Authority Health e-News Letter Now Available
Click read more
It’s a homecoming of sorts for Dr. Jasper Gill DO Family & Sports Medicine. After completing his residency in Family Medicine with Authority Health in 2017, Dr. Gill pursued a fellowship in Sports Medicine at Loyola University in Chicago. Dr. Gill could’ve worked in a number of sports medicine practices, instead, he decided to return to Detroit area to continue his career in community-based medicine at McKenny Center – Partners in Wellness Family Medical Services in northwest Detroit. Dr. Gill will be starting on March 4, 2019.
Dr. Gill grew up in metro Detroit and wants to continue his work in the underserved communities in which he became familiar during his residency. He has said that his time in the Graduate Medical Education program at Authority Health made him more aware of the plight of the uninsured. The doctor is now coming back to work in community medicine and serving the underserved is his way of giving back.
“Authority Health served as the basis of my primary care training and something that has shaped the physician I am becoming now,” says Dr. Gill. “Having the opportunity to be involved with communities I was able to provide care for as a resident physician is a blessing and something I hope to continue for the rest of my career.” Dr. Gill continues, “McKenny Center gives access to healthcare where it has been missing. They provide a multitude of health options and resources to increase the quality of life for the people in the surrounding area and that is a wonderful service.”
After completing his undergraduate degree in Human Biology, Dr. Gill attended Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine, followed by three years of residency with Authority Health’s Graduate Medical Education program and a Sports Medicine fellowship at Loyola University.
“My work as a physician is to provide up-to-date care and knowledge to positively impact the community. I also want to provide family care and bring specialized sports medicine care to the community where there wasn’t access to a fellowship-trained musculoskeletal care beforehand. By doing this I want to help all ages, including the youth, to further enhance pursuing their athletic goals and increase their overall health. ”
The Partners in Wellness is a partnership consisting of Authority Health, Behavioral Health Professionals Inc., and the Development Centers. Family medical services are available at the McKenny Center – 19750 Burt Rd. Detroit, MI 48219. For more information on the services offered by the Family Medical Services at the McKenny Center, please call 313.395.4701.
Earl Carlos is one of three Authority Health medical residents who traveled to eastern Kenya in July 2017 with CMMB to participate in an eight-week residency placement. During his time there, he and his colleagues served at the Mutomo Mission Hospital, at rural health centers, and also in the surrounding communities.
They worked and learned alongside Kenyan health practitioners while contributing valuable skills and helping build capacity of the local health workers. In this piece, EG, as he is affectionately known by friends and colleagues, shares some of his experiences in this remote part of the world.
My mind inclines now, more than ever, towards hope. I’m constantly shedding the assumption that a skeptical point of view is the most intellectually credible. Intellect does not function in opposition to mystery. Tolerance is not more pragmatic than love. And cynicism is not more reasonable than hope. Unlike almost any other worthwhile thing in life, cynicism is easy. – Krista Tippet
Ever since arriving here in Mutomo, Kenya; a semi-arid, dry small town located about 230 kilometers southeast of Nairobi, I’ve been hoping to see some rain. It was said that Mutomo’s rainy season is not until December and the odds of getting even a little drizzle of rain at this time, was practically none.
Yet, every time I walked out first thing in the morning, my eyes would scan the clouds for possible rain. It started becoming a running joke between me and my other colleagues; one of them would ask me in the morning, “EG, do you think it’s going to rain today?” I would look up at the clouds, and points out a substantial amount of grey patches, and say, “Yes, I think so.”
And yet, no matter how promising the sky and clouds appeared, or how blustery the wind may have been, not even a drop would be felt all day.
But then, one day, my prayer for rain was answered.
The rains came. I am not talking about just a slight drizzle. It was a downpour! It lasted nearly 45 minutes and came rushing through one morning as I was in the hospital. After hoping for it for so long, it really felt like I was seeing rain for the first time.
I walked outside and stood in front of the hospital to admire it. I was like child. I placed my hand out into the rain to feel the water. But that wasn’t enough so eventually, I just walked out into the rain and embraced it.
I wasn’t the only one to admire it. A few of the workers came outside too, joining me in awe and admiration for a phenomenon that I’d been hoping for since my arrival; one that I had lived through so many times in my life back home. There was something magical about appreciating something that so many people take for granted.
I know that one can’t assume anything and that the signs and ways of the universe can’t be directed to small, seemingly insignificant hopes and dreams of one person, because, yeah, most likely it was a coincidence.
Yet, there is a small (not so very big) part of me that really believes that the time that I dedicated to hoping for rains did in fact play a small part in the rains that came. I just can’t stop believing that. As irrational and almost impossible as it may be, my mind believed it (and still does).
