Flagler College will kick off its new academic year Saturday, Aug. 19, when approximately 700 new first-year students arrive to campus. Classes begin on Wednesday, Aug. 23.
To facilitate students’ move-in process and to ease traffic congestion on Aug. 19, Valencia Street will be open eastbound-only from Sevilla St. to Cordova St. between 6:00 a.m. to approximately 6:00 p.m. Vehicles traveling on Cordova St. will not be allowed to turn onto westbound Valencia St. unless authorized by the St. Augustine Police Department. The streets most affected will include Valencia, from Malaga to Cordova Streets; Sevilla, from Carrera to King Streets; Carrera, from Cordova to Riberia Streets; and Malaga, from King to US Highway 1. In general, traffic congestion should be expected around Granada and Cedar Streets and Martin Luther King, Jr. Avenue from Aug. 19 to Aug. 22.
Move-in Day marks the start of a week of new student orientation activities that are part of a program called “Building Your Legacy.”
Featured
Direct Primary Care Bill Filed by Senator Tom Lee Increases Access to Quality Healthcare
Senator Tom Lee announced today the filing of Senate Bill 80, which increases patient access to quality primary care by establishing an alternative to the traditional third party, fee-for-service insurance system.
“Direct primary care offers an innovative solution to a healthcare system plagued by exorbitant costs and a lack of quality care for the uninsured and underinsured,” Senator Lee said. “This type of free-market approach gives patients greater flexibility and expands access to concierge-level healthcare that was once available only to the wealthy.”
In a direct primary care model, doctors charge patients a flat monthly, quarterly, or annual fee. A full range of comprehensive primary care visits and services are included under this contract, ranging from acute and urgent care to regular checkups, labs, preventative care and chronic disease management. Physicians are able to spend more time caring directly for their patients and significantly reduce operating expenses by cutting out the hassle and costs associated with billing a health insurance company.
“Direct primary care offers gives patients the opportunity to establish an enduring and trusting relationship with their primary care provider, which ultimately leads to superior health outcomes, lower costs and an enhanced patient experience,” Senator Lee added.
The proposed bill defines direct primary care agreements, clarifies them as outside the scope of state insurance regulation, and establishes protections for both patients and physicians.
“These arrangements empower Florida families by giving them more control and choice in how they pay for the care they need,” Senator Lee said.
For more information on SB 80, click here.
New Quality Scores Confirm Florida’s Medicaid Program is A National Leader
The Agency for Health Care Administration (Agency) today announced that the Statewide Medicaid Managed Care (SMMC) quality scores for calendar year 2016 are the highest in the Florida Medicaid program’s history. This is the second full year of Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) quality scores for the SMMC program, and the results show an improvement in the overwhelming majority of these nationally recognized quality measures. Florida’s Medicaid program is one of the most efficient programs in the country, and our implementation to Managed Care stands as a national model. In calendar year 2016, Florida’s Medicaid health plans performed as well as or better than the national average on 59 percent of HEDIS measures.
Agency Secretary Justin Senior said, “What these scores really reflect is that managed care is working, and the program is providing even better quality care every year for the families we serve. In 2014 we transitioned the Florida Medicaid program to a Managed Care system, this roll out now stands as a national model for managed care and has made our program a more efficient Medicaid program. Our Agency’s goal is to provide better health care for all Floridians, and we are proud of how successful the program has been. We will continue to work with the health plans and providers to ensure that recipients are receiving the care that they need.”
The National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) uses HEDIS to measure health plans on their levels of care and service. With Florida’s Medicaid health plans performing at or above the national average on 59 percent of HEDIS measures, Florida Medicaid has had an overall improvement of six percentage points over its 2015 scores and an 18 percentage point increase over plan ratings prior to the SMMC program.
