July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

40
JULY 2012 FREE Retirement on the Horizon? Northwest Bank Investment Management Group Can Help pg. 18 HealthyCells MAGAZINE www.healthycellsmagazine.com TM Cancer Docs Can Have Cancer, Too pg. 14 Essential Oils and MRSA pg. 26 Spotlight on Safety pg. 28 area Promoting Healthier Living in Your Community • Physical • Emotional • Nutritional QUAD CITIES

description

Northwest Bank Investment Management Group

Transcript of July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 1: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

JULY 2012 FREE

Retirement onthe Horizon?Northwest Bank InvestmentManagement Group Can Help pg. 18

HealthyCellsM A G A Z I N Ewww.healthycellsmagazine.com

TM

Cancer Docs CanHave Cancer, Too pg. 14

Essential Oils andMRSA pg. 26

Spotlight onSafety pg. 28

areaPromotingHealthier Living in Your Community

• Physical

• Emotional

• Nutritional

QUAD CITIES

Page 2: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Our therapists and nurses provide:

n Therapy after stroke, brain injury and other neurological disordersn Therapy after a spinal cord injury or amputationn Cognitive retraining n Speech/language and swallowing treatmentn Wheelchair clinics to aid in selection of chair and seating devicesn Pressure mapping for wound preventionn Brace, prosthetic and orthotic caren Tracheostomy educationn Catheter and toileting educationn Medication management education

Our services include physician oversight, nursing, occupational therapy, physicaltherapy, speech/language pathology, neurofeedback, therapeutic recreation,laboratory testing and other diagnostic services as needed. Located on the 2nd floor of Genesis Medical Center, West Campus.

421-1421

Designed for patients who are able to stay in their own homesat night and make arrangements to come to Genesis for intensive rehabilitation throughout the week.

DayRehabilitation

HealthyCells_HalfpgAds_Layout 1 6/12/12 11:04 AM Page 9

Center for Weight Management

Call (563) 421-8361 to register for a free informational class.

Take the first step with the Genesis Center for Weight Management.

The Genesis Center for Weight Management now offers surgical and non-surgical weight loss options, and is recognized as a Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence by the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

OPTIFAST®: (non-surgical)A meal replacement program that closely monitors and assesses your progress towards better health.

BARIATRIC SURGERY:Patients undergo three-to-four months of education before surgery, followed by consultations with the nursing staff, dietitian, psychologist, surgeon, physical therapist, recreational therapist and pharmacist.

Page 3: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 3

Page 4: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Volume 3, Issue 7

6

8

10

12

14

16

22

24

26

27

28

30

32

35

36

Emotional:Helping Military Families Prepare forReunions

Nutritional:Protect Your Vision… Eat Leafy Greens

Physical:Catching a Cold When It’s Warm – What’s the Deal with Summertime Sniffles?

Healthy Aging:It’s a Kid’s Job – Playing Helps KidsLearn and Grow

Men’s Health:Cancer Docs Can Have Cancer, Too

Eye Protection:Watch the Eyes this Fourth of July

Cosmetic Advancements:New Liposonix Non-InvasiveFat Reduction Treatment

Patient Recovery:Olympic Dreams

Natural Treatment:Essential Oils and MRSA

Women’s Health:Skip the Test Before Incontinence Surgery?

Health and Wellness:Spotlight on Safety

Awareness Month:Effective Pain Management and Cancer

Hearing Loss:Annual Hearing Tests are Important!

Financial Health:Term vs. Permanent Life Insurance

Personal Success:My Success Can Be Your Success

J U L Y

Mission: The objective of Healthy Cells Magazine is to promote a stronger health-conscious community by means of offering education and support through the cooperative efforts among esteemed health and fitness professionals in The Quad Cities.

Healthy Cells Magazine is intended to heighten awareness of health and fitness information and does not suggest diagnosis or treatment. This information is not a substitute for medical attention. See your healthcare professional for medical advice and treatment. The opinions, statements, and claims expressed by the columnists, advertisers, and contributors to Healthy Cells Magazine are not necessarily those of the editors or publisher.

Healthy Cells Magazine is available FREE in high traffic locations throughout the Quad Cities, including medical facilities and other waiting rooms. Healthy Cells Magazine welcomes contributions pertaining to healthier living in the Quad Cities. Limelight Communications, Inc. assumes no responsibility for their publication or return. Solicitations for articles shall pertain to physical, emotional, and nutritional health only.

Healthy Cells Magazine is a division of:

1711 W. Detweiller Dr., Peoria, IL 61615 • Ph: 309-681-4418 Fax: [email protected]

For advertising information, contact Laurie Hutcheson, owner at 563-650-1876, [email protected]

2012

“I wish to thank all of the advertisers who make this magazine possible. They believe enough in providing positive health information to the public that they are willing to pay for it so you won’t have to.”

Laurie Hutcheson

This Month’s Cover Story:Retirement on the Horizon? Northwest Bank InvestmentManagement Group Can Help page 18

Cover and feature story photos by Accent Photographic.

Page 5: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 5

EAST MOLINEN U R S I N G & R E H A B I L I T A T I O N C E N T E R

Exceptional careFamily valuesProud neighbor in theQuad City community

430 30th Ave. East Moline, IL 61244309-755-3466Call today to schedule a tour and see the beautiful art on display from United Township High School.

“Everyone here has been real nice. My care was great and now I’ll be going home soon. I’ll be back though...I plan to be a volunteer

and help others like I was helped.”- Charles

“The care my mother received here waswonderful

and I tell everyone that!The whole staff treated her like family.We couldn’t have asked for any better.”

- John

*Registered representative. Securities offered throughMWA Financial Services Inc., a wholly owned subsidiaryof Modern Woodmen of America. Member: FINRA, SIPC.

modern-woodmen.org

Ruth Ahnen* FIC621 E. Kimberly Rd.Davenport, IA [email protected]

Life is everywhere.

Are you ready?No matter what life brings,protect your loved ones with lifeinsurance. Since 1883, we've offeredfinancial products and fraternalbenefits to help protect families.Call today to learn more.

Page 6: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 6 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

With the ongoing drawdown of service members from Af-ghanistan, military families are preparing for the return of loved ones. The homecoming of a service member can

be very exciting, but it is also a significant transition that affects the entire family—especially children. Fortunately, military families don’t have to face this transition alone. The Real Warriors Campaign (www.realwarriors.net) offers support for families throughout the deployment cycle. The campaign, an initiative of the Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury (DCoE), promotes the processes of building resilience, facilitating recovery, and supporting reintegration for re-turning service members, veterans, and their families. With tips from the Real Warriors Campaign, families can prepare for the excitement and potential challenges of a parent’s return home.

emotional

Helping MilitaryFamilies Prepare for Reunions Tools to Help Parents and Children with Resilience, Recovery, and Reconnecting

Communicate: Prior to a homecoming, it is important for parents or caregivers to communicate with their children and remind them that, just as they have grown and changed during the course of a deployment, it is likely that their parent has also had new experi-ences. By talking about some of these changes before the reunion, families can reduce the anxieties of a homecoming. Real Warriors Campaign volunteer Sheri Hall experienced the challenges of reintegration firsthand when her husband, Army Maj. Jeff Hall, returned from his second deployment. She advises mili-tary families to communicate as openly as possible. “Encourage children to be vocal—to tell their families what’s bothering them,” Hall said. As children open up, be prepared for a range of emo-tions. It is important for parents to remain calm and understanding while listening to their children’s concerns.

U.S. Navy photo by Mass CommunicationSpecialist 2nd Class Timothy Walter

Page 7: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 7

Be Patient: Military families experience a natural adjustment period after deployment, during which children may experi-ence excitement, as well as nervousness and anxiety. Fami-lies can ease concerns by taking time to get to know each other and routines again. Maj. Hall advises returning service members to be open to change during this transition. “Return-ing from deployment can be challenging. It’s important to be patient and remember some things may have changed while you were gone. Take time to get to know your family again,” Maj. Hall says.

Anticipate Change: During the course of a deployment, new family schedules and routines may have developed. For return-ing parents, it is important to remain open and flexible and learn the family’s new dynamic. It is also important for the entire fam-ily to help the returning service member adjust to changes that have occurred. Homecomings are an important time for all military families, and communication, patience, and flexibility help pave the way for a positive transition to reconnect with loved ones.

For more tools, tips and resources for military families, visit the Real Warriors Campaign online at www.realwarriors.net or contact the DCoE Outreach Center to talk with trained health resource consultants for assistance 24/7 by calling 866-966-1020. More information and resources are also available at the DCoE website at www.dcoe.health.mil.

Source: The Real Warriors Campaign

Odds of a child becoming a professional athlete: 1 in 16,000

Odds of a child being diagnosed with autism: 1 in 110

© 2010 Autism Speaks Inc. “Autism Speaks” and “It’s Time To Listen” & design are trademarks owned by Autism Speaks Inc. All rights reserved.

To learn more of the signs of autism, visit autismspeaks.org

No words by 16 months.

No babbling by 12 months.

Some signs to look for:

No big smiles or other joyful expressions by 6 months.

TM

METROPOLITANMEDICAL

LABORATORY, PLC

CELEBRATING! ONE YEAR OF Patient Care

685 Ave. of the Cities, SilvisNear I H Mississippi Valley Credit Union

6 am - 6 pm M-F; 6 am - Noon Sat.

309-792-0200

1 5 2 0 7 t h S t r e e t 1 8 2 8 E . L o c u s t S t r e e tM o l i n e , I L 6 1 2 6 5 D a v e n p o r t , I A 5 2 8 0 33 0 9 . 7 6 2 . 8 5 5 5 5 6 3 . 3 2 4 . 0 4 7 1

Q u a l i t y Y o u E x p e c t . . . S e r v i c e Y o u D e s e r v e

Tell your doctor, “I want to go to Metro.”

In a hurry? Fast, friendly, & convenient service.

Close parking.

Virtually all insurances accepted.

Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce

Ribbon Cutting Ceremony

at new Silvis site on January 24,

2011

Page 8: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 8 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

Protect YourVision…Eat Leafy Greens

Submitted by Chrissy Watters, MS, RD, LDN,Hy-Vee Registered Dietitian

Think carrots are the best food for your eyes? Think again. Leafy greens like spinach and kale are some of the best foods to eat for vision health.

