We Are Open and Seeing Patients

The Healthy Connections non-profit Federally Qualified Health Center in your community remains open during the Coronavirus outbreak. We want you to know we are taking all precautions to ensure the safety of both our patients and staff. We will screen everyone who enters the building and limit the number of people actually entering the building whenever possible.

We want to remind everyone to please practice social distancing during this time. Please call (888) 710-8220 if you have any questions. Or visit www.healthy-connections.org/covid-19.

There are only a couple of exceptions right now:

  • Both dental clinics in Mena and Hot Springs are now open 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday through Thursday for emergency procedures only.
  • All three school-based clinics (ASU-Three Rivers, Acorn School, and Mount Ida schools) are temporarily closed. We are seeing patients at the Healthy Connections community location in each of these areas (Malvern, Mena, and Mount Ida).
  • And clinics in Arkadelphia and Little Rock are not open on Friday staying with their regular schedule.

For a complete list of locations and their operating hours, please visit www.healthy-connections.org/locations.

 

March 19 COVID-19 Update: Hand Washing 101

Here at Healthy Connections, we want to assure our family of patients that we are taking the current coronavirus threat seriously. Everybody has questions, many of us feel anxious about our health or that of loved ones, and all of us are living with uncertainty.

For the foreseeable future, we will be sharing brief posts here every few days with information to help keep you and your family safe.

Our website (www.healthy-connections.org/covid-19) will link to helpful resources and has information on symptoms to look out for and practices to reduce your risk of infection. These will be updated as the situation develops.

Top tips for safety today? Hand washing 101!

  • Wash like a pro
    • 20-30 seconds of lathering with plenty of soap and hot water, being sure to include finger web-spaces, the backs of your hands, under your nails, the pads of your fingers, the first part of your wrists
    • Keep your nails trimmed to make cleaning easier
    • Make it fun for kids – use foaming soap; sing a song; have a “most suds” or “fastest scrubbing” competition
    •  
  • Wash regularly
    • After touching your face; blowing your nose; using your cellphone, computer or tablet; using the restroom; eating meals; arriving home/at work; driving your car; physical contact with another person
    • Before eating or preparing food; leaving work/home

COVID-19 Screenings For All Clinic Patients, Visitors

In an effort to keep our patients and staff healthy, we are screening all patients before you enter a Healthy Connections clinic. A staff member will meet you at the door to take your temperature and ask you some screening questions related to COVID-ID infection. If a COVID-19 risk is identified, you will be directed to a designated area for further evaluation. Otherwise, you will proceed to check in with your visit as usual. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause. We will continue to post updates at www.healthy-connections.org/covid-19. #Coronavirus #Covid19

Healthy Connections Clinics Earn PCMH Recognition

NCQA Patient-Centered Medical Home™ standards emphasize enhanced care through patient-clinician partnership

The National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) announced that Healthy Connections, Inc., clinics in Mena, Hot Springs, Malvern, Arkadelphia, Mount Ida, and De Queen have received NCQA Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) Recognition for using evidence-based, patient-centered processes that focus on highly coordinated care and long‐term, participative relationships.

The NCQA Patient-Centered Medical Home is a model of primary care that combines teamwork and information technology to improve care, improve patients’ experience of care and reduce costs. Medical homes foster ongoing partnerships between patients and their personal clinicians, instead of approaching care as the sum of episodic office visits. Each patient’s care is overseen by clinician-led care teams that coordinate treatment across the health care system. Research shows that medical homes can lead to higher quality and lower costs, and can improve patient and provider reported experiences of care.

The Healthy Connections Montgomery County Community Clinic in Mount Ida (534 Luzerne St.) previously earned this recognition. Other clinics now recognized include:

Appointments for these clinics can be made by calling toll free (888) 710-8220.

“We are honored to receive this recognition from NCQA,” said Tony Calandro, CEO of Healthy Connections. “This is a testament to the mission of Healthy connections to provide outstanding, compassionate care to the patients we serve.”

Healthy Connections has three of Arkansas’ 13 PCMH Certified Content Experts on its staff, including Michelle Gibson, RN; Amanda Barrett, LPN, and Rachel Tomaskovic, RN.

To earn recognition, Healthy Connections demonstrated the ability to meet the program’s key elements, embodying characteristics of the medical home. NCQA standards aligned with the joint principles of the Patient-Centered Medical Home established with the American College of Physicians, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Osteopathic Association.

Over the past 21 years, Healthy Connections has become a lot of things to the communities it services, including primary care/family medicine provider, dentist, pediatrician, or medical specialist. But mostly it is a place all people can go to receive quality care regardless of their ability to pay.