Hope is being able to see that there is light despite all of the darkness. – Desmond Tutu
There’s an attraction and fascination towards hope that is so much more appealing to me than despair. That despite of all the evidences of hate, violence, and nonsense that exists around the world (and even in my own life), there is a deep belief inside of me that things can and will get better.
I can’t provide you any direct evidence.
I can’t show you anything that is concrete and concise.
I can’t reveal any good plans, any markers for improvement, or any idea of how to go about it.
But I believe it, deeply.
Maybe it was my belief in hope led me to Mutomo. This place is not the most ideal of places; we are isolated, the food (though tasty) can be a bit repetitive, and the hospital is so under resourced both in terms of healthcare practitioners and resources that it is hard to provide people with the care they so desperately need.
And yet, my time there was so constructive and really opened my eyes to not only how unfair life is, but also how simple happiness can be. It seems impossible (almost oxymoronic!) to learn those two lessons simultaneously, but it is exactly what I took away from my time in Kenya.
There is this care-free, ‘take life as it is’ spirit among the people and workers of Mutomo, and it is such a breath of fresh air. I heard very few complaints and any kind of help offered or given was appreciated in the way people used to show appreciation in the good ol’ days.
The hospital is understaffed, especially at night when there is one nurse for a total of 40 beds. As a result, obtaining lab results or even being able to get prescribed medication is a huge challenge. Several patients had to stay an extra few days as they waited for a single lab result (Imagine! We find it hard to wait for our coffee order at Starbucks).
And yet they waited, and waited patiently, in their beds, in a room with as many as nine other sickly patients, and numerous family members.
So many things surprised me, but perhaps the most surprising was the fact that these family members never left the bedside of their sick relative. Every morning, as we did our rounds, we always found a loving and loyal family member sitting next to their sick relative.
How do I make sense of this all? I am not sure that I can. But what I know for sure is that I am so very thankful for this opportunity. It has taught me so much that no book or lecture could ever have taught me.
Sometimes, the most impactful moments and people in life are the quietest, most simple, and most subtle of all. I believe that many more people are taking action or planning to take action, and there are organizations, like CMMB, that are providing ways for people with passion and skills to pursue and contribute to this beautiful force called hope.
This experience, as expected, is a catalyst for me to seek more opportunities to push myself out of my comfort zone and into challenging and worthwhile causes. To test my mind, body, and spirit by working in places like Mutomo, serving people like those I met in the hospital and community.
While I am still young, while my parents are still young, and while I have absolutely no attachments, I want to be able to do all that I can to make a positive, creative and meaningful difference in the world. That is a worthwhile way to spend my life.
Maybe, probably, most likely.. this might be the only way that I can make sense of all the pain and inequity in the world.
About Earl Carlos:
Earl Carlos, known by family and friends as EG, was born in the Philippines but moved the U.S. as child. He earned his bachelor’s degree at a small liberal arts college near Chicago and went to medical school in Florida. Earl is now a medical resident at Authority Health in Detroit Michigan.
When he learned about the opportunity to work in Kenya with CMMB he immediately jumped on board. He said, “What I am seeking out of a career in medicine is to simply do my part in helping more people live to the best way that they can. I hope to utilize my strength and youth to work in locations that are resource-poor and to play a part in helping communities that are often forgotten.”
Earl has worked internationally in the past, spending two months in the Philippines completing a pediatric pulmonology rotation during his fourth year of medical school and volunteering in Cusco, Peru for a month in the summer before starting residency.
Article courtesy of CMMB.org
The July 3, 2017 issue of Crain’s Detroit features Authority Health’s Graduate Medical Education Teaching Health Center Program in an article “Addressing the doctor shortage: More than 1,500 medical residents complete training in Michigan. Click here for the full article.
Authority Health recently provided testimony regarding the Inclusionary Housing Ordinance. The full statement is below.
Testimony Regarding the Inclusionary Housing Ordinance
June 22, 2017
The impact of housing on health is both obvious and easy to be overlooked. Likewise, the health impact of substandard housing quality and the poor environment in which the housing is situated is relevant, yet easily overlooked.
The loss of housing by those frail elderly seniors who were evicted from the Griswold apartment building to make way for The Albert, led Authority Health to join a coalition of like-minded advocates to form the Senior Housing Preservation – Detroit Coalition. The coalition advocates for preserving existing senior housing and the prospects of developing new housing. The coalition’s theme, “One Detroit for All,” is applicable to the ideal espoused by the inclusionary housing ordinance proposed by Council Member Mary Sheffield.
The Authority Health Population Health Council has passed a motion of support for the intent of the ordinance, pending a final draft of the ordinance.