Lutein (LOO-teen) and zeaxanthin (zee-uh-zan-thin) are essential nutrients that help maintain the health of your eyes. Your body doesn’t make these nutrients, so it’s important to replenish them daily through the food you eat. Leafy greens like spinach and kale are the best of sources of lutein and zeaxanthin.

Lutein and zeaxanthin:• Work like internal sunglasses absorbing damaging sun-

light and indoor light.• Act as powerful antioxidants, helping to protect and

maintain healthy vision and improve visual performance.• Reduce the time your eyes need to recover from glaring

light, like headlights while driving at night.

Clinical research shows that you need 10 mg of lutein and 2 mg of zeaxanthin every day to protect your eyes. Getting the recommended amounts of lutein and zea-xanthin from foods is preferred, but can be difficult. The average American diet only provides about 2 mg of these nutrients daily, far below intakes clinically shown to have a positive effect on visual function. Supplementing your diet with an eye vitamin that con-tains lutein, zeaxanthin and omega 3 fats is an easy way to bridge the gap of several essential nutrients. See your eye doctor for additional information on lutein, zeaxanthin and eye health.

Good Sources of Lutein & Zeaxanthin: • Kale• Spinach• Collards and turnip greens• Corn• Green peas• Broccoli• Romaine lettuce• Green beans• Eggs• Yellow and orange bell peppers• Supplements with FloraGLO Lutein, such as Alcon I

Caps Lutein & Omega-3 Formula, Bausch & Lomb Ocu-vite eye vitamin adult 50+ formula, Centrum Specialist Vision complete multivitamin, Nature Made lutein and Vitafusion Daily Vision lutein + multivitamin gummies.

nutritional

Page 9: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 9

Baby Spinach Salad with Raspberry VinaigretteServes 4 (1 1/2 cups each) Active time: 15 minutes Total time: 15 minutes

Enjoy this delicious, refreshing spinach salad, loaded with sight-saving nutrients.

All you need:Vinaigrette or Raspberry Vinaigrette:1/3 cup Hy-Vee canola oil1/4 cup Grand Selections red wine vinegar or raspberry

vinegar3 tablespoons Hy-Vee orange juice1/4 teaspoon salt Freshly ground pepper to taste

Salad:6 cups prewashed baby spinach1 small red bell pepper, thinly sliced1 ripe, but firm, nectarine, cut into 1-inch chunks3 tablespoons Vinaigrette or Raspberry Vinaigrette

All you do: To prepare vinaigrette: Add oil, vinegar, orange juice, salt and pepper to a jar with a tight-fitting lid; shake well to combine. To prepare salad: Combine spinach, bell pepper and nec-tarine in a large bowl; toss with 3 tablespoons of the vinaigrette. Cover and refrigerate the leftover dressing for up to 1 week.

Nutrition facts per serving: 72 calories, 5g fat, 0g saturated fat, 0mg cholesterol, 74mg sodium, 6g carbohydrate, 2g fiber, 2g protein. Daily values: 98% vitamin A, 65% vitamin C.

For more information, contact your Quad Cities Area Hy-Vee Registered Dietitians. The information is not intended as medical advice. Please consult a medical professional for individual advice. Chrissy Watters represents Hy-Vee as a nutrition expert pro-moting healthy eating throughout the community. She is a mem-ber of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (formerly known as the American Dietetic Association).

Source: Adapted from Eating Well, Inc.

Pleaselet Healthy Cells advertisers

know you saw their ad in

“Like” us on Facebook!Healthy Cells--Quad Cities

Page 10: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 10 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

Catching a Cold When It’s WarmWhat’s the Deal with Summertime Sniffles?

Most everyone looks forward to summer—time to get away, get outside and have some fun. So what could be more unfair than catching a cold when it’s warm? How can cold

symptoms arise when it’s not cold and flu season? Is there any way to dodge the summertime sniffles? More than 200 different viruses can cause cold symptoms. Each can bring the sneezing, scratchy throat and runny nose that can be the first signs of a cold. The colds we catch in winter are usually triggered by the most common viral infections in humans, a group of germs called rhinoviruses. Rhinoviruses and a few other cold-causing viruses seem to survive best in cooler weather. Their numbers surge in September and begin to dwindle in May. During summer months, the viral landscape begins to shift. “Gen-erally speaking, summer and winter colds are caused by different viruses,” says Dr. Michael Pichichero, a pediatrician and infectious disease researcher at the Rochester General Hospital Research In-stitute in New York. “When you talk about summer colds, you’re probably talking about a non-polio enterovirus infection.”

Enteroviruses can infect the tissues in your nose and throat, eyes, digestive system, and elsewhere. A few enteroviruses can cause polio, but vaccines have mostly eliminated these viruses from Western countries. Far more widespread are more than 60 types of non-polio enteroviruses. They’re the second most com-mon type of virus—after rhinovirus—that infects humans. About half of people with enterovirus infections don’t get sick at all. But nationwide, enteroviruses cause an estimated 10 million to 15 mil-lion illnesses each year, usually between June and October. Enteroviruses can cause a fever that comes on suddenly. Body temperatures may range from 101 to 104 °F. Enteroviruses can also cause mild respiratory symptoms, sore throat, headache, muscle aches and gastrointestinal issues like nausea or vomiting. “All age groups can be affected, but like most viral infections, enterovirus infections predominate in childhood,” says Pichichero. Adults may be protected from enterovirus infections if they’ve de-veloped antibodies from previous exposures. But adults can still get sick if they encounter a new type of enterovirus.

physical

Your Life. Your Health. Your Choice.

Expect the best: • Attentiveness • Compassion • Dignity • Professionalism

Celebrating 10 Years of Outpatient Services in the Quad City Area

Physical TherapyOccupational Therapy

Speech TherapyPulmonary Rehabilitation

Sleep StudiesOccupational Medicine

563-327-0133 563-322-2103 309-762-2998

.com

Midwest Therapy

Page 11: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 11

Less common enteroviruses can cause other symptoms. Some can lead to conjunctivitis, or pinkeye—a swelling of the outer layer of the eye and eyelid. Others can cause an illness with rash. In rare cases, enteroviruses can affect the heart or brain. To prevent enterovirus infections, says Pichichero, “it’s all about blocking viral transmission.” The viruses travel in respiratory secre-tions, like saliva or mucus, or in the stool of an infected person. You can become infected by direct contact. Or you might pick up the virus by touching contaminated surfaces or objects, such as

Treating a ColdThere’s no cure for a cold, but you can relieve symptoms by:• Resting in bed.• Drinking plenty of fluids.• Taking acetaminophen—Tylenol, for

example—for headache or fever.• Gargling with warm salt water or

using ice chips, throat sprays or loz-enges for a sore throat.

• Using a decongestant or saline nasal spray for nasal symptoms.

a telephone, doorknob or baby’s diaper. “Frequent hand washing and avoiding exposure to people who are sick with fever can help prevent the spread of infection,” says Pichichero. The summer colds caused by enteroviruses generally clear up without treatment within a few days or even a week. But see a health care provider if you have concerning symptoms, like a high fever or a rash.

For more information, please visit www.nih.gov.

Page 12: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 12 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

It’s a Kid’s Job Playing Helps Kids Learn and Grow

healthy aging

What would childhood be without time to play? Play, it turns out, is essential to growing up healthy. Re-search shows that active, creative play benefits

just about every aspect of child development. Play is behavior that looks as if it has no purpose,” says NIH psychologist Dr. Stephen Suomi. “It looks like fun, but it actually prepares for a complex social world.” Evidence suggests that play can help boost brain function, increase fitness, improve coordination, and teach cooperation. Suomi notes that all mammals—from mice to humans—engage in some sort of play. His research focuses on rhe-sus monkeys. While he’s cautious about drawing parallels between monkeys and people, his studies offer some gen-eral insights into the benefits of play. Active, vigorous social play during development helps to sculpt the monkey brain. The brain grows larger. Connec-tions between brain areas may strengthen. Play also helps monkey youngsters learn how to fit into their social group, which may range from 30 to 200 monkeys in three or four extended families. Both monkeys and humans live in highly complex social structures, says Suomi. “Through play, rhesus monkeys learn to negotiate, to deal with strangers, to lose gracefully, to stop before things get out of hand, and to follow rules,” he says. These lessons prepare monkey youngsters for life after they leave their mothers. Play may have similar effects in the human brain. Play can help lay a foundation for learning the skills we need for social interactions. “If human youngsters lack playtime, social skills will likely suffer,” says Dr. Roberta Golinkoff, an infant language expert at the University of Delaware. “You will lack the ability to inhibit impulses, to switch tasks easily and to play on your own.” Play helps young children master their emotions and make their own decisions. It also teaches flexibility, motivation and confidence. Kids don’t need expensive toys to get a lot out of play-time. “Parents are children’s most enriching plaything,” says Golinkoff. Playing and talking to babies and children are vital for their language development. Golinkoff says that kids who talk with their parents tend to acquire a vo-cabulary that will later help them in school. “In those with parents who make a lot of demands, language is less well developed,” she says. The key is not to take over the con-versation, or you’ll shut it down. Unstructured, creative, physical play lets children burn calories and develops all kinds of strengths, such as learn-ing how the world works. In free play, children choose the games, make the rules, learn to negotiate and release stress. Free play often involves fantasy. If children, say, want to learn about being a fireman, they can imagine and act out what a fireman does. And if something scary happens, free play can help defuse emotions by working them out.

Page 13: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 13

“Sports are a kind of play, but it’s not the kids calling the shots,” says Golinkoff. It’s important to engage in a variety of activities, including physical play, social play and solitary play. “The key is that in free play, kids are making the decisions,” says Golinkoff. You can’t learn to make decisions if you’re always told what to do. Some experts fear that free play is becoming endangered. In the last two decades, children have lost an average of eight hours of free play per week. As media screens draw kids indoors, hours of sitting raise the risk for obesity and related diseases. When it comes to video games and other media, parents should monitor content, especially violent content, and limit the amount of time children sit. There’s also been a national trend toward eliminating school recess. It’s being pushed aside for academic study, including standardized test preparation. “Thousands of children have lost recess altogether,” says child development expert Dr. Kathryn Hirsh-Pasek of Temple University. “Lack of recess has important consequences for young children who concentrate better when they come inside after a break from the schoolwork.” Many kids, especially those in low-income areas, lack access to safe places to play. This makes their school recess time even more precious. In response to these changes, some educators are now insisting that preschool and elementary school children have regular periods of active, free play with other children. The type of learning that happens during playtime is not always possible in the classroom. School recess is also important because of the grow-ing number of obese children in the United States. Running around during recess can help kids stay at a healthy weight.

