinic Training Room

For more information, please call 912.644.5818 or email chdstopsmoking@gmail.com

Freshstart classes in McIntosh County

April 7, 8, and 9, 12 – 1 p.m. (light lunch provided)
Darien Telephone Company (conference room 7, 8, 9)
1011 North Way, Darien
Pre-registration required and registration is limited. To register, call Paige at 912-832-5473 or email Paige.Lightsey@dph.ga.gov.

Grant Funding Helps Bolster Two McIntosh County Health Department Programs

The McIntosh County Health Department has received $8,800 in funding from the Miller Family Fund, a component fund of the Communities of Coastal Georgia Foundation, to purchase car safety seats for children and implement tobacco cessation classes.

“Part of our mission is to provide grants for organizations in Camden, Glynn, and McIntosh counties to support programs that will make a positive difference in those communities,” said President and CEO of the Communities of Coastal Georgia Foundation, Dr. Valerie Hepburn. “We are pleased to be able to help the McIntosh County Health Department with these two very worthwhile initiatives.”

Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among children ages 2-14 and the leading cause of injury-related death for children under two. When installed and used correctly, child car seats and seat belts can prevent injuries and save lives. Grant funding in the amount of $2,000 from the Foundation will be used to purchase car seats and educate families on the proper installation of car seats and general seatbelt safety.

According to the 2013 McIntosh County Community Health Needs Assessment, 28 percent of McIntosh County residents smoke or use tobacco. That is well above the national rate of 13 percent and state average of 20 percent. Grant funding in the amount of $6,800 from the Foundation will help support “Tobacco-Free McIntosh,” a campaign to help promote tobacco cessation through advertising, educational classes, and nicotine replacement therapy.

“We are very glad to have had an opportunity to participate in these two worthy projects,” said philanthropist Martin Miller, who established the Miller Family Fund along with his wife, Laura Lynn Miller.

The health department will begin implementation of tobacco cessation and car seat programs in the very near future.

“Although this funding will be used for two entirely different purposes, both programs will help protect the residents of McIntosh County in the long run,” said McIntosh County Health Department Nurse Manager, Paige Lightsey, R.N.

The Miller Family Fund, a component fund of the Communities of Coastal Georgia Foundation, was established by Martin and Laura Lynn Miller in 2013. The family is from Valdosta, but they have had a home in McIntosh County for more than a decade. The family has built a number of successful agencies providing home care and services for seniors, and they have been recognized as leaders and innovators in health and aging services. The Millers have a long history of successful philanthropy focused on health, aging and quality of life issues, including support for the establishment of a Family Health Center at Valdosta State University’s School of Nursing. Their current philanthropic interests include public health and primary care services for the people of McIntosh County.

The Communities of Coastal Georgia Foundation (CCGF) was incorporated in 2005, as a tax-exempt public charity created by and for the people of Glynn, McIntosh and Camden counties.   The Foundation now has assets approaching $15 million and hosts some 50 distinct funds.  Since its inception, the Foundation has awarded more than $5 million in grants to community organizations in the three county region and beyond.

McIntosh HD Miller Donation Web page

[JPG, 226.00 KB] (L to R): Barbara Hurst, McIntosh County Board of Health Chair; Paige Lightsey, R.N., McIntosh County Health Department Nurse Manager; Martin Miller, philanthropist and President and CEO of Coastal Home Care; Kelly Spratt, McIntosh County Board of Commissioners; Diane Weems, M.D., District Health Director, Coastal Health District; and Michael Hardy, Communities of Coastal Georgia Foundation Board of Directors, stand in front of a child car seat and tobacco cessation display.

 

Georgia Department of Public Health’s Babies Can’t Wait Program Seeks Public Comment

ATLANTA – The Georgia Department of Public Health’s (DPH) Babies Can’t Wait (BCW) program invites interested persons to participate in a 60-day public comment period for the Federal Fiscal Year (FFY) 2015 Annual State Application under Part C of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and Fiscal Policies. Stakeholders, early intervention providers, parents and members of the public are encouraged to comment and may review the grant application and revised policy online or at locations throughout the state.

Comments will be accepted in four ways:

1.    Written comments will be received by mail until Apr. 18, 2015:

Babies Can’t Wait
Attn: Cynthia Bryant, Part C Coordinator
2 Peachtree Street NW, Suite 11-204
Atlanta, GA 30303-13422

2.    Email comments will be received until Apr. 18, 2015:
DPH-MCHDO@dph.ga.gov  (Subject line: Part C or Public Comment)

3.    Facsimile comments will be received until April 18, 2015:
State BCW Office Fax: (404-657-2763)

4.    In Person comments at a Public Hearing:
DPH invites interested persons to attend Public Hearings and present public comments. To allow an opportunity for all to be heard, comments will be limited to five minutes. (See locations listed below.)

Gainesville (2)
March 10, 2015, 4:30 PM – 6:30 PM
Gainesville Health District
440 Prior Street, SE
Gainesville, GA 30501
(770) 531-4053
Contact: Patricia (Dru) Thomas, Early Intervention Coordinator
(770) 531-4053
Dru.Thomas@dph.ga.gov

Clayton (3-3)
March 10, 2015, 4:30 PM – 6:30 PM
Clayton County Library
865 Battle Creek Road
Jonesboro, GA 30236
770-473-3850
Contact: Nicole Wilson
Early Intervention Coordinator
(678) 610-7252
Nicole.Wilson@dph.ga.gov

Columbus (7)
March 12, 2015, 4:30 PM – 6:30 PM
The Health and Human Services Building
2100 Comer Avenue
Columbus, GA 31902
(706) 327-0645
(800) 527-7344
Contact: Tori Endres, Early Intervention Coordinator
(706) 321-6136
Tori.Endres@dph.ga.gov

Waycross   (9-2)
March 10, 2015, 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Waycross Health District
C.N.N. Building
1057 Grove Avenue
Waycross, GA 31501
(912) 284-2552
Contact: Tracy Weeden
Early Intervention Coordinator
(912) 284-2552
Tracy.Weeden@dph.gov

 

The Babies Can’t Wait (BCW) Program is Georgia’s statewide early intervention system for infants and toddlers with special needs, age birth to three, and their families. This program enhances the capacity of families to meet the special needs of their child in order to ensure that each young child with significant developmental delays achieves his or her maximum developmental potential.

To learn more about DPH’s Babies Can’t Wait program, please call 404-657-2762 or 888-651-8224 or visit http://dph.georgia.gov/Babies-Cant-Wait.