31 reported measures showed improvement over last year’s scores, including:
- Adult BMI Assessment
- Adults’ Access to Preventive Care – 65+ years
- Annual Dental Visit
- Annual Monitoring for Patients on Persistent Medications – ACEs/ARBs
- Annual Monitoring for Patients on Persistent Medications – Digoxin
- Annual Monitoring for Patients on Persistent Medications – Diuretics
- Annual Monitoring for Patients on Persistent Medications – Total
- Call Answer Timeliness
- Cervical Cancer Screening
- Childhood Immunization Status – Combination 2
- Childhood Immunization Status – Combination 3
- Chlamydia Screening in Women – 16-20 years
- Chlamydia Screening in Women – Total
- Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam
- Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Good Control
- Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Poor Control
- Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Testing
- Controlling High Blood Pressure
- Engagement of Alcohol and Other Drug Dependence Treatment – 13-17 years
- Engagement of Alcohol and Other Drug Dependence Treatment – 18+ years
- Engagement of Alcohol and Other Drug Dependence Treatment – Total
- Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness – 30 Day
- Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness – 7 Day
- Follow-up Care for Children Prescribed ADHD Medication – Continuation and Maintenance
- Immunizations for Adolescents – Combination 1
- Initiation of Alcohol and Other Drug Dependence Treatment – 13-17 years
- Lead Screening in Children
- Postpartum Care
- Prenatal Care
- Well-Child Visits in the First 15 Months – 6+ visits
- Well-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Years of Life
For more information on the SMMC program, please visit our website.
DSC welcomes back students Aug. 28 with host of new courses, programs
From television production to academic reading and writing to phlebotomy and hospitality beverage science, Daytona State College will launch a slate of new programs and courses when fall semester kicks off on Aug. 28. Here’s a sampling of timely DSC offerings designed to address industry needs and job trends. DSC’s School of Business Administration now features a new hospitality concentration to its Bachelor of Applied Science in Supervision and Management program. The program is specifically tailored to prepare graduates for management positions in the region’s stalwart hospitality and tourism industry.
Costa Magoulas, dean of DSC’s Mori Hosseini College of Hospitality and Culinary Management, said the new BAS concentration is a timely addition considering the industry’s rapid growth locally and statewide. “All projections show that the hospitality, tourism and culinary industries are expanding well above the state and national averages and will continue to do so for some time,” he noted. “That means the region is going to need more operations managers, food services and lodging managers, chefs and head cooks, which all command annual wages in the mid-$50,000 to mid-$70,000 range.”
DSC also is adding a new certificate in Hospitality Beverage Science to its epicurean program repertoire. The new program, which formally launches in January upon completion of the college’s new Academy of Beverage Sciences lab located in the Hosseini Center on the Daytona Beach Campus, will prepare students for a variety of careers in the craft-brewing and hospitality beverage markets. The 36-week program will cover such topics as beverage operations management, brewery operations, wine essentials, craft beer production and more.
Also within the School of Business Administration, the college has developed certificates and an associate of science degree in Broadcast Television Production. The stackable credentials are designed to produce graduates with job-ready skills that can be applied to various television and multimedia industry sectors.
The three-semester, 24-credit-hour certificate program covers the essentials of television production, including how to operate a video camera, studio and on-location video, recording, mixing and editing, operating control room equipment and generating a production schedule, to name just a few. Among the new program-related courses are Television Directing, Producing for Television and Electronic Field Production.
Credits earned in the program can be applied toward the new two-year associate of science in Broadcast Television Production, which will cover such topics as live-action production and directing, on-location lighting, camera operation and audio techniques, script writing, live web streaming, live remote sports broadcasting and production. “The program will allow our graduates to get a leg up on one of Team Volusia’s top target industries to attract to our area – film and video production,” said program chair Anita Bevins. Since this program is the result of a partnership with the college’s public television station, our program graduates will have the benefit of gaining the competitive advantage of including their work experience with WSDC on their resumes.”