Play also may offer advantages within the classroom. In an NIH-funded study, Hirsh-Pasek, Golinkoff and their colleagues found a link between preschoolers’ math skills and their ability to copy models of two- and three-dimensional building-block construc-tions. Play with building blocks—and block play alongside adults—can help build children’s spatial skills so they can get an early start toward the later study of science, technology, engineering or math. “In a way, a child is becoming a young scientist, checking out how the world works,” says Hirsh-Pasek. ”We never outgrow our need to play.” Older children, including teens, also need to play and daydream, which helps their problem-solving and creative imagination. Adults, too, need their breaks, physical activity and social interaction. At the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, “Recreation therapy services are seen as essential to the patients’ recovery,” says Donna Gregory, chief of recreational therapy. She and her team tailor activities for both children and adults. Games can get patients moving, even for just minutes at a time, which improves their functioning. Medical play helps children cope with invasive procedures. A two-year-old can be distracted with blowing bubbles; older kids can place their teddy bear in the MRI machine or give their doll a shot before they themselves get an injection. It gives kids a sense of control and supports their understanding in an age-appropriate, meaningful way. Without play and recreation, people can become isolated and depressed. “There’s therapeutic value in helping patients maintain what’s important to them,” says Gregory. “When you are physically and socially active, it gives life meaning.”

Page 14: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 14 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

men’s health

Cancer Docs Can Have Cancer,TooOncologist Shares Experience with Prostate Cancer

By Craig Cooper, Genesis Health System

George Kovach, M.D., knew the routine. Get a physical, and, at his age of 66, have your prostate checked as part of that physical. But his screening for Prostate Specific Antigen

(PSA) was anything but routine. PSA scores are like golf scores; the lower the better. A 33 is like 33 over par.

While the PSA is notoriously fickle and increasingly controversial, a PSA score of 33 is considered to be a strong indicator of prostate cancer. According to WebMD, men with a PSA number between four and 10 have a 25 percent chance of having prostate cancer. If the PSA is higher than 10, the risk increases to 67 percent. There was one thing not routine at all about Dr. Kovach’s diagno-sis. He is an oncologist who has diagnosed and treated thousands of cancer patients himself. Oncologists do get cancer. “Without any family history, I had some degree of security that I would not have prostate cancer but there are no guarantees for any-

one, including cancer doctors,’’ said Dr. Kovach, who is an oncolo-gist with Iowa Cancer Specialists and is affiliated with the Genesis Cancer Care Institute. Prostate cancer is often an invisible cancer. There may be subtle symptoms like frequent urination, especially at night; painful urina-tion; blood in the urine or semen; and lower back pain. However, all of those symptoms could be related to something other than prostate cancer. “My symptoms were minimal to none,’’ Dr. Kovach explained. He began treatment with the understanding that his prostate was probably going to be removed after more was learned from a biopsy. Clinical by nature and profession, Dr. Kovach did his own research. There were options available but only one seemed to be the best course. “I reviewed the medical literature I respected and began to rank the treatment options based on the initial clinical pre-treatment stag-ing,’’ he said. “The options considered included observation, sur-gery, or radiation therapy.” Two of those options weren’t really viable. It was too late for ob-servation because his PSA number was higher than 10. Radiation therapy was out because of the size of his prostate. The best option was surgery. The last decision was open surgery or robotic surgery. Both are options at Genesis. Mark Milleman, M.D., of Urological Associates PC of Davenport offers both to patients. “Most of my patients seem to make the decision to have the open surgical procedure, although I do the da Vinci robotic surgery, too,’’ Dr. Milleman said. “The average length of stay is shorter with the open procedure, and there have been studies indicating fewer side effects from the open surgical procedure. “There are possible side effects from surgery, but in the hands of someone who has done a high number of open procedures, the risk of side effects are lessened.”

PSA screening controversial The side effects of prostate surgery can be serious, including in-continence, erectile dysfunction and infertility. The side effects have prompted a debate about the use of PSA screenings and aggressive treatment of prostate cancer. The U.S Preventive Services Task Force said in a recent report that healthy men should no longer receive PSA screening. Creating firestorms is nothing new for the independent organization. Last year, the same task force reported that most women did not need a first mammogram until age 50, even though many breast cancers are discovered in women in the 40-to-50 age bracket. Citing the serious side effects from surgery and the fact that prostate cancer is often a slow-growing cancer, the task force’s report said a PSA is unnecessary for most men. “I would prefer they would let the doctors and patients decide using the best information available and defer from blanket state-ments of policy,’’ Dr. Kovach said. “Has there been an overtreatment of some men? Yes, there has,’’ Dr. Milleman conceded. “But the PSA is the best screening

Oncologist George Kovach, M.D., who has diagnosed and treated thousands of cancer patients over the years, wasdiagnosed with prostate cancer after a PSA screening.

Page 15: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 15

tool we have right now. It has probably saved hundreds of thou-sands of lives. “I don’t think anyone wants to be the guy who is told a PSA is unnecessary and then finds out he is dying of metastatic prostate cancer. I think you get the best information you can get, consider the patient and other factors, and use the information to help the patient make the best decisions.”

Different direction for different men One of the issues with prostate cancer, Dr. Milleman said, is there is no good method for determining how quickly a prostate cancer will grow. The best course of action for one patient may be too aggressive for another. A number of factors are considered in determining treat-ment, including age, family history, and general health of the individual. “What we don’t know is how aggressive a cancer will be. A man of 80 who is otherwise healthy is probably not going to die of a newly diagnosed prostate cancer. He will die of something else,’’ Dr. Mille-man said. “But someone in their 50s who has some underlying risk factors and has an abnormal PSA is someone you might treat more aggressively. “It’s a complex issue, and there is a lot of gray to it. It isn’t black and white.’’ September is National Prostate Cancer Awareness Month but men should be aware of the threat of prostate cancer every month of the year. If you are 50 years old or have a family history of prostate can-cer, ask about a prostate exam the next time you see your primary care physician.

Ten Facts About Prostate Cancer1. About 242,000 new cases of prostate cancer will be di-

agnosed in the U.S. in 2012. About 28,170 men will die of prostate cancer.

2. About one in six men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime.

3. Your chances of getting prostate cancer are one in three if you have a close relative with the disease. The risk jumps to 83 percent if two close relatives—father or brothers—have been diagnosed with the disease.

4. African-Americans have the highest rate of prostate can-cer in the world.

5. Prostate cancer is the second-leading cause of male cancer-related death in the U.S.

6. Prostate cancer occurs primarily in older men. Nearly two-thirds of men diagnosed with prostate cancer are 65 or older.

7. There are no consistent or noticeable symptoms of pros-tate cancer while it is still in the early stages.

8. Before early detection through PSA screening, only one in four prostate cancer cases were found while still in the early stages.

9. There is new debate about the effectiveness of the Pros-tate Specific Antigen (PSA) screening. Consult with your primary care physician about whether you should be screened.

10. Nearly 100 percent of men diagnosed with prostate can-cer while the cancer is in early stages are still alive five years after diagnosis.

Sources: American Cancer Society and National Prostate Cancer Coalition.

3450 30th Avenue, Suite #4Moline, IL 61265

(309) 764-2346

• Hearing aid sales & services, repair and accessories• Now serving children & adults

Formerly Don White Hearing Aid ServicesServing the QC for over 50 years

3601 North Division St., Davenport563-326-5441

www.parkeraudiologypc.comHrs. M-T-Th-Fr 9-4:30 • Wed. 9-Noon

Page 16: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 16 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

eye protection

It’s estimated that nearly 6,000 Americans spent part of their Fourth of July holiday in the emergency room in 2009 due to fire-works injuries, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety

Commission (CPSC). Of those, fireworks caused an estimated 1,600 eye injuries. The injuries included contusions, lacerations and foreign bodies in the eye. Some injuries even caused permanent vision loss. “I’ve treated many eye injuries associated with fireworks,” says Davenport Ophthalmologist, Dr. Leonardo Antaris, Quad Cities Ret-ina Consultants. “Most involve kids who treat the fireworks as ordi-nary toys. They get too close or, as part of their playing, throw the fireworks at each other. Seldom is eye protection worn and there is almost never any adult supervision.” According to the National Fire Protection Association, “safe and sane” fireworks cause more injuries than illegal fireworks, especially to preschool children. For children under the age of five, half of the total injuries were from sparklers. Children ages 15 and younger make up a significant number of fireworks injuries, accounting for 39 percent. “The key to prevent injury is proper education,” says Dr. Antaris. “The reality is that many people—of all ages—are going to celebrate with fireworks, so they need to do so as safely as possible. Eye pro-tection, supervision, and common sense are the key components to a safe Fourth.”

Eight Things to Remember This July 4th, Dr. Antaris reminds Quad Citians to play it safe around fireworks by taking these simple precautions:• Determine if it’s legal to shoot fireworks. Laws vary based on

where you live. Buy only legal fireworks with a label, manufac-turer’s name, and directions. Never try to make your own.

• Wear safety goggles. Regular eyeglasses are not adequate to protect your eyes. However, safety goggles won’t prevent other injuries such as burns.

• If you give kids sparklers, make sure they keep them outside and away from the face, clothing, and hair. Sparklers can reach 1,800° Fahrenheit (982° Celsius)—hot enough to melt gold.

• Always use fireworks outside and have a bucket of water and a hose nearby in case of accidents.

• Back away. Fireworks have been known to backfire or shoot off in the wrong direction. Never throw or point fireworks at someone, even for fun.

• Don’t hold fireworks in your hand or have any part of your body over them while lighting.

• Point fireworks away from homes, and keep away from brush and leaves, and flammable substances.

