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Will you join Massey to reduce cancer disparities?
from TLN-3-11-20
VCU Massey Cancer Center is asking local citizens to partner in cancer research designed to identify and address health needs in their own communities.
The project called Together for Health – Virginia is described as a comprehensive health assessment program designed to better understand how social and behavioral patterns as well as financial and environmental factors impact cancer rates. Information from this research will help to improve health care practices and services within communities. “This is an opportunity for residents to partner with their local National Cancer Institutedesignated cancer center on a research program aimed at improving health in the communities
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Bernard Fuemmeler, Ph.D., M.P.H. that need it most,” said Bernard Fuemmeler, Ph.D., M.P.H., associate director for cancer prevention and control and Gordon D. Ginder, M.D., chair in cancer research at Massey as well as a professor in the Department of Health Behavior and Policy at the VCU School of Medicine.
“The effort really gets to the heart of Massey’s mission by conducting research that makes an impact at the local level.”
The cancer center is hoping to enroll 2,000 or more Virginians ages 18 years and older in the program. An initial survey was mailed to a random selection of households in Virginia. Next, researchers will be reaching out to residents in Virginia by disseminating targeted messages via social media platforms. The program can be accessed through a mobile app available at the Apple App Story or Google Play (by searching Together for Health – Virginia) or online at Together for Health – Virginia. Participation in the survey is completely voluntary. After completing the survey, participants will have the option to continue engaging with researchers over the course of a year by answering follow-up questionnaires and providing researchers with access to behavioral and social data. By downloading the mobile app, participants have the option of sharing the data from their fitness tracker. Only VCU researchers conducting the study will have access to the data, which will be
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Children’s hospital joins law firm & Dominion to provide free legal assistance for patients
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at Virginia Commonwealth University has launched a partnership with McGuireWoods and Dominion Energy to make an additional 50 attorneys available to families with legal needs that impact the health of their children. This relationship significantly expands the existing Medical-Legal Partnership – Richmond program, which began in January 2018 and offers free legal advice and representation for eligible patients and families in Richmond and surrounding counties.
“MLP-Richmond has received approximately 200 referrals of families at the Children’s Pavilion and VCU Massey Cancer Center each of the past two years, but there are many more who can benefit from this professional assistance,” said Allison Held, associate general counsel and director of MLPRichmond at VCU Health. “The generosity and willingness of these attorneys from outside the health care industry to donate their time and work alongside us to help patients in difficult situations is remarkable.”
With the addition of these attorneys, MLP-Richmond has expanded to provide access to legal counsel at no cost to families of pediatric patients at Virginia Treatment Center for Children and CHoR’s Brook Road Campus, along with adult patients at VCU Health’s Complex Care Clinic.
Pro bono services covered by the McGuireWoods and Dominion Energy attorneys include housing law (eviction defense, repairs, substandard housing conditions, etc.); immigration relief (as it relates to access to care); family law (child custody, guardianship, domestic violence); simple wills, powers of attorney and advance medical directives; and education advocacy (IEP eligibility and enforcement, 504 plans, bullying, etc.). MLPRichmond services offered by the onsite attorneys through the Central Virginia Legal Aid Society and CancerLINC also include health and public benefits (Medicaid, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, etc.), and employment and consumer law (bankruptcy, debt collection defenses, garnishment protection, etc.).
Takia Gant, whose 1-year-old son Adrian has cerebral palsy, knows first-hand the importance of legal assistance as a component of comprehensive health care. When her apartment had an unpleasant smell and was overrun with rodents, her already-fragile son experienced recurrent illness. She tried many times to get the general manager to take action without success. Tiffany Kimbrough, M.D., Adrian’s pediatrician at CHoR, referred Gant to MLP-Richmond.
“Within a month, the attorney got us out of the apartment and into a new one. She even got my rent reduced at the new apartment to match what I was paying before,” Gant said. “Having somebody to help me made my life so much easier. She was basically my voice. She still calls and checks up on me to make sure everything is going great.”
Adrian has not been sick in four months and is no longer on supplemental oxygen as he prepares to celebrate his second birthday.
“Imagine a child living in public housing has asthma and there is a mold problem. This could be lifethreatening. We now have partners on board to help take care of the whole child and family – to get them appropriate housing and keep them healthy,” Kimbrough said. “MLPRichmond helps with everything from wheelchair ramps and custody support to education advocacy. They are helping us make sure every child has the opportunity for a healthy future.”
Jon Harmon, McGuireWoods’ chairman, said, “McGuireWoods is pleased to partner with two of our community’s strongest groups – Dominion and VCU – in meeting legal needs through a medical legal partnership. We applaud VCU’s initiative to treat the whole person by addressing social issues rooted in legal problems for its patients. To the extent our legal assistance improves the health and well-being of patients and families, we are all the better for it.”
This initiative uses the Department of Housing and Urban Development guidelines for income eligibility as they are more generous than poverty
guidelines and enable the program to serve more patients with legal needs who cannot afford a lawyer.
“Dominion Energy is a public service corporation and we believe that our duty to serve extends beyond just providing affordable energy but also to finding ways to improve our communities,” said Carlos M. Brown, senior vice president and general counsel for Dominion Energy. “We are excited about the potential that our partnership with McGuireWoods and VCU Health will have on improving the lives of some of our most vulnerable customers. Our commitment to the medical-legal partnership is part of our belief that our actions speak louder than our words.”
“This partnership is a gamechanger for us,” Held said. “It will enable us to serve more patients with legal needs that affect their health and well-being, and who have nowhere else to turn. That’s what MLP-Richmond is all about – improving community health through legal advocacy.”