Authority Health, as a member of the Housing Trust Fund Coalition, supports addressing those with the greatest economic need – households earning up to 50 percent of the average median income, with a priority for 70 percent of the funds to serve households at or below 30 percent of the average median income for a family of four. It’s relevant to note that many of these households would qualify for Healthy Michigan, the expanded Medicaid program, or would qualify for subsidies under the Affordable Care Act – both, being at risk as Congress devises the nation’s new health legislation. This is also a population at risk for food insecurity, access to transportation, and other social determinants of health.
To further support the objectives of the Housing Trust Fund Coalition, we support the principle of requiring half of the units receiving housing trust fund awards for new construction and preservation be accessible to people with different abilities, and that long-term affordability be assured for at least 30 years.
We feel that there is a need to ensure community oversight through an advisory committee that is appointed by City Council.
There is a well-documented need for safe, healthy housing for low income people. The correlation between housing and health is also well-documented. We believe that in this current era of prosperity, Detroit can and should include its low-income population in the redevelopment of the Downtown/Midtown areas of Detroit, and support development of housing in outlying neighborhoods.
On it differed repeated wandered required. Then girl neat why yet knew rose sport paraissait. Moreover property kindness greatest be striking laughter.
Instantly immediate one day perceived. Old blushes respect offices hearted foret minutes effects. Written parties started. Residence min gentleman yet preserved few convinced.
Norem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip Duis aute irure dolor reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum.
Prisonnier primeveres arriverent survivants comprendre. Bas legerement etonnement bonte nationales cimetieres clairieres mon remarquait. Abondance attardent que age dentelles tot soufflent. Trouvent relevent hebetude ne exploits promptes pu remparts ca ma. Heros ornee robes tu me. Les dut ces brique grande ete semble.
Me principles apartments. Has visitor law attacks pretend you calling own excited paint. Contented attending smallness the oh ye unwilling. Turned favour A man two but lovers. Position couleurs souliers ni matieres on joyeuses. Bout cinq elle qu nees soit faux sa. Faite six nos ras grave voila. Ils epluchant seulement bon alternent defensive portieres.
It’s an honor and a privilege to be welcomed into the home of a young parent, mentoring them as educator and counselor through a healthy pregnancy and into a new life as a family unit. This is the work of nurse home visitors in the Detroit Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP) and the work at which Maria Lebron, B.S.N., excels in.
Her colleagues at Authority Heath voted her Employee of the Year for 2016.
Ms. Lebron joined the Authority Health NFP program in 2015 as one of ten nurse home visitors. The program serves up to 250 first-time mothers in Detroit.
Ms. Lebron received her Bachelor of Science degree in Nursing from Wayne State University, where she graduated summa cum laude from the Irvin Reid Honors College.
“I love that every day I get to partner alongside families as they transition toward an experience as monumental as parenthood,” she says. “I have the privilege to meet a woman in the prenatal period and support her alongside her journey until her child turns two years old.” She enjoys educating her clients and identifying resources to help overcome barriers to meeting the needs of their lives. “The best part of my work is the long-term nature of my care and the frequency I get to see my clients.”
A significant aspect of the Authority Health mission involves promoting the health of vulnerable populations, one of which is low income young pregnant women and their babies. Assuring access to maternal health care is essential in combating infant mortality and early childhood development. “I can further my clients’ care by stressing the importance to obtain prenatal care, connect them to transportation or housing resources, and give them well-rounded holistic care,” she says. “This ultimately decreases health disparities within our community. The evidence behind NFP points toward achieving improved prenatal health, fewer childhood injuries, and enhanced economic self-sufficiency for families.”
NFP nurses initially meet with their clients on a weekly basis, then bi-weekly for the majority of the program. The final months are on a monthly basis. They are available by phone and can increase their visit schedule should clients need enhanced support at any time during the program. The nurses look after their clients’ clinical and social needs, but “sometimes people need someone who has faith in them and simply makes that message clear. I have faith in every client I meet and I feel lucky to cheer them on the whole way as they realize that they are indeed doing great.”
She says that “whether it’s teaching about safe sleep or supporting my client as she makes goals for her educational aspiration, I feel honored to do this work. This is important because these women are making decisions that are impacting not only themselves but their child – and this, in turn, is creating a powerful change in the next generation.
“I get to see my clients take a life-changing experience like pregnancy and turn it into a life- improving experience. My clients take their pregnancy as an opportunity to improve their health, their lives, and set a new life for themselves and the new life they’re bringing into the world. I get to see women become mothers, men become fathers, and children be born into a life that is built on the foundation of hope.”
The 2016 State of Population Health Report is now available on our website. Please visit here to see the report and presentations delivered at the recent Population Health Forum.