• Light one firework at a time (not in glass or metal containers) and never relight a dud.

Watch the Eyes this Fourth of JulyDavenport Opthalmologist, Dr. Leonardo Antaris, provides eighttips for making sure your kids play it safe with fireworks.

Submitted by Mississippi Valley Health Network

Dr. Leonardo Antaris

Page 17: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 17

Eight Tips To Help Save An Eye:• Do not delay medical attention even for seemingly mild injuries.

“Mild” damage can end in serious vision loss, even blindness, if treatment does not occur immediately.

• Stay calm, do not panic. Keep the child as calm as possible.• Do not rub the eye. If any eye tissue is torn, rubbing might push

out the eye’s contents and cause more damage. • Do not rinse out the eye. This can be even more damaging than

rubbing.• Shield the eye from pressure. Tape or secure the bottom of a foam

cup, milk carton, or similar shield against the bones surrounding the eye: brow, cheek, and bridge of the nose.

• Avoid giving aspirin or ibuprofen to try to reduce the pain. They thin the blood and might increase bleeding. Acetaminophen is the over-the-counter drug of choice. Unfortunately, non-prescription painkillers will not be of much help.

• Do not apply ointment or any medication. It is probably not sterile. Also, ointments make the eye area slippery. This could slow the doctor’s examination at a time when every second counts.

• Above all, do not let your child play with fireworks without close supervision. If you must attend a non-professional fireworks dis-play, have all present wear safety goggles (which may not prevent all injuries). Regular glasses will not prevent injury, and may break or shatter if impacted by flying debris.

Sources: Prevent Blindness America and Kidshealth.orgwww.hcr-manorcare.com

I’m so glad I learned about Medicare’s 30-day windowMom’s health got worse. I didn’t know what to do, since we’d already used Medicare. Fortunately, I called ManorCare. They told me about Medicare’s 30-day window and helped me understand the benefits I still had available. It meant coverage could be renewed within 30 days of discharge because more care was needed. What a relief!

Call today for your free Medicare 30-day Window Brochure

563.344.2000 • www.manorcare.com

If you have wounds such as...

• Diabetic ulcers, Venous insufficiency ulcers, Arterial ulcers

• Pressure ulcers (bedsores)• Non-healing surgical wounds

(longer than 3 to 4 weeks)• Non-healing traumatic wounds

(longer than 3 to 4 weeks)• Outpatient burn care• Recurrent wounds

...find out how the staff at Genesis Wound and Hyperbaric Institute can help.

For more information visit www.genesishealth.com/wound or call (563) 421-1585.

IOWA LOCATION1351 W. Central ParkPavilion 2, Suite 1225Davenport, IA

ILLINOIS LOCATION1314 10th StreetSuite CSilvis, IL

Wound_HealthyCells_Layout 1 6/12/12 11:02 AM Page 1

Page 18: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 18 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

feature story

There are many things to consider when planning for your retirement. How old do you want to be when you stop working? Are you going to downsize your home—or maybe

you’re thinking of buying a second home. Perhaps travel is in your future. However you envision retirement, planning for it financially is an important first step.

Retirement on the Horizon? Northwest Bank Investment Management Group Can Help

“Many of our clients have retirement planning as their number one priority,” stated Karen Goodall, Senior Vice President / Senior Trust Officer at Northwest Bank Investment Management Group. “They have an idea of what they would like their retirement to look like and need expert guidance to help ensure they get there.” That’s where the Investment Management Group steps in to help. Their team of pro-

The Investment Management Group Team – Front: Dan Zude and Cody Allen,Back: Karrie Roels, Taffney VandeVoorde, Karen Goodall, Janet Swanson, and Carrie Bowman

Page 19: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 19

fessionals has over 200 years of combined financial management experience to help their clients achieve their financial goals. “Over 85% of our clients are over age 50 which means a well-managed investment plan for their retirement nest egg is absolutely essential. As these clients complete the final years of the “accumula-tion phase” of their investment life and enter the early stages of their “income phase” of life they can afford very few, if any, mistakes,” stated Cody Allen, Assistant Vice President /Trust Officer. Allen went on to explain that the Investment Management Group has a solid process they use with potential clients to help both the clients and the Investment Manage-ment Group understand if they are a good fit. “The first thing we do with a potential new client is talk to them about where they see themselves in retirement,” ex-plained Cody Allen. “We want to really understand their vi-sion for the future and determine how much retirement income it’s going to take to live that life they see.” Once they have estab-lished the goals, he also takes a look at their current portfolio to understand what has been accomplished so far. Many people have pockets of money in different accounts. Some have left a 401(k) behind at a previous employer. Others have established accounts at multiple brokerage firms in hopes of being more diverse. Some have always done their own investing in the past but now feel the need for a professional to help guide them the rest of the way. “We speak with so many new clients that have ended up with relationships with three or four financial organizations and no real explanation as to what those relationships were originally intended to do for them,” says Goodall. Having accounts in many different places is not often in a person’s best interest. When an invest-ment advisor isn’t able to see an entire portfolio, it’s not possible to correctly balance assets to achieve goals. “Different phases of retirement planning require different types of investments,” ex-plained Goodall, “and determining the appropriate asset allocation between stocks, bonds and cash is 90% of the battle.” An invest-ment advisor only looking at a piece of the total portfolio could balance their piece of the investments accordingly, but it may not mesh well with other parts of a person’s total portfolio, thereby not creating the best possible return. There is also a great risk of duplication of investments—more than one advisor investing your money in the same funds. If you are married, it is also important to look at both spouses’ portfolios to determine how they work together to achieve the fam-ily’s goals. “It’s okay for husband and wife to disagree on how aggressive or conservative they should be with their retirement accounts. We work with numerous couples where one spouse will lose sleep at night if his or her portion of the portfolio has anything in the stock market while the other spouse places everything in the

stock market and never looks back. It’s all about keeping a well-informed approach,” states Allen. Many times, when people leave a job, they also leave a 401(k) behind to be administered by their former employer. “This practice is the path of least resistance,” says Allen. “The average American will change careers five to seven times during their lifetime and it’s awfully easy to put off the decision and leave the 401(k) plan with the former employer.” Allen explains why this practice is generally not a good one. “A 401(k) plan gives you a menu of 15 to 20 mutual funds to diverse your portfolio. When you rollover the balance of your plan into an IRA you have practically unlimited investment selections which can greatly improve the potential success of your retirement plan.” Another important point to keep in mind is that a former em-ployer is going to be less likely to cover the administration cost of having you as part of their 401(k) plan when you no longer work for them. You may incur some administration fees that your em-ployer was happy to cover for you when you were an employee, but not so willing to do after you have left the organization. When you leave an organization, take the time to complete the necessary paperwork to roll your 401(k) into a plan at your new employer or consolidate it with other investments under a single advisor. Once a client of the Investment Management Group, a team goes to work to make sure that their client receives excellent ser-vice. After an initial meeting to understand the client’s objectives and risk tolerances, Vice President / Portfolio Manager Dan Zude goes to work. He chooses the investments that will best suit the client and chooses the correct time to enter the market. Zude is a trained investment specialist with a financial analytical back-ground. He spends his day studying the markets and researching a consensus of the best minds on Wall Street to determine how best to manage the portfolio. Unlike some institutions with only a limited selection of inventory, the Investment Management Group

Portfolio Manager Dan Zude reviews investment choices and marketconditions as part of a total Portfolio Review meeting.

Page 20: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 20 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

team has access to the entire bond market and has no pressure to choose specific funds. While a traditional broker is also managing money locally, they are generally paid when an investment is bought or sold. Because of the Investment Management Group’s fee-based services, there is no incentive for them to move investments unless it truly benefits the customer. An account that is appreciating can continue to do so without pressure to sell it in order to make a commission. The Investment Management Group stays in close contact with their clients, making sure that the clients are always well informed and comfortable with what is happening with their assets. A cus-tomer of the Investment Management Group has access 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to their most current reporting thanks to secure online access to their accounts. The team assigned to the account meets with the client for a full investment review as often as the client sees fit. Client’s investment returns are compared to various benchmarks. They also look at projections of how much money the client will have for retirement based on current invest-ment levels and discuss opportunities to ensure the goals are met. “Our clients really enjoy the Portfolio Review meeting,” stated Goodall. “It gives them the opportunity to ask our team questions about the investment process and how we make decisions regard-ing their account. In many financial organizations, the client never gets to talk to the person who is actually managing the money. We think it’s important that they have that interaction.”

feature story continued

Another point their clients find comforting is that the Investment Management Group is a fiduciary. Many traditional brokers are not. Being a fiduciary means that they are held to a higher standard of care, and they are bound by law to always put the best interest of their client in front of their own. The professionals at Northwest Bank Investment Management Group understand another very important point. You can be as careful and thoughtful about saving for retirement as possible, but if something happens tomorrow and you don’t get to enjoy the money yourself, it’s important that it goes to the right people. They are experts in Estate Planning and work with their clients to ensure that the client’s ultimate wishes are met. Preparing for retirement gives you a lot to consider. The North-west Bank Investment Management Group lets you focus on the fun decisions while they assist you in making the financial deci-sions that can help you achieve your dreams. They’ve been doing it for over 40 years for people right here in the Quad Cities.

For more information or to schedule a review of your retirement plan call,563-388-2628 or visit them online at

www.northwestbank.com/IMG.

The professionals at the Investment Management Group use a teamapproach to providing excellent customer service with clients.

Page 21: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 21

feature story continued

Because advanced training makes a difference when it comes to surgical specialization. It brings new possiibilities

and new procedures into the conversation about your care and recovery. By providing you with access to

osquadcities.com or by

calling 563-344-9292 to schedule an appointment today.

Why should patients look for a fellowship-trained orthopaedic specialist?

Foot & Ankle Hand & Upper Extremity Spine Sports Medicine Total Joint Replacement

www.osquadcities.com

Fellowship-training.

A difference that makes a difference.

