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Source: http://www.specialolympics.org/RegionsPages/content.aspx?id=37368

Source: http://www.specialolympics.org/RegionsPages/content.aspx?id=37368

 

As our nation realizes that we need to move resources from costly acute care to efforts that can promote the health of individuals, families and communities, foundation are increasingly integrating into their funding portfolios a focus on building healthy communities. One such foundation is the New York State Health Foundation. The Foundation has two primary strategies to do this work. One is to support “neighborhood-level and policy interventions to increase residents’ access to healthy, affordable food options; opportunities for physical activity; and other initiatives that encourage healthy living.” Launched in January of 2015, its Healthy Neighborhood Fund Initiative initially invested in six communities, including three in New York City. These communities are developing partnerships with various organizations, government and private entities to engage in the longterm work that is required to build healthier places to live, work and play.

 

On Thursday, August 25th, HealthCetera Producer Diana Mason, PhD, RN, interviews Lourdes Rodriquez, Program Officer who heads the Foundation’s Building Healthy Communities work. They discuss the Foundation’s aims, strategies and progress to date in these six communities. So tune into HealthCetera at 1:30PM on Thursday, August 25th for the second half of HealthCetera on WBAI, 99.5 FM in New York City or streaming at www.wbai.org. Or you can listen to the interview anytime by clicking here:

HealthCetera is sponsored by the Center for Health, Media & Policy.

[caption id="attachment_11593" align="aligncenter" width="275"] Source: http://www.specialolympics.org/RegionsPages/content.aspx?id=37368[/caption]   As our

Screen Shot 2016-08-17 at 2.28.20 PMJudith R. Smith, Ph.D, LCSW, is a licensed certified social worker and Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Social Service, at Fordham University, New York City.  For over 40 years, her clinical and research focus has been on parenting, focusing on the effects of poverty on young children and their mothers. She is an emerging leader in feminist gerontology research. In this interview, HealthCetera host Barbara Glickstein interviews Dr. Smith on her latest research examining elder abuse in mother’s with difficult children in low-resource families published in the November 2015 Journal of Elder Abuse and Neglect, “Expanding Constructions of Elder Abuse and Neglect: Older Mother’s Subjective Experiences. 

She discusses the issues facing healthy women 62 and older, who have adult children who require (or have required) financial, emotional or residential support.  Very little is known about the experience of extended parenting responsibilities in later-life. Being the mother of an adult child who is unable to be self-sufficient is a strain on families and one that is often kept hidden, due to the shame and stigma associated with being the mother of a child who is unsuccessful or  “off-time” in their adult development.   

Tune into HealthCetera Thursday, August 18 at 1:00 PM on WBAI 99.5 FM wbai.org to hear this interview or listen to the interview on our iTunes channel here:

Judith R. Smith, Ph.D, LCSW, is a licensed certified

Screen Shot 2016-08-18 at 11.07.32 AMA study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looked at cases of neonatal abstinence syndrome, or NAS, that can occur in newborns whose mothers are addicted. NAS is usually due to opioid withdrawal, though it can occur as a result of other drug or alcohol withdrawal.

Sasha Winslow-Smith, a NYS registered professional nurse with a background in pediatrics and neonatal care discusses this issue with HealthCetera host Barbara Glickstein. Winslow-Smith shares how the health care team provides clinical care to the newborn and support for the new mom so she can parent effectively and manage parenthood. Focusing on family-centered care, maternal-child bonding, and creating access to treatment for her substance use. She emphasizes how this care must extend beyond the hospital stay into her life at home in her community.

Tune in to HealthCetera on WBAI 99.5 FM streamed live at wbai.org at 1 PM on Thursday, August 18th or listen to the interview on iTunes here:

A study from the Centers for Disease