Statewide, job openings for professionals with live broadcast production skills are expected to increase faster than the national average during the next decade, with positions such as producers and directors, film and video editors, audio and video equipment technicians and set designers all showing growth. Salaries vary widely depending on skill sets and experience.
Daytona State’s School of Health Careers has added a Phlebotomy certificate that can be completed in just one semester. Phlebotomists collect blood specimens used in diagnostic laboratory tests. They must have knowledge of the anatomy and physiology of the cardiovascular system as well as an understanding of infection control and safety practices. Phlebotomists are employed in a variety of healthcare settings including hospitals, nursing homes, critical care facilities, dedicated blood-collection facilities and dialysis centers. Course work includes 75 classroom hours and a 90-hour phlebotomy internship at a local facility.
Other new courses include:
Curriculum and Instruction for Students with Disabilities 6-12 (EEX 4265) – For students enrolled in one of DSC’s seven Bachelor of Science in Education (BSED) programs.
Mathematics Content for Elementary Grades (MAE 4803) – For BSED majors interested in teaching conceptually and developmentally appropriate math content at the elementary grade level.
Advanced Practice and Professionalism for OTA (OTH 2704C) – This course for Occupational Therapy Assistant majors covers clinical scenarios such as client mobility, exercise, stress and functioning, occupations in the home setting, and use of technology.
Introduction to College Reading and Writing (ENC 0027) – This is a developmental course designed to help students gain proficiency in composition and reading skills.
Academic Reading (EAP 1620) and Academic Writing (EAP 1640) – These courses, offered in the college’s School of World Languages and Speech, are designed to improve English skills to read and write with clarity, accuracy and cohesiveness in college studies for both native and non-native English speakers.
DSC Basics (SLS 1130) – This is a free, non-credit, one-day orientation course that highlights need-to-know first-semester college policies, services, campus locations and suggestions to prepare students for their first day of class.
For more information, call (386) 506-3059 or email [email protected].
Media Conference Call: Community Health Centers Across Florida Advocate for Streamlined Payment Process
MEDIA ADVISORY
Proposed payment process could result in centers
closing down and patients losing access to care
The Florida Association of Community Health Centers (FACHC), the leading state advocate for community-based health care programs, will host a media conference call TODAY, August 15 at 2:00 p.m. to discuss how a new “Alternative Payment Methodology” threatens community health center’s efforts to participate in the Low Income Pool program. Across the state, health centers treat more than one million patients each year and save the state hundreds of millions of dollars by giving patients an alternative to emergency room visits.
The media conference call comes in advance of a scheduled meeting later in the week where the Agency for Health Care Administration will hear testimony about the LIP program and how this new payment process will affect dozens of community health centers across the state.
What: Media Conference Call
Who: Andrew Behrman, President & CEO of FACHC
Dr. Michael Gervasi, CEO of Florida Community Health Centers
Brad Herremans, CEO of Suncoast Community Health Center
Annie R. Neasman, CEO of Jessie Trice Community Health Center
When: TODAY, August 15, 2017
2:00 pm EST
Where: Conference Line: (888) 392-4560
Access Code: 6363880
Appointments by Governor Rick Scott for Monday, August 14, 2017
Governor Scott Appoints Renatha Francis to the Miami-Dade County Court
Governor Rick Scott today announced the appointment of Renatha Francis to the Miami-Dade County Court.
Francis, 39, of Miami, currently practices with Shutts & Bowen, LLP. Previously, she served in multiple positions with the First District Court Appeal, including as an attorney to Judge Scott Makar, staff attorney, and law clerk to Judge Peter Webster. She received her bachelor’s degree from the University of the West Indies and her law degree from Florida Coastal School of Law. Francis fills the vacancy created by the elevation of Judge Jason E. Dimitris to the Eleventh Judicial Circuit Court.
Gov. Scott Appoints Three to Continuing Care Advisory Council
Governor Rick Scott today announced three appointments to the Continuing Care Advisory Council.