Whole Campaign (Family Focus).indd 11 11/15/2011 3:49:30 PM

Page 22: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 22 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

Do you have extra belly fat? Who doesn’t? Now there is a new non-invasive fat reduction technology. Liposonix uses high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) energy to perma-

nently destroy targeted fat cells without surgery. “Liposonix is a revolutionary non-surgical solution for people who are close to their ideal shape, but have stubborn areas of fat that just won’t go away no matter how much they exercise or diet. The procedure takes about one hour and, while individual results can vary, patients typically achieve a waistline reduction of ap-proximately one inch (equivalent to one pant or dress size) within 8-12 weeks after receiving a single treatment,” said Dr. Kimberly K. Schulz of Infinity Skin Care & Spa.

The Liposonix system technology from Solta Medical, a global leader in the medical aesthetics market, was developed over a period of 10 years by leading scientists and ultrasound experts with more than 200 years of combined experience in the field of therapeutic and diagnostic ultrasound devices. It works by focus-ing ultrasound energy below the surface of the skin in order to heat only targeted fat tissue — similar to how light from the sun can be focused with a magnifying glass to create heat. The treated fat tissue is removed through the body's natural healing process, leaving the patient with a thinner, more contoured waistline. Patients typically resume normal activities immediately after the Liposonix procedure and no special diet or exercise pro-

New Liposonix Non-InvasiveFat Reduction Treatment

One treatment, one hour, one size smaller — without surgerySubmitted by Infinity Skin Care & Spa

cosmetic advancements

Page 23: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 23

gram is required in order to achieve results. Clinical studies of more than 200 patients, conducted using the Liposonix system, showed an average waist circumference reduction of approximately one inch (2.5 cm) at 12 weeks after a single Liposonix treatment. “Our patients are very happy with Liposonix because it deliv-ers results without the risks typically associated with surgical fat reduction procedures. It is not liposuction or surgery, is not a re-placement for a healthy lifestyle and exercise, and is not a way to lose weight. But it is a quick, easy way to help patients slim that last inch and hit their personal shape goals.”

About Infinity Skincare & Spa Infinity Skin Care & Spa is a comprehensive skin care practice providing cosmetic dermatology, clinical skin care, and acne and facial spa services and is proud to be the first practice in the state of Iowa that is offering Liposonix treatments. The practice is led by Kimberly K. Schulz, MD, board certified dermatologist, and pro-vides a focus on skin fitness, sun protection and overall facial and skin rejuvenation. For more information about Liposonix® treatment or to schedule a consultation, call 319-337-5355 or visit them on-line at www.infinityskincareandspa.com.

About Solta Medical, Inc. Solta Medical, Inc. is a global leader in the medical aesthetics market providing innovative, safe, and effective solutions for pa-tients that enhance and expand the practice of medical aesthetics for physicians. The company offers products to address a range of skin issues under the industry's six premier brands: Liposonix®, Thermage®, Fraxel®, Clear + Brilliant™, Isolaz® and CLARO®. Li-posonix uses advanced HIFU technology for non-invasive fat re-duction. Thermage is an innovative, non-invasive radiofrequency procedure for tightening and contouring skin. As the leader in frac-tional laser technology, Fraxel delivers minimally invasive clinical solutions to resurface aging and sun damaged skin. Clear + Bril-liant is a unique, cost-effective treatment that utilizes safe, frac-tional laser technology to prevent early signs of aging. Isolaz was the first laser or light based system indicated for the treatment of inflammatory acne, comedonal acne, pustular acne, and mild-to-moderate inflammatory acne. CLARO is an over-the-counter personal care acne system that uses a powerful combination of both heat and light to clear skin quickly and naturally. Since 2002, approximately one million Thermage, Fraxel and Isolaz procedures have been performed in over 100 countries.

For more information about Solta Medical, call 1-877-782-2286 or log on to www.Solta.com.

© 2012 Solta Medical, Inc. All rights reserved. Liposonix, Thermage, Fraxel, Clear + Brilliant, Isolaz, CLARO and Solta Medical are trademarks or regis-tered trademarks of Solta Medical, Inc. or its subsidiaries.

“Liposonix is a revolutionary non-surgical solution for people

who are close to their ideal shape, but have stubborn areas of fat that just won’t go away no matter how

much they exercise or diet.”

When your doctor recommends an MRI, make sure you ask to use Metro MRI Center. We will provide the clearest images possible.

We offer: • High-field traditional and open MRI exams including breast and cardiac MRI

• Advanced level MRI technologists

• State-of-the-art hardware and software

• Contracted with most insurance companies

• Exams available 24/7

/

MOLINE, IL (309) 762-7227

BETTENDORF, IA (563) 359-0277

ROCK ISLAND, IL (309) 779-3470

ists

E, IL (309) 762-722

DORF, IA (563) 3

Helping You Hear Better!Personal care service

with the highest technology available.

• Complete hearing evaluations

• Hearing aids

Providers for HAMS, IA BCBS EPIC

Siemens, Oticon, Phonak and more.

1931 10th Ave. E, Milan, IL309-283-5902

2215 E. 52nd St, Suite #2 Davenport, IA563-355-7712

1616 Cedar St., Muscatine, IA 563-264-9406

Hammond Henry Hospital 600 College Ave, Geneseo, IL

309-944-9181

AUDIOLOGY CONSULTANTS P.C.

www.audiologyconsultants.com 800-404-7712

Page 24: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 24 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

L ondon’s Summer Olympic Games open in July, and as the world once again becomes inspired by the courage and tenacity of Olympic athletes, a volleyball player from the Iowa cornfields is

still dreaming of Olympic gold of her own one day. Emily Podschweit is a former Pleasant Valley High School volleyball standout and has just graduated from Colorado’s Chaparral High School in May. When the London games begin, one eye will be on her mentor, beach volleyball legend and Olympian Misty May-Treanor, represent-ing Team USA, while the other eye will be on her own career. Emily’s story begins in Pleasant Valley, Iowa with a bad knee injury and Dr. John Hoffman of Orthopaedic Specialists, PC.

In 2009, Emily experienced a bad ACL tear. The tear was so bad, in fact, that her original orthopaedist told her she’d never play the sport she loved again. But Emily sought a second opinion from Dr. Hoffman, a fellowship-trained, sports medicine surgeon in Davenport who called on his experience to provide an alternative point-of-view. “Some surgeons take a very conservative attitude on returning to play,” said Dr. Hoffman, “but that’s not necessarily good for the patient.” Fortunately for Emily and the other sports medicine patients at OS, Dr. Hoffman’s experience of performing thousands of ACL repairs in his career has helped form his philosophy of aggressive rehabilitation programs after surgery to help athletes return to their sports safely and quickly.

patient recovery

Olympic DreamsAfter recovering from a nearly career-ending ACL injury, former Pleasant Valley

volleyball player, Emily Podschweit, now actively pursues her dream of Olympic Gold.

Submitted by Orthopaedic Specialists, PC

Dr. John Hoffman

Image Courtesy ofKeyser Images Photography

Page 25: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 25

“Women are three to eight times more likely to suffer a major knee injury than men,” explained Dr. Hoffman. “As more young women like Emily play in high school sports where the knee takes a lot of pound-ing, there is a related increase in knee injures.” It took six months of hard work after surgery. “Dr. Hoffman kept in touch and encouraged me the whole way through,” she said. “I learned you have to have patience to get to the next level and deal with setbacks, like injuries, when they happen.” She managed to get herself back on the court again. And after eleven months, Emily found herself and a teammate fighting their way to fifth place in the AAU Junior Olympic Beach Doubles Tournament—the first team from Iowa to medal in the history of the tournament. Emily’s Olympic dream eventually took her and her family from Pleas-ant Valley to their current home in Parker, Colorado where she could be near the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs and play for one of the top club programs in the country during the off-season.

The Pursuit of the Dream Continues Now it is the summer of 2012, and Emily has graduated from high school with accolades and honors that could propel her to the top. She was named one of the top five defensive players in the nation for indoor volleyball and ranked in the top eight players in the U.S. for beach volleyball, following her senior season. Emily is currently training with the USA Beach National Team in Hermosa Beach, California, located near the Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista. In the fall, she will be attending Florida International University in Miami with a full-ride scholarship to play the sport she loves. Her mother, Mary Kaye Podschweit, says her daughter still

dreams of making the Olympic team, and that she has her eye on trying out for the 2016 Olympic Games in Brazil, with even greater hopes of making the team for the 2020 Games, eight years away. “When Emily left Bettendorf,” recalls Mary Kay, “she wrote a letter to Dr. Hoffman and the OS team, thanking them for helping her save her knee and her dreams. Without them, she wouldn’t be the player she is today.”

For more information on understanding knee and ACL injuries and the various treatment options open for discussion with your doctor, visit the Orthopaedic Specialists PC website: www.osquadcities.com.

Image Courtesy ofKeyser Images Photography

(563) 391-3430

4130 Northwest Boulevard • Davenport, IAwww.ridgecrestvillage.org

Call Bob today to schedule a tourand complimentary luncheon.

If you’re considering a move to a senior living campus,

but don’t want to part with your king size bedaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

or your sectional sofa , come check out

our large apartments and cottages at Ridgecrest Village.

We have large units available now!We have 175Independent Livingapartments and 33cottages in all sizes,including two bedroom units up to

1,700 sq. feet. Awide variety ofstyles areavailable.

And while you’re enjoying your newhome, you’ll have opportunitiesevery day to experience a lifestlye of

fulfillment. We have something forevery interest! For example, a cast oftalented residents recently performedthe 4-actcomedy playSeniorMoments tolarge,enthusiasticaudiences hereon ourcampus.

Our continued care programsn Independent Livingn Assisted Living (including a

memory loss neighborhood.)n 24-hour Nursing CareSENIOR

MOMENTSA play about seniors, for seniors,

starring seniors!

A Comedy

Ridgecrest Village Resident Activitiespresents

Page 26: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 26 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

Essential Oilsand MRSA

By Karen DeVault, RN, BCHHP

Methicillin-resistant staphylococcus Aureus, commonly known as MRSA was first detected in the 60s, only a few years after a new form of penicillin, known as Methicillin, was intro-

duced. Staphylococcus Aureus is a common and relatively harmless inhabitant and can be found on the skin and in the nasal passages of people. The MRSA form of staphylococcus is not so harmless. Once contracted, a person can have MRSA for life, and it can be fatal. MRSA originated in hospitals and where it is principally found today; however, it can now be found in other parts of our commu-nity, including gymnasiums and playgrounds. The two types of MRSA are classified as: HA-MRSA, which is acquired in hospitals; and CA-MRSA, which is acquired in communities. Michelle Moore, a Microbiologist and Scientist, states that MRSA is much more resistant to the following antibiotics:• Methicillin, Oxacillin, Penicillin, and Amoxicillin: These are all

in the penicillin antibiotic family• Cephalosporins: These antibiotics are another class of Penicillin-

like antibiotics• Vancomycin: Some strains of MRSA (VISA and VRSA) are

now becoming resistant to Vancomycin, one of the best last resort antibiotics. Vancomycin has tradition-

ally been used for serious and life-threatening infections that are not responsive to more

common antibiotics.

“Unfortunately, MRSA is constantly becoming more resistant

to more antibiotics, and it may be a matter of time before antibiot-

ics can no longer can be relied upon,” says Moore.

MRSA Statistics According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), in the year 2005, MRSA was respon-sible for an estimated 94,000 in-vasive life-threatening infections

and close to 19,000 deaths (more than AIDS).

Hospitals in England have seen a 548% increase in MRSA related deaths

from 2003 to 2004. David Stewart, PhD, who is the Direc-tor of the Center of Aromatherapy and Research Education, and author of the books, The Chemistry of Essential Oils Made Simple, and Healing Oils of the

natural treatment

Page 27: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 27

women’s health

Bible, says a powerful and effective way to combat MRSA can be found in nature, with the use of therapeutic-grade essential oils, (those pro-duced by Young Living Essential Oils). According to Dr. Stewart, these essential oils are effective antimicrobial agents with powerful antibacte-rial properties, without side effects. They, unlike their pharmaceutical counterparts, are incapable of producing resistant strains of bacteria.

Why Essential Oils Essential oils are extremely complex, comprised of hundreds of naturally occurring chemical constituents that circulate throughout a plant, keeping it healthy in many different ways. In contrast, man-made medicine is made with laboratory precision, always producing the same identical drug with every batch. A drug usually consists of only one or two active ingredients. It is easy, therefore, for bacteria to become resistant when exposed to the same, exact drug over and over because the bacteria eventually figures out the drug’s proper-ties, or “breaks the code” so to speak, and this is how they develop resistance. Essential oils are never identical duplicates like man-made medi-cines, because nature has so many variables. Since plants adjust to their environment, their oils are different from morning to evening, season-to-season, and year-to-year. Each batch of essential oil from a lavender plant for example, can be different depending on the time of day of harvest, amount of rainfall it was subject to, soil and climate variations, etc. If you compare the same species grown in different parts of the world, you will get even greater variations of essential oils. Dr. Stewart likens essential oils to fine wines. Even from the same vineyard, no two years produce exactly the same wines. Simply said, bacteria will never “figure out” or become resistant to an essential oil because of the ever changing but naturally occur-ring chemical constituents found in essential oils. Even if bacteria did figure out the constituents of an oil in a given year, it would have to figure it out all over again with the next year’s crop. Young Living produces quality, therapeutic grade, or as some pro-fessionals call them, “medicinal-grade” essential oils. Do not expect to get the same results from a non-therapeutic grade EO because non-therapeutic grade oils have either been diluted with an odorless, colorless solvent, or they have not been grown, gathered, distilled and bottled in order to obtain all the naturally occurring compounds. To understand what constitutes a true therapeutic grade EO, I invite you to read the following article at: www.youngliving.com/en_US/com-pany/therapeutic-grade.html.

Karen DeVault is the owner of Holistic Alternatives, LLC. She is a Registered Nurse and Board Certified Holistic Health Practitio-ner who specializes in Nutritional Therapy and Essential Oil Tech-niques (Raindrop; Emotional Release and Neuro-Auricular). Her office is located on Kimberly Rd. in Bettendorf. For details about oil techniques, visit: www.KarensHolisticAlternatives.com or email: [email protected].

Skip the Test BeforeIncontinence Surgery?

Women may be able to skip a routine bladder function test before urinary incontinence surgery. A new study shows that outcomes were similar whether patients had the test

or just a check-up before the surgery.

Urinary incontinence is a loss of bladder control. It affects nearly 13 million Americans. It’s caused by problems with the muscles and nerves involved in holding and releasing urine. Stress urinary incontinence occurs when urine leaks following coughing, laugh-ing, sneezing, exercising or other movements that put pressure on the bladder. Pregnancy, childbirth and menopause can often lead to stress incontinence. Each year about 260,000 women choose to have surgery to treat this condition. Before surgery, tests called urodynamic studies are used to measure how well the bladder, sphincter muscles, and urethra are storing and releasing urine. These bladder function tests might cause discomfort or pain, and can be costly. NIH-funded researchers studied over 600 women with stress urinary incontinence. Before surgery, all of the women had a rou-tine check-up. Half also had a bladder function test. A year after surgery, several measures showed that about 77% of women in both groups had achieved treatment success. “The findings of our study argue against routine pre-operative testing in cases of uncomplicated stress urinary incontinence, as the tests provide no added benefit for surgical treatment success but are expensive, uncomfortable and may result in complications such as urinary tract infections,” says the study’s lead author, Dr. Charles Nager of the University of California, San Diego.

For more information, please visit www.nih.gov.

Page 28: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 28 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

The National Safety Council encourages an annual observance for educating and influencing safety behaviors around the leading causes of preventable injuries and deaths.

Safety is a broad topic, which encompasses daily life activities at home, at work, and for our children. Consider the following safety rec-ommendations as small changes that can make a big difference to you personally and to your family’s health and wellness.

Motor Vehicle Safety Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among 5 to 34 year-olds in the United States. Prevention focuses on safer vehicles, seat belt, and booster seat use, reducing impaired drivers (Don’t Drink and Drive) and distracted drivers (Don’t Text and Drive). The Center for Disease Control (CDC) focuses its efforts on helping groups at risk, including child passengers, teen drivers and older adult drivers. Preven-tion of pedestrian and bicycle injuries also is important.

Traumatic Brain Injury and Concussions Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is a serious public health problem. Each year TBI contributes to a substantial number of deaths and permanent disability cases. Approximately 1.7 million people sustain TBI’s annually. A recent news topic that many parents are now aware of is the risk of head injuries for their children who play contact sports. • Mild TBI is characterized by a brief change in mental status or con-

sciousness.

• Severe TBI is characterized by an extended period of unconscious-ness or amnesia after the injury.

• A concussion is a brain injury.

Regarding concussions in sports: Concussion Policy Statements can be developed to include commitments to safety, brief descriptions about concussion, and information on when athletes can safely return to play. The CDC recommends that an athlete should be kept out of play the day of the injury and until a health care professional experi-enced in evaluating for concussions says they are symptom-free and it’s okay to return to play. Parents and athletes should sign the Concus-sion Policy Statement at the beginning of each sports season.

Falls One of every three adults, age 65 and older, falls each year. Falls can cause moderate to severe injuries, such as hip fractures and head trauma, and can increase the risk of early death. Older adults can remain independent and reduce their chances of falling by regular exercises, review of medication for possible side effects of dizziness, making homes safer by reducing tripping hazards and using a grab bar near the tub, shower and toilet, plus a stair rail and improved lighting. Getting adequate calcium and vitamin D, doing weight bearing exer-cises, and getting screened for osteoporosis, can reduce hip fractures.

Spotlight on SafetyBy Mary Shook MD, MPH, CIME,

Quad City & Clinton Occupational Health, a Division of Braaten Health LLC

health and wellness

Page 29: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 29

Prescription Drug Overdose Drug overdose deaths have never been higher—rates in the US have more than tripled since 1990. In 2010, over 2,000 people a day—a total of 831,295—were seen in Emergency Departments because of poison-ing, one-third of which were transferred to another hospital or admitted. The increase rates of death by unintentional prescription drug overdose in recent years has been driven by the increased use of a class of pre-scription pain relievers that may become habit-forming.

Tips to prevent prescription drug overdose:• Only take prescription medication that is prescribed to you. • Never take larger or more frequent doses of your medication. • Never share or sell prescription drugs. • Follow label directions. Read and follow warning labels (e.g. do not

take medication and drink alcohol). • Turn on a light when you give or take medications at night. • To avoid drug interactions check with your doctor or pharmacist. • Monitor use of medications for children. Never tell children medication

is candy to get them to take it. • Dispose of unused, unneeded, or expired prescription drugs accord-

ing to federal guidelines. Participate in National Drug Take Back days.

Suicide Prevention Each year more than 34,000 suicides occur in the United States. Most people are uncomfortable talking about this topic. Prevention is achieved by decreasing risk factors and increasing protective factors. The primary goal in suicide prevention is to provide individuals, fami-lies, professionals, and organizations with information and resources to seek help, provide assistance, and/or implement suicide prevention programs in their communities. The National Suicide Prevention Hotline telephone number is 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

Food Safety This year 1 in 6 Americans will get sick from food poisoning. Follow-ing 4 simple steps can help protect your family from food poisoning at home:• Clean: Wash hands the right way—for 20 seconds with soap and

running water. Wash surfaces and utensils after each use. Wash fruits and veggies before peeling, because bacteria can spread from the outside to the inside.

• Separate: Use separate cutting boards and plates for produce and for meat, poultry, seafood and eggs. Keep these foods separate from other foods at the grocery store and in the refrigerator.

• Cook: Cook to the right temperature. Bacteria that cause food poi-soning multiply quickest between 40 degrees and 140 degrees °F. Keep hot food hot after cooking (140 degrees °F or above). Micro-wave food thoroughly to 165 degrees °F or above. Stir food in the middle of heating. Don’t skimp on standing time. Check temperature with a food thermometer.

• Chill: Refrigerate perishable foods within 2 hours. Never thaw or marinate foods on the counter. Know when to throw foods out. View Safe Storage Times Chart at www.foodsafety.gov/keep/charts/ storagetimes.html

Asthma Asthma can be triggered by environmental conditions. It can be controlled by taking medication and avoiding environmental “triggers’ such as dust mites, furry pets, mold, tobacco smoke and certain chemicals.

Mold Mold grows anywhere there is moisture. Exposure to damp and moldy environments can cause nasal stuffiness, throat irritation, cough-ing or wheezing, eye and skin irritation. Control mold in your home by keeping humidity levels between 40% and 60%; promptly repair leaky roofs, windows and pipes; thoroughly clean and dry after flooding; ven-tilate shower, laundry and cooking areas. Mold growth can be removed from hard surfaces with commercial products, soap and water, or a bleach solution of no more than 1 cup of bleach in 1 gallon of water. When using bleach, never mix bleach with ammonia or other household cleaners or dangerous toxic fumes may result. Open windows and doors to provide fresh air. Wear non-porous gloves and protective eyewear. If the area to be cleaned is more than 10 square feet, consult EPA mold remediation resources at www.epa.gov. Always follow the manufacturer’s instructions when using bleach or any other cleaning product.

Avoiding Heat Emergencies Heat-related deaths and illnesses are preventable. Yet annually, many people succumb to extreme heat. Elderly people 65 years and older, infants and children and people with chronic medical conditions are more prone to heat stress. • Get informed. Listen to local news and weather channels or contact

your local public health department during extreme heat conditions for health and safety updates. Heat stroke, heat exhaustion, heat cramps, and severe sunburn are some of the dangers that need to be avoided.

• Air conditioning is the number one protective factor against heat-related illness and death. During conditions of extreme heat, spend time in locations with air conditioning, such as shopping malls, public libraries, or public health sponsored heat-relief shelters in your area.

• Drink cool non-alcoholic beverages and increase your fluid intake regardless of your activity level. Liquids that contain alcohol or large amounts of sugar actually cause you to lose more body fluid. Replace salt and minerals if you are sweating heavily; this can be accom-plished with a sports drink.

• Wear appropriate clothing and sunscreen. Dress infants and children in cool loose clothing. Shade their heads and faces with hats or an umbrella.

• If you are not used to being outdoors in the heat, pace yourself and your activities. Schedule outdoor activities carefully: morning and eve-ning hours are less stressful. Use a buddy system when working in the heat.

• Monitor those at high risk. Do not leave children in cars. Visit the elderly at least twice a day.

• Use common sense: Do not eat hot foods and heavy meals.

If you have other questions about your safety, health and wellness, Quad City & Clinton Occupational Health’s (QCOH) team of occupa-tional health professionals deliver complete and compassionate patient care to area employers and workers in the QCA. Call us at 563-322-2103 or 563-242-2900. QCOH is located in Davenport at 1820 West Third Street and in Clinton at 1647 Lincoln Way. Ask your employer to send you to Quad City & Clinton Occupational Health, a Division of Braaten Health LLC, serving the Quad City Area for our 12th year.

Visit us at www.braatenhealth.com to explore our other Best-In-Class Outpatient Services: Midwest Therapy Center with four conve-nient locations in Davenport and Clinton, IA, Moline, IL and The REM Center™ 24/7 Sleep Lab.

Remember: It’s Your Life, Your Health, Your Choice.

Page 30: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 30 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

July is cancer awareness month, and when someone is stricken with this disease, a frequent concern is how to ease the pain that can occur as the disease progresses. The World

Health Organization has a treatment ladder that starts with simple painkillers taken by mouth such as Tylenol and other non-steroid anti-inflammatories such as Ibuprofen and Naprosyn. When these are ineffective alone, other medications are added that have co-deine, hydrocodone, and oxycodone to them. Stronger painkillers are added as needed such as morphine, methadone, and hy-dromorphone. The medications have to be escalated to stronger forms because the disease can progress which leads to increasing normal tissue disturbance and destruction including destruction of embedded nerves, which respond with painful impulses to the brain via the spinal cord pathways. The opioid medications which include most of the pain killers used beyond the first ones men-tioned above produce physical tolerance which means that the body gets used to them and they lose their effectiveness. This seems to occur more often when larger doses are used, as is the case when given by mouth. These medications work in the brain for the most part and in order to get there they must first pass through the circulator system, as they are absorbed from the gas-trointestinal tract. The side effects of these medications used in this way can be bothersome to the point of intolerability in some people. Constipation, nausea, sleepiness, inability to urinate, and sudden jerks of muscles can interfere with daily lives and interac-tion with family and friends. An alternative method to avoid severe side effects of oral pain-killers but yet create effective pain control is to use small amounts of pain killing medication in the spinal cord area. The pain killing effects are magnified in the spinal cord area because the medica-tions can directly act upon the spinal cord pain nerve pathways to lessen the pain nerve traffic on its way to the brain. The doses are much less on a daily basis and the exposure to the rest of the body is minimized leading to less side effects. Frequently, cancer victims can lead a more normal life and interact with those around them better than they would normally be able to do. The usual process for this treatment, which is known as intra-thecal drug delivery, is to test the effect of spinal administered drugs by placing a small tube within the spinal space via a needle and hooking it up to a pump in a fanny pack. An infusion of medi-cation over a 2-3 day period is done to see if the pain is well con-trolled. If it is successful, then a permanent pump hooked to a small tube is permanently implanted under the skin for continuous infusion of the pain killing medications for as long as needed. There are many options for medications to use and fine-tuning is done to produce comfort with a clear mental function. Your physician can explain further if you are interested and can be contacted at Mississippi Valley Pain Clinic 563-344-1050.

awareness month

Effective PainManagementand Cancer

Submitted by Mississippi Valley Pain Clinic

Page 31: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 31

awareness month

Call our Sleep DisordersCenter at (563) 421-1523

Services available at Davenport, Silvis and DeWitt locations

HealthyCells_HalfpgAds_Layout 1 6/12/12 11:03 AM Page 11

OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGYSPECIALIST, P.C.

Paul Revere Square • 2322 East Kimberly Road • Davenport, Iowa 52807Phone: 563.355.1853 • Fax: 563.355.0327

All of the physicians in this practice are certified specialists in the health care of women. We are practicing our specialty together to give you the best

possible medical care when you need it and hope that you will feel comfortable and secure with the treatment you receive.

Please call: (563)355-1853 to Schedule an appointment.Open from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM daily, Monday thru Fridaywww.obgyngroup.com

Personalized Healthcare for Today’s WomenWelcoming New Patients

Page 32: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 32 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

hearing loss

Have you had your hearing tested recently? Studies show that hearing tests are one of the most routinely missed tests as it gets skipped over nearly 70 percent of the time.

Hearing loss can be mistaken for several conditions and it can signal other medical ailments. Remember that your physician is the best person to diagnose and treat medical conditions…but an audiologist can point you in the right direction. Alzheimer’s/Dementia: Hearing loss can present similar symp-toms as dementia or Alzheimer’s. If you cannot hear information correctly, how are you supposed to remember it? Conversely, if your mind is not being exercised (with hearing and vision being our primary senses of gaining information), then you may be at greater risk of developing memory/cognitive problems. Diabetes: Hearing loss can be one indicator of diabetes. Diabetes affects more than just your eating habits, toes, and vision. Hearing loss can signal whether you should be concerned about diabetes. Autoimmune Disease: There can be an autoimmune condition that is related to hearing loss. Abnormal hearing loss can some-times be related to potentially treatable autoimmune disorders. Multiple Sclerosis: MS affects the plaque of the vision and hearing/balance systems. Cancer: Skin tags, scabs that don’t heal, and abnormal spots are sometimes pre-cursors to skin cancer. An audiologist is

sensitive to these areas of concern, and inspects the ear canal with careful attention. Fungal infections: These can spread quickly. Fungus can grow in the ear...and it can be really hard to get rid of. It can have dif-ferent colors and textures. It is often mistaken as earwax because its symptoms are similar. The difference is that fungus recurs quickly and can itch until it is treated appropriately. Depression: It is easy to pretend you do not have hearing loss and begin isolating yourself. I often hear that it is just easier to back away and not participate. There are numerous studies that point out the relationship of hearing loss and depression. Fortu-nately the consistent use of hearing aids can treat the hearing loss and reduce the likelihood of depression. Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder in Children: ADHD symptoms and symptoms of hearing loss in children can mimic each other. If children cannot hear (due to ear infections, hearing loss, wax, etc.) then they will lack focus and be unable to follow directions. In short, the more active—and proactive—you are with life conditions, the happier and healthier you will be. For more information, please contact Parker Audiology PC at 563-326-5441. Visit our new location at 3601 North Division Street, Davenport.

Annual Hearing Tests Are Important!By Audiologist Dr. Molly Parker, Owner of Parker Audiology, P.C.

Page 33: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 33

(563) 271-9327Each Miracle Method franchise independently owned and operated.

Lean Tissue is a sign of health. Excessive Body Fat is not.

Your scale cannot tell the difference, but our Body Composition Fat Analysis scan can…

Considered the Gold Standard, no other test is as accurate.

Call today for more information!

615 Valley View Dr., Moline(309) 743-0445

www.qcradiology.com

Learn more at:www.northwestbank.com/IMG

563.388.2628

Families are unique,and so are their financial needs.

Families can be made up of all types of people and each of them has their individual needs when it comes to their finances. Families in the Quad Cities have placed their trust in us because they value the relationship. They like the time we take to understand their goals and the efforts we make to help meet them. They appreciate our expertise and attention. Call or visit us today for answers about how we can help your family.

Investment Management

Trust and Estate Administration

Employer Retirement Plan

Services

IRA Management

Investment Products• Are not insured by the FDIC or any other federal government agency• Are not deposits of or guaranteed by the bank or any bank affiliate• May lose value

Page 34: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 34 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

Today, orthopaedic surgeons are using state-of-the-art techniques to replace knees, hips, shoulders, ankles, elbows, even wrists – and patients of all ages are resuming active lifestyles again after years of frustration. For more on joint replacement, visit orthoinfo.org.

