LCSW Meggers Seeing Children In Hot Springs

Healthy Connections, Inc., continues its Behavioral Health program expansion with the addition of Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) Nicole Meggers.

Meggers, who specializes in mental health therapy with children, will work out of the Hot Springs Central Avenue Clinic, home to Healthy Connections Pediatrics Clinic. The address is 3604 Central Avenue. Call (888) 710-8220 to schedule an appointment.

The LCSW is part of the Behavioral Health team, working with clients in order to help deal with issues involving mental and emotional health. Meggers’ specialty is working with children and those young adults 25 and under.

“I love working with kids. I’ve always worked with children. Even before graduate school, my jobs were always centered around kids,” Meggers said. “That’s where my passion is.”

Meggers graduated from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Social Work in 2010 with her master’s degree. After becoming a LCSW in 2014, she began work at Living Hope in Hot Springs. The Hot Springs native said she excited to begin her new journey with Healthy Connections.

“I think it’s going to be a great, new adventure,” she said. “I’d love to be a part of helping to build the pediatrics program.”

Healthy Connections currently operates nine clinics throughout West Central Arkansas. This includes two clinics in Hot Springs at 3604 Central Ave., and 102 Chippewa Court. At Central Ave., Healthy Connections has a family medical clinic, pediatrics, cardiology podiatry and behavioral health. Other services offered include BioTE Hormone Replacement Therapy, Botox and Joint Injections.

The pediatrics clinic features Jeremy Porter, MD, and Melanie Newman, APRN. They work in the kid-friendly clinic to take care of children of all ages. Meggers will serve as the therapist for children.

“I just feel like the children need that source of stability because they have no control over their environment and surroundings. It’s important to have somebody who can help them navigate through their situation.”

“As a child, I grew up in a family full of addiction. I was one of the only ones who did not choose to go down that path. My past experience is what led me to want to work with kids.”

Meggers is able to see both established Healthy Connections patients and can take referrals from other healthcare providers.

Healthy Connections’ Behavioral Health program features Licensed Clinical Social Workers (LCSW) in Hot Springs, Malvern, Arkadelphia, and Mount Ida, who diagnose and treat mental, emotional and behavioral health issues.

Learn more about Healthy Connections’ Behavioral Health program at www.healthy-connections.org/bh. And learn more about the Pediatrics program at www.healthy-connections.org/pediatrics.

 

 

 

 

A Matter of Heart

 

February is National Heart Month, a time to raise awareness about cardiology and cardiovascular diseases. The four-chambered heart is an amazing engine for your body, but it’s one without a check engine light. Learn more about the heart and how it works. And keep Healthy Connections Cardiology Clinics in mind if you need us. We have Dr. Vito Calandro in Mena and Dr. Fred Heinemann in Hot Springs.

CLICK HERE TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE HEALTHY CONNECTIONS CARDIOLOGY CLINIC.

1. Your heart can weigh between 7 and 15 ounces.

A man’s heart weighs, on average, around 10 ounces and a woman’s heart weighs around 8 ounces.

2. Newborn babies have the fastest heartbeats.

A newborn’s heart rate is around 70 to 190 beats per minute. The average adult should have a resting heart rate between 60 and 100 beats per minute. If your resting heart rate is higher or increases over several years, it could be a sign of current or impending heart problems. Athletes, who regularly train, will have a very slow resting heart rate around 40 to 60 beats per minute. Women also have faster heart rates, on average, than men because their hearts are smaller in size and need to beat more to pump the same amount of blood.

3. Your heart is located in the middle of your chest.

It’s found behind your breastbone, but it’s tilted to the left, which makes it easier to feel on that side of your chest.

4. Your heart beats around 100,000 times a day.

The sound you hear when it beats is actually the noise of the heart valves opening and closing.

5. Your heart pumps 2,000 gallons of blood a day.

That blood travels about 12,000 miles through your body each day, which is four times the size of the U.S. from coast to coast. During your lifetime, you pump about one million barrels of blood.

6. Heart attacks happen most often on Monday mornings.

Stress hormones are higher in the mornings than at any other point during the day, and Mondays, in particular, seem to cause people more stress than other days of the week. A rise in blood pressure, plus an increase in heart rate and stress hormones can break pockets of plaque and cause a blockage to the heart.

7. There are 60,000 miles of blood vessels in your body.

If one of the vessels is damaged, it makes your heart have to work harder to pump your blood.