Dudley Geyer, 71, of Saint Johns, was the former area manager of Hewlett Packard Company. He succeeds Walter Hood and is appointed for a term beginning August 14, 2017, and ending September 30, 2018.
Raymond Neff, 75, of Sarasota, is the President of Neff and Associates Home Office Services. He succeeds Charles Paulk and is appointed for a term beginning August 14, 2017, and ending September 30, 2018.
Sue Bunevich, 60, of Tampa, is the Principal of Clifton, Larson, Allen, LLP. She succeeds Marshall Gunn III and is appointed for a term beginning August 14, 2017, and ending September 30, 2019.
Governor Scott Appoints Joseph J. Mansfield to the Miami-Dade County Court
Governor Rick Scott today announced the appointment of Joseph J. Mansfield to the Miami-Dade County Court.
Mansfield, 52, of Miami, has served as an Assistant State Attorney for the Eleventh Judicial Circuit since 2001. He received his bachelor’s degree from the University of Akron and law degree from Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. Mansfield fills the vacancy created by the elevation of Judge Victoria del Pino to the Eleventh Judicial Circuit Court.
Commissioner Adam Putnam to Join U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue at Citrus Expo
MEDIA ADVISORY
On Wednesday, Aug. 16, Florida Commissioner of Agriculture Adam Putnam will join U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue at the Citrus Expo, the premier trade exposition for the citrus industry.
Event: 2017 Citrus Expo Dinner
Date: Wednesday, Aug. 16, 2017
Time: 6:30 p.m.
Location: Alico Arena
12181 FGCU Lake Pkwy E,
Fort Myers, Fla. 33913
UCF Helps Bring Community Partners Together to Support New School in Parramore
The design for a stunning new school opening today in Orlando’s Parramore neighborhood got its start on a napkin in New York City.
Architects for the new Orange County school were touring public “community schools” in New York that had a track record of helping children in poverty succeed and thrive with support from community partners such as the Children’s Aid Society. The community schools offered health care, enrichment programs and other services for students.
The architects were looking for design ideas for a school to be opened in Parramore and were excited by what they saw, said Nancy Ellis, director of the Center for Community Partnerships and a graduate of the doctoral program in public affairs at the University of Central Florida. “By lunch they were making sketches on what was handy in one of the school’s cafeteria.”
Ellis and colleagues at the College of Health and Public Affairs, Children’s Home Society of Florida and True Health had already partnered with Orange County Public Schools to develop a community school at Evans High School in Pine Hills that began in 2010.
The high school was seeing a steady increase in its graduation rate and the future seemed promising, so Orange County School Superintendent Barbara Jenkins wanted the new school in Parramore to be a community school too, said Ellis.
Ellis coordinated the 2015 trip for the principal architects from Baker Barrios, the Orlando-based architecture firm hired by the school district, and representatives from the school district, UCF and Children’s Home Society of Florida.
The following year she coordinated a similar trip for three new community partners now involved in the Parramore school project — Orange Blossom Family Health, Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Florida, and the Rosen Foundation. Andrew Rollins, the newly hired principal, went as well.
Both trips and ongoing conversations among the partners have helped the school district reach its milestone today of launching the new OCPS Academic Center for Excellence as a community school for some 1,200 students and their families and community.
The school will serve not only Parramore but also the Callahan and Holden Heights neighborhoods, said school board District 5 representative Kate Gordon at an Aug. 9 sneak peek of the school.
“The parents are excited. The students are excited. We’re going to do great things this year,” said Rollins, who earned two degrees in education at UCF.
OCPS ACE is formally known as a Community Partnership School, the name coined by UCF and Children’s Home Society of Florida for the school model developed at Evans High.
All community schools foster strong partnerships to support the well-being of students and their families and communities, but the programs and services vary depending on the needs, said Amy Ellis, assistant director of the Center for Community Schools at UCF.
