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Get to know a Board Member – Karen Berube

By Sarah Dick: Communication Student – Senior and Dr. Rebecca Vargas Jackson

Get to Know a Board Member

INOVA Board Member Karen Berube

Karen Berube serves as Vice President of Population/Community Health at Inova. In that capacity, she oversees Inova’s Geriatric Services, Safety Net Clinics, Transitional Programs and Clinics, Disease Management Programs and Community Based Programs. She has oversight for the Community Benefit Reports and Community Health Needs Assessments for the system. In her role, she works closely with local governmental agencies, community partners, and other hospital providers.

Ms. Berube joined Inova in 1995 as a social worker for the Juniper Program, Northern Virginia’s largest provider of HIV/AIDS care. Since that time, she has used her core skills in working with and understanding people as her biggest asset to manage an increasing amount of Inova’s community work. She has directed medical clinics including obstetrics, pediatrics, diabetes, and HIV. She co-leads the readmission reduction strategies for the system and helped to create and implement Transitional Services at Inova, an initiative that works to prevent readmissions and find patients a medical home. She also has oversight of the Forensics Assessment and Consultation Team (FACT) that provides services to victims of sexual assault and abuse.

Ms. Berube has spent much of her career in medical care but also has worked with young children, the elderly and those with addiction issues. In her work at Inova, she has successfully managed to combine her love for helping people with management and leadership skills, as evidenced by programs that are increasing both in volume and efficiency. She sits on a number of local community boards and commissions.

Here is Ms. Berube’s interview with Mason Communication student Sarah Dick. Ms. Berube’s answers are bulleted.

Interviewer: I want to thank you for taking the time to have this phone interview with me. My team and I are really looking forward to learning about your work. My first question is,

* Please tell me about a professional accomplishment you are proud of.

o I’m most proud of how INOVA gives back to the community and the programs that I’ve helped to start and run for community members who do not always have access to healthcare.

* Is there something you’ve done that the other AHEC board members should want to be informed about?

o My work has improved access to healthcare and helped to create a diverse workforce.

* Why did you decide to join the AHEC board?

o I thought AHEC would be a group that had the same beliefs I have. I like its focus on helping to create health care professional. That’s important to me.

* In your opinion, in what ways can AHEC make a difference in the community?

o We will make a difference to the next generation if we increase the number of people in the healthcare workforce, and increase their diversity, hopefully without cultural biases.

and last but not least, my team and I were wondering,

* What is your favorite meal to have?

o I shouldn’t say this but Pepperoni pizza.

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Principal Investigator – Dr Caroline Sutter

By: Monica Forero: Communication Student

Northern Virginia Area Health Education Center’s Principal Investigator

Caroline Sutter is an assistant professor in Georga Mason University’s School of Nursing and the new Principal Investigator for Northern Virginia’s Area Health Education Center. NVAHEC’s mission is recruitment, training, and retention of a diverse health workforce for underserved communities. From 2006-2012, Dr. Sutter managed clinics for Northern Virginia Community College. The mission of these clinics was to serve underprivileged, low-income communities and give undergraduate nursing students valuable, hands-on work experience in nursing and professional skills.

Dr. Sutter’s work was concentrated in medically underserved areas and where practitioner-to-patient communication is hindered by language barriers. She worked with new technologies to assess current translation services and optimize them.

In much of her work, Dr. Sutter aims to improve mental health and health literacy. She says that these dynamics are critical to improving healthcare for underserved and uninsured populations. Currently, she is implementing a multilateral initiative to train various levels of professionals in cultural competence and critical life skills.

Dr. Sutter has won many awards during her career, including the Virginia Nurse Practitioner Award in 2016. Read more about her achievements at (https://www2.gmu.edu/news/392931).

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News

Newsletter On Opioid Crisis

By Sabrina Fine: Communication Student- senior. George Mason University

Opioid Crisis What Is George Mason Doing Help?

In the United States, 115 people die a day from opioid overdoses, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. In 2016, more people died from opioid overdoses than car crashes, according to opioids.gov. George Mason University is trying to help.

“Our provost convened a multi-disciplinary research team to learn about ways in which Mason can assist with this very difficult problem,” said Professor Katherine Rowan. “The team is composed of faculty from across several disciplines such as those in the health sciences, psychology, and communication.”

Mason also hosted a symposium April 19 to address Northern Virginia’s opioid epidemic. In attendance was Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, and U.S. Representatives Barbara Comstock (VA-10) and Gerald Connolly (VA-11).

“This is happening to our friends and families. This is something that is touching every aspect of our lives,” Comstock said at the conference. “I can’t emphasize enough how important it is to be working as a community. That’s why it is so wonderful being here at George Mason University because you have outreach into all aspects of the community.”

With a record number of Americans abusing opioids, more is being learned about its consequences. Recently, researchers from the University of Exeter, King’s College London and the University of Bergen found a significant increase in harmful side effects related to the use of commonly prescribed opioid painkillers in people with dementia, compared to those on a placebo

The opioid problem also affects America’s youngest population. In 2014, 22,000 babies were born addicted to opioids, according to National Geographic.

Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome describes the condition of babies born addicted who go into withdrawal. Babies in opioid withdrawal cry repeatedly, wake more often and are seemingly constantly uncomfortable.

A major contributor to opioid use is overprescribing of the drugs by doctors, according to Opioid.gov. One way to address this problem is for states to fund addiction treatment for low-income individuals through Medicaid.

“Virginia and Ohio have recently allowed more low-income individuals to receive Medicaid,” said Katherine Rowan, a communication professor at George Mason University who studies science communication. “This increased funding is bringing down the number of opioid-related deaths in cities like Dayton, Ohio, that was hit hard by the loss of manufacturing jobs.”

“Another step is to monitor physicians prescribing opioids,” said Rowan. However, she cautioned that those who truly need the drugs for pain management should receive them.

“This is a crisis,” said Northam when he spoke at the Mason conference. “But if we all put our minds together, we can overcome it. We’ve done a lot of things in our history, and this is something that if we work together we can get done.”

References:

Source for opioid addiction and dementia study: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/07/180724110122.htm
Source for drug deaths down in Dayton: