Monthly Archives: April 2021

Could a Colorado Private Duty Nurse solution work in PA?

by Rebecca Dean, Easterseals Social Worker

In addition to the emotional and social impacts of having a child who’s considered medically fragile, parents are often tasked with finding a Private Duty Nurse or Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) to provide care during the day. Families across the nation struggle to receive in-home nursing care that fits their needs and expectations. Parents who hire nurses during the day while they attend work, also often find themselves coming home from work to provide continuous care to their child.

What if a program existed where parents could be hired as their child’s care provider? What if parents could bring their level of passion and attention to caring for their child’s medical needs full time as a CNA? Well, what if we told you that a program like this already exists! The only catch… it only exists today in one state.

In Colorado, they’ve developed a solution for these concerns, known as the Family CNA Program. This is a program where family members can receive free training to become a CNA for their child. The family member is then hired by a home health agency, and can be paid to take on the tasks that would normally be performed by a nurse that has been hired! When it is determined that a child needs individual nursing care, parents are given the choice to either hire a nurse or become a CNA themselves. The importance of choice in these situations is crucial and provides the families with increased self-determination.

There are many benefits to this program including: ensuring that the child is receiving the highest level of care continuously, parents not having to juggle a job while managing their child’s care, decreased exposure to viral diseases, and evidence showing a decrease in pediatric hospitalizations rates which leads to an overall reduction of healthcare costs. Qualifying parents in Colorado who are a part of this program, can receive full medical coverage for the entire family, as well as other benefits.

While this isn’t a program available to parents in Pennsylvania at the moment, the need for it still exists. The Unforgotten Families is an advocacy group that promotes the awareness and engagement around the challenges faced by medically fragile children and their families. Their mission is to advocate for a statewide Family CNA Program in Pennsylvania that will give parents the choice in either hiring a nurse, or being trained to become a CNA for their loved one.

If you’re interested in having this program started in PA, you can show your support by becoming an advocate! Share your voice of support by visiting: https://p2a.co/Kk5ylZb. You can select to receive emails and texts regarding the campaign, but it is optional. Becoming an advocate is similar to signing a petition; you are not held to any obligations. Instead, it curates a list based on zip codes, so that The Unforgotten Families is able to make a case to local legislators. For example, if 1,000 people from Philadelphia sign up to become an advocate, it demonstrates to local Philadelphia and Pennsylvania legislators that there is an interest and need for this program in these areas.

To learn more about the program, or becoming an advocate for The Unforgotten Families, please visit their website at http://www.theunforgottenfamilies.com

The Inclusion Conversation

By Christine E. Staple Ebanks 
Advocate, Author, founder of the Nathan Ebanks Foundation 

Inclusion is… 

“the mindful practice of including and accommodating people who have traditionally been excluded because of their disability, age, race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, etc.” 

Why is “inclusion” so important, especially now? 

We have more in common than we think. A friend of mine always reminds me that as human beings, “we are one, sharing one human experience.” She explains that while we are diverse in age, national origin, socioeconomic status, education, and physical appearance, we share one human experience.  

We breathe to live. We hurt, cry, and experience happiness, sadness, and the myriad of emotions we share as human beings inhabiting the planet. I am sure we can each recall a time(s) when we felt excluded, left out, not understood, or like we didn’t belong. This inherent need to belong, connect and have our voices heard is what makes the act of inclusion so important, especially at this time.  

Our world is becoming increasingly diverse. Research informs us that this current “post-Millennial” generation who are becoming adults is the most racially and ethnically diverse generation in history (Mondal, 2020). To live peacefully and in safety, for us to work together, play together and build our communities and nations, we need to make room for everyone. Inclusion and belonging are what make diversity work. (Eileen Hoenigman Meyer, 2019). 

The opposite of inclusion is exclusion and omission. When we fail to be inclusive, we practice to exclude, ostracize, discriminate and are intolerant to differences. Hate and violence are byproducts of this way of being. This negatively impacts all of our society, home, school, work, and social spaces. Just take a look at what’s happening today. The world has become a very intolerable place to live, do business and raise families. 

Inclusion is a mindset. It requires us to take action on a personal, corporate, and national level. When we are inclusive, we are participating in creating environments in which any individual or group can feel welcomed, respected, supported, and valued to participate fully. An inclusive climate embraces differences and offers respect in words and actions for all people. (Independentsector.org)

When we include, “We become not a melting pot, but a beautiful mosaic. Different People. Different beliefs. Different yearnings. Different hopes. Different dreams“. – Jimmy Carte

The everyday moments of living provide opportunities for us to practice inclusion. 

Here is one thing you can do to get started. Over the course of the next few weeks, be mindful of inclusion. In the next week, observe and pay attention to how and when you may be excluding others. Make a physical note of how it occurs. Is it based on their religion, their race, their appearance, their gender, their sexual orientation, their class background?  How are you practicing exclusion without even realizing that you are?  

Then join our conversation at the upcoming Town Hall Meeting on April 29, 2021, where we will have a deeper discussion on what small steps you can take to impact inclusivity.  

Source: 

Mead, J., & Paige, M. (2019). Building a Wall around the Schoolhouse? Education and Immigration in the Trump Age. Journal of Law and Education, 48(4), 449. 

About Inclusion — NJCIE. https://www.njcie.org/inclusion/ 

Diversity, Equity & Inclusion: The Impact on Human …. https://adurolife.com/blog/human-performance-coaching/diversity-equity-inclusion-the-impact-on-human-flourishing/ 

Why Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Matter — Independent …. https://independentsector.org/resource/why-diversity-equity-and-inclusion-matter/ 

Everyone has the right to be safe and to #LiveFearFree.. https://www.facebook.com/ButetownLabour/videos/758787731509309/ 

HL7 International Organizational Statement on Diversity …. http://www.hl7.org/documentcenter/public/legal/HL7-Statement-on-Diversity-Equity-and-Inclusion.pdf 

Mondal, Somen. 2020. Why is Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Important to Organizational Success? Ideal.com. Retrieved 03/28/2021 

About Inclusion. njcie.org/inclusion. Retrieved 03/28/2021 

Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka. khanacademy.org Retrieved 03/28/2021 

Wilkins, Dan. The Need for Inclusive Communities. https://www.abilitycenter.org/essays/need-inclusive-communities/