In the case of Community Partnership Schools, four types of community partners are always involved — a school district, a university or college, a nonprofit and a health care provider. Other types of community partners participate, too, and can play a major role.
For OCPS ACE the partnerships are among Orange County Public Schools, UCF, Valencia College, Children’s Home Society of Florida, Orange Blossom Family Health, Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Florida, and the Rosen Foundation.
The partnerships mean OCPS ACE can offer tutoring and mentoring programs; professional development for teachers; before- and after-school services; a resource center for parents; onsite medical, dental and behavioral health services; athletic, arts and summer programs; and a high-quality preschool program.
“Community Partnership Schools are among the most comprehensive community schools in the world,” said Amy Ellis, a former community school administrator at Evans who has visited community schools in England and is studying them as a doctoral student in education leadership at UCF.
The Community Partnership Schools model is now recognized as a national community school model by the Coalition for Community Schools in Washington.
The Florida Legislature appropriated more than $4 million dollars during the past four years for the development of Community Partnership Schools across the state.
Currently, eight public schools in Florida have become Community Partnership Schools with state support, including Evans and OCPS ACE in Orlando and schools in Pensacola, Jacksonville, Tampa, Holiday and Cocoa. Five others are implementing the Community Partnership Schools model with support from their local community, and another four are in the emerging phase, said Amy Ellis.
Early-outcomes data is impressive. Evans’s graduation rate has increased from 64 percent in 2011 to 88 percent 2017. C.A. Weis Elementary School in Pensacola began offering behavioral health services when it became a Community Partnership School in 2015. Since then more than 100 children have been referred to behavioral health care and 81 new cases have been opened, according to school director John Sherman. Student referrals dropped 43 percent and suspensions dropped 50 percent in the first year.
Sherman’s position as director is one of four staff positions found at all Community Partnership Schools – a director, an after-school coordinator, a health programs’ coordinator and a parent resource coordinator. The positions are partially supported with legislative funding.
Shannon Currie has been on board as the Community Partnership School director at OCPS ACE since last year. She is an employee of Children’s Home Society of Florida, works closely with the school principal, and receives training and technical support from the Center for Community Schools at UCF.
“It’s an amazing experience to be a partner and to understand what it takes to support a school holistically,” Currie said. “I’m doing what I love to do – to serve people. What I want them to know is that they have access to support. If they know that, then we’re doing our job.”
Agency for State Technology and Florida National Guard to Host Cyber Security Event
MEDIA ADVISORY
Tomorrow, August 15th, the Agency for State Technology in collaboration with the Florida National Guard will be hosting a cyber security training exercise and invite you to tour the cyber range at the National Guard Armory.
WHAT: Press Conference
WHEN: 1:00 PM
WHERE: Florida Army National Guard
1225 Easterwood Drive
Tallahassee, FL 32311
Media Conference Call: Community Health Centers Across Florida Advocate for Streamlined Payment Process
Proposed payment process could result in centers
closing down and patients losing access to care
The Florida Association of Community Health Centers (FACHC), the leading state advocate for community-based health care programs, will host a media conference call on Tuesday, August 15 at 2:00 p.m. to discuss how a new “Alternative Payment Methodology” threatens community health center’s efforts to participate in the Low Income Pool program. Across the state, health centers treat more than one million patients each year and save the state hundreds of millions of dollars by giving patients an alternative to emergency room visits.
The media conference call comes in advance of a scheduled meeting later in the week where the Agency for Health Care Administration will hear testimony about the LIP program and how this new payment process will affect dozens of community health centers across the state.
What: Media Conference Call
Who: Andrew Behrman, President & CEO of FACHC
Dr. Michael Gervasi, CEO of Florida Community Health Centers
Brad Herremans, CEO of Suncoast Community Health Center
Annie R. Neasman, CEO of Jessie Trice Community Health Center
When: Tuesday, August 15, 2017
2:00 pm EST
Where: Conference Line: (888) 392-4560
Access Code: 6363880