Healthy Connections accepts Medicaid, including ARKids 1st, Medicare and most private health insurances. There are also appointment openings for all patients, sometimes even same-day, at all of the clinics. As a Federally-Qualified Health Center, Healthy Connections providers treat thousands of patients each year who have no insurance or not enough insurance to cover essential health and dental services. This is done as part of a sliding-fee schedule, which is determined by the total family income of the patient. Qualified applicants can receive treatment at a reduced rate.

For more information, visit www.healthy-connections.org.

About NCQA
NCQA is a private, non-profit organization dedicated to improving health care quality. NCQA accredits and certifies a wide range of health care organizations. It also recognizes clinicians and practices in key areas of performance. NCQA’s Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS®) is the most widely used performance measurement tool in health care. NCQA’s Web site (ncqa.org) contains information to help consumers, employers and others make more informed health care choices.

 

Schedule Changes in Mena, De Queen

Terri Devlin, MD

Lindy Jumper, APRN

Eric Webb, PA

Carolin Hockersmith, APRN

In order to better serve our patients and families, Healthy Connections is making some changes to its schedule in Mena and De Queen beginning the week of Jan. 14-18..

The Healthy Connections location on Health Park Drive will now be open from 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday through Friday. APRN Lindy Jumper will see both children and adults on Friday as we expand the schedule at the main location.

The Healthy Connections location on Mena Street will switch to a 7:45 a.m. – 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday schedule.

The Healthy Connections location in De Queen will now be open from 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday through Friday. Pediatrician Terri Devlin, MD, will see pediatrics patients Monday through Thursday. APRN Carolin Hockersmith will see adult patients Wednesday through Friday. Hockersmith will also see sick children on Fridays, but well-child checkups will only be done Monday through Thursday.

The Healthy Connections location at the Ouachita River Health Center at Acorn School remains open 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Eric Webb, PA, will see patients on Mondays. Jumper will see patients on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays.

For a complete list of providers and clinic locations and hours, visit www.healthy-connections.org.

Healthy Connections Earns National Recognition

 

The American Heart Association presents Check.Change.Control.Cholesterol™ award for commitment in prioritizing cholesterol management  

Healthy Connections, Inc., has received the American Heart Association’s Check.Change.Control.Cholesterol™ Gold Award in recognition of their commitment to reducing the risk of heart disease and stroke through improved cholesterol management.

High cholesterol is one of the major controllable risk factors for heart disease, heart attack and stroke, estimated to cause nearly 2.6 million deaths annually.

To help people better understand their risk and learn to manage their cholesterol, the Association launched its Check.Change.Control.Cholesterol. initiative in 2017. Since then, more than 340 health centers and systems have registered to participate.

“Nearly two-thirds of people who have high cholesterol don’t think they’re at high risk for a heart attack or stroke. For the good of our patients, we want to lower those numbers,” said Healthy Connections CEO Tony Calandro. “This is an important part of our mission to improve the health and well-being of the communities we serve.”

Healthy Connections clinics recognized with the Gold Award include:

  • 136 Health Park Drive, Mena
  • 139 School Lane, Mena (Ouachita River Health Center, Acorn School)

Healthy Connections clinics also participating in the program include:

  • 3034 A Pine Street, Arkadelphia
  • 900 Dr. Martin Luther King Boulevard, Malvern
  • 534 Luzerne Street, Mount Ida (Montgomery County Community Clinic)
  • 1201 Mena Street, Mena
  • 102 Chippewa Court, Hot Springs
  • 1357 West Collin Raye Drive, De Queen

To help practices achieve their goals, the Association provides all participants with a dedicated website featuring a free, evidence-based improvement program that includes tools and resources to help clinicians improve cholesterol control rates. To facilitate easy and seamless adoption of the program, the Association will provide access to trained support specialists within their community who can help identify specific program components to incorporate into clinical practice.

“We have a large body of evidence supporting the benefits and safety of cholesterol lowering treatment. Yet, the challenge is that high cholesterol remains underdiagnosed and therefore undertreated. This program helps bring patients and healthcare providers together to recognize the issue, bring cholesterol under control and help patients maintain control” said Alice K. Jacobs, M.D., Vice Chair for Clinical Affairs at Boston University Medical Center and past president of the AHA. “We applaud the providers who are already working to address cholesterol lowering, and we will continue to urge more physician practices, health systems and patients to join this initiative to prioritize cholesterol control and ultimately improve health outcomes nationwide.”

Healthy Connections, Inc., was founded in 1998 as a home visiting program and now operates nine clinics throughout Southwest Arkansas. Depending on location, services include primary and preventative medical care, general dentistry, pediatrics, behavioral health, physical therapy and cardiology. Learn more at www.healthy-connections.org.

Learn more at Check.Change.Control.Cholesterol.