Thursday, February 26, 2009

Nurse practitioner in Branttord

Nurse practitioner is back. This is welcoming news , after a 3 year service gap -where did the money and patients go -we have our nurse pratitioner back to provide a vital and needed service in the underserviced city core. "Panagiotou will work with collaborating physician, Dr. Arash Zohoor, who works at Brantford General Hospital." Welcome back we need you and more like you...... QJ

Serving health core needs By HEATHER IBBOTSON, EXPOSITOR STAFF

The downtown nurse practitioner clinic will be reborn on Monday with the return of nurse practitioner Laurie Panagiotou.

The clinic, operated by Aberdeen Health and Community Services, will run out of 220 Colborne St. in space donated by the city's social services department.

Clinic hours will be 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. Both appointments and walk-ins are accepted. Patients are welcome from the city and county.

"I'm excited. I'm really looking forward to providing what I can to the citizens of Brantford," Panagiotou said in an interview on Wednesday.

Panagiotou, who has been a nurse practitioner since 1999, was beloved by her patients when she staffed the clinic from 2003 to 2006.

The reopened clinic will help "to bridge the gap in the doctor shortage," said Amber Cowan, manager of volunteer services and community development with Aberdeen.

"We're excited to have her back," Cowan said.

The mission of the downtown clinic will be to serve the needs of patients who do not have a family physician, Cowan said.

Nurse practitioners are registered nurses with advanced education and training in primary health care nursing. This expertise allows them to diagnose and treat minor illnesses, conduct pap smears, and order diagnostic tests such as X-