AAOS_ImageCampaign_PostCards_WhiteBar.indd 4 11/24/09 3:41:00 PM

“We care for the family you care about”

www.GuardianFamily.comQuality Home or Facility Care

Our Services Include But Are Not Limited To:• Weareavailablefor1hour

andupto24hours,sevendaysaweek

• Laundry/bedchanges• Medicationset-upandreminders• LightHousekeeping• Reliefcareforfamilymembers• Transportation• Totalorassistedpersonalcare• Shopping/runningerrands• Posthospitalcareorassistance

afteranaccidentorillness• Mealplanningandpreparation

Call for a: Free Consultation • Free sCreening • Free assessment

Clinton,IAOffice563.242.2308•563.659.5516

TollFree1.888.942.2308Moline,Office309.736.7414

Geneseo,Office309-944-3727

LeClaire,IAOffice563.289.5229•TollFree1.800.339.5229

Fax563.289.3444Muscatine,Office

563-263-0530

Page 35: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 35

financial health

Time to convert? Term vs. permanent life insurance

1. You can lock in protection forlife. Term insurance is designed toprovide coverage for only a limitedperiod of time. Permanent insuranceprovides life-long protection.

As long as you pay all required premiums, you are insured for life.

2. You can lock in your premiumso it will never increase. As a result,while you may pay more initially, yourrate will never increase. In manyinstances, your total costover time may actu-ally be lowerthan for acomparableterm contract. Italso may be possibleto stop paying premiums inthe future by taking a reducedpaid-up certificate.

3. You can accumulate living benefits in the form ofcash values. Your permanent life

insurance certificate canaccumulatevaluable bene-fits. This cash value can be bor-rowed to help pay a child’s collegecosts, to supplement your retirementincome or to take advantage of a busi-ness opportunity, for examples.

4. You can protect your insura-bility for life. Since your permanentcertificate can never be canceled as

long as all premiums arepaid, your insurability isprotected. Regardless ofyour age or any changes

in your health status, yourcoverage will be there when

it’s needed to pay benefits uponyour death.

Should you convert your termcoverage to permanent? That’s aquestion only you can answer. Contactyour Modern Woodmen representa-tive to discuss the options that makesense for your situation.

The biggest appeal of term life insur-ance coverage is the initial price.Especially when you’re young, the costcan be downright cheap compared toother products. Term insurance canstretch premium dollars during timesof high protection needs and limitedresources, such as while children are athome or until a mortgage is paid off. Itcan be ideal for short-term solutions.

However, term insurance is designedprimarily to provide short-term, tempo-rary protection. If you’ve owned terminsurance for more than a few years,you know that your cost increases ateach renewal. These increases climbsharply the older you get.

The cost can become prohibitivelyexpensive in later years. The result:You could end up with no protectionat the very time you need coverage the most.

It may be time to consider convert-ing your term coverage to permanent,cash value life insurance. The benefitsare many:

Are you in the caterpillar or butterfly stage of life? For more informationon the differences between term and permanent life insurance, look up LifeInsurance under Financial Planning Topics at www.modern-woodmen.org.

Founded in 1883 as a fraternal benefit society, Modern Woodmenof America offers financial services and fraternal member benefitsto individuals and families throughout the United States.

Copyright©2005 Modern Woodmen of Americaand Custom Communication Insurance Publishing.

REPRINTED FROM THE MODERN WOODMEN MAGAZINE S U M M E R 2 0 0 5

Ruth AhnenDavenport, Iowa563-508-0842

Compliments of yourlocal Modern Woodmenrepresentative:

Time to Convert?Term vs. Permanent Life Insurance

Page 36: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 36 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

Most people who go by Susan Shaw’s house know it before they get there. How? Easy, it’s the smell of fresh baked goods coming from her business, Central Illinois Events

and Catering, in Elkhart, Illinois. Whether it’s her breads, pies or one of seven types of butter cake, Susan Shaw’s business is prospering. The recipe for her success was simple: mix equal parts passion, determination, training, family support and the assistance of The Department of Human Services, Division of Rehabilitation. But as Susan will tell you, the road to success was a challenging one.

In 2002, Susan was successfully employed as a customer ser-vice order correspondent in Springfield, Illinois. “I handled the or-ders from the initial call from the sales representative, till the time the supplies were picked up and taken away.” Susan balanced her hectic work schedule with the real passions in her life—her family and her baking. “I always loved baking and cooking for my family and also for people through my church. Baking has always been my passion!” It was then that the road became bumpy. Susan was home recovering from a surgery when she noticed that she didn’t feel well. “I remember I just felt faint, sort of flu-like

My Success Can BeYour Success

Submitted by Illinois Department of Human Service

personal success

Page 37: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

July 2012 — Quad Cities — Healthy Cells Magazine — Page 37

Susan’s business has picked up in a short period of time. “I now go to many of the farmers markets in the area. I also stay busy with catering, and after the beginning of the year I’ll start providing cooking classes. Things have really turned out very well.” Success for Susan is a recipe she doesn’t mind sharing.

To learn more, call 1-877-761-9780 Voice, 1-866-264-2149 TTY, 1-866-588-0401 VP, or read about the Division of Rehabilitation Services at www.dhs.state.il.us. Refer yourself or someone else for services using the online Rehabilitation Services Web Referral.

symptoms. I decided to go the hospital just to make sure things were okay.” The news at the hospital surprised everyone. Susan was suffering the effects of a blood infection known as Sepsis, and was in septic shock. “My family was told I was being kept comfort-able. They didn’t think I was going to make it through this.” Susan ended up losing nine of her ten fingers and all ten of her toes. “Those were the long days—I felt pretty hopeless for a while there. But I knew I had lots of family and friends to help me through this.” That support also included contacting the Department of Human Services, Division of Rehabilitation Services. Staff from DRS’s Home Services Program met with Susan and began to plan how they could help her adjust to her return home. “My work with DRS started with the very basics. They (the staff) helped me adjust to doing things without the use of fingers and toes. It really put things in perspective for me.” Little by little Susan began to increase her independence and plan for her future. She informed her DRS counselor that bak-ing was a passion of hers that she would like to pursue for em-ployment. Susan and her counselor worked together, and shortly thereafter she began the Hospitality and Culinary Arts Program at Lincoln Land Community College in Springfield, Illinois. Having been through so much already, Susan was determined to make it work. “I knew it would be a challenge to make it hap-pen, but I was confident I could start my own business.” Susan discussed this with her counselor and they agreed to a business plan. The Division of Rehabilitation Services assisted Susan with some equipment to start her own business, as well as consulta-tion on the business plan. The result was Central Illinois Event and Catering in Elkhart, Illinois.

“The Division of Rehabilitation

Services assisted Susan with some

equipment to start her own

business, as well as consultation

on the business plan. The result

was Central Illinois Event and

Catering in Elkhart, Illinois.”

Holistic Alternatives, LLCWhole Food Nutrition • Essential Oil Techniques

Karen DeVault RN, BCHHP563-340-5999

2435 Kimberly Rd. (Suite 220, South)Bettendorf, IA 52722

www.KarensHolisticAlternatives.com • www.youngliving.org/devaultEmail: [email protected]

“We are so glad we came to see Jim Hanerhoff at Audibel Hi-Tech Hearing Care! Joe’s quality of life improved as soon as he was fitted with his custom-programmed hearing instruments. He can now hear conversations with our friends (even in crowded restaurants). He no longer has to constantly ask me ‘What did he say?’ Thanks again, Jim!” – Paula & Joe Anderson

Quality of Life Improved!Hi-Tech Hearing Care

Page 38: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

Page 38 — Healthy Cells Magazine — Quad Cities — July 2012

www.LSSI.org

Connecting with you…Caring for you

Call 309/797-0200Services provided throughout Rock Island county.Visit our new Web site: www.LSSI.org/homecare

• Personal care • Housekeeping• Medication reminders • Meal preparation • Companionship and supervision • Transportation • Respite caregiving services

Intouch Adult Day & Home Care

Services of LSSI

Services provided throughout Rock Island, Henry and Mercer Counties.

Visit our new Web site: www.LSSI.org/homecare

Saluting Veterans For Our Freedoms

We care not only for the mind, body and spirit of patients like Steve, but of their family and loved ones, like his daughter Linda.

Contact us anytime, or ask your physician for a no-obligation referral.

Hospice Care

4340 E. 53rd Street • Davenport, IA 52807866.216.5708 • heartlandhospice.com

Page 39: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

At our age, why would we chooseinflated health care costs?

Get the surgery you need - even on fixed income.

At Mississippi Valley Surgery Center, our seniors often pay less out-of-pocket for the same procedure than in a hospital. Why? Because we’re an outpatient facility. We perform minimally-invasive surgical techniques and our patients recover at home. No expensive hospitalization adds up to savings for you.

Don’t let expensive insurance premiums, high deductibles or the fear of lost time from work or life keep you from getting the treatment you need. You can save money and receive great care: It’s what healthcare should be.™

3400 Dexter Court • Suite 200 • Davenport, IA 52807www.mvsurgerycenter.com

At Our Age.indd 1 6/12/2012 9:34:59 AM

Page 40: July Quad Cities Healthy Cells 2012

R e l i ev i n g yo u r p a i n , s o yo u c a n re s u m e yo u r l i f e !

Got Pain?

Call Today 563.344.1050

Mon - Fri 8-4pm5515 Utica Ridge Road# 600

Davenport, IA 52807 www.mvpainclinic.com

Quad Cities first full service Comprehensive Interventional Pain Management Clinic. Emotional/Behavioral Support, Massage Therapy, Medical Management. No Referrals Needed

John Dooley MD- Board Certified in Pain ManagementSusan Alden, Nurse PractitionerNancy Jipp, Nurse PractitionerRosina Linz, Psychologist

@painchat & on

Are you looking for pain relief with your back and legs? Do you feel better sitting or leaning? Does your pain worsen as you stand or walk? Come learn about a non-surgical solution that John Dooley MD is performing. John Dooley M.D. of Mississippi Valley Pain Clinic is the only trained physician in Iowa to perform this procedure. Please stop by for a complimentary nurse in-service every Wednesday from 10-11.

Where do you go to rehabilitate after knee surgery?After my dad’s knee replacement, the hospital gave us a list of places for him to recover and receive physical therapy. Then they gave us great advice: Ask the professional at each place for their expertise. That’s when we choose Heartland. They not only had vast experience for my father’s conditions, they tracked his progress to tailor his treatment.At Heartland, we carefully track patients’ progress because we believe improving success begins by measuring it.

For more information about Heartland’s track record, please call:

www.heartlandnursing.com

A P R OV E N L E A D E R

Heartland Health Care Center – Moline 833 Sixteenth Avenue • Moline, IL 61265 309.764.6744