8. No one knows why the heart is associated with love.

Different civilizations and historical time periods had different meanings for the heart. The belief that the heart controlled all thought and emotion was the general assumption in ancient civilizations. They also believed that the brain was completely useless. Over time, the idea that love came from the heart stuck in popular culture.

9. Men and women have different heart attack symptoms.

The symptoms of a woman having a heart attack are much less prominent than a man. For women, heart attacks can feel like uncomfortable squeezing, pressure, fullness or pain in the center of the chest. It can also produce pain in one or both arms, the back, neck, jaw or stomach, shortness of breath, nausea and other symptoms. Men experience the typical heart attack symptoms of chest pain, discomfort and pressure. They, too, can experience pain in other areas, such as the arms, neck, back, and jaw, as well as shortness of breath, sweating, and discomfort that mimics heartburn.

10. Laughing is good for your heart.

Studies have shown that your blood vessels relax when you’re laughing, which sends 20% more blood through your body. Relaxed blood vessels mean your heart doesn’t have to work as hard.

11. The heart works twice as hard as the leg muscles of a sprinter.

It takes a lot of force to move your blood around your body, and that is why a strong, healthy heart is so important. The heart, which is a muscle, has twice the power of the leg muscles of someone sprinting.

12. Sneezing does not stop your heart.

Contrary to popular belief, sneezing does not stop your heart or make it “skip a beat.” It can, however, briefly change your heart’s rhythm. The only time your heart stops is during cardiac arrest.

13. Your aorta is as large as a garden hose.

The biggest artery in your body, the aorta, runs from your heart to your belly. It carries the most blood and is also the most common sight for problems like aneurysms.

14. A “broken heart” can feel like a heart attack.

Intense and sudden feelings of sadness can mimic the symptoms of a heart attack. Stress hormones are released into the body and can cause chest pain and shortness of breath. Luckily, with a little bit of rest, your heart will begin to feel normal.

15. Some capillaries are ten times smaller than a human hair.

They are so small that blood cells have to travel single-file through them. Oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged through the very thin walls of the capillaries.

16. Horses can mirror a human’s heart rate.

A study showed that a horse can mimic the heart rate of the person touching them. Along with dogs and cats, horses have been added to the list of animals that are emotionally responsive to humans, and they may one day be used to detect stress hormones in patients.

 

Source: www.unitypoint.org

Cardiology Providers in Mena and Hot Springs

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HS Chamber Features Peds Clinic

Recently The Greater Hot Springs Chamber of Commerce produced a video highlighting the Hot Springs Pediatrics Clinic and Jeremy Porter, MD, and Melanie Newman, APRN. Check it out.

HCI Nominated For Hot Springs Nonprofit Award

Healthy Connections, Inc., has been nominated for Nonprofit of the Year by the Greater Hot Springs Chamber of Commerce. The award will be announced and presented at the Annual Banquet and Community Awards Ceremony on Jan. 17 at Hot Springs Convention Center.

Healthy Connections was selected as one of the 12 finalists in the Nonprofit category. The other finalists are:

  • H.O.E.B.E., the Uzuri Project
  • The CALL
  • Historic Downtown Hot Springs Farmers Market
  • Difference Makers
  • The Caring Place
  • Ouachita Behavioral Health and Wellness
  • Garland County Habitat for Humanity
  • Low Key Arts
  • Cooper-Anthony Mercy Child Advocacy Center
  • The Hope Movement
  • Samaritan’s Ministries

Healthy Connections is a Mena-based nonprofit organization serving the needs of adults and children throughout West-Central Arkansas. Since its founding in 1988 as a home-visiting program, Healthy Connections has been able to provide much-needed health, dental and social services to families of every lifestyle.”

“We’re driven from the mission that we can provide quality health care to the population in the areas we serve,” said CEO Tony Calandro. “This population is considered underserved for a lot of services – medical, dental and behavioral health. “We allow them to have easy access, affordable access, to quality health care.”

Healthy Connections has two Hot Springs location. The clinic at 102 Chippewa Court (across from National Park Medical Center) is a family medical and dental clinic. The clinic at 3604 Central Ave (across from Texas Roadhouse) is a family medicine, pediatrics, cardiology, podiatry, and behavioral health clinic.

Healthy Connections has also been selected as one of four finalists for the Nonprofit of the Year in the Arkansas Business of the Year Awards. The announcement for this award will be made March 6 in Little Rock.

Healthy Connections has been named one of Arkansas’ Best Places to Work two consecutive years by Arkansas Business.

Visit www.healthy-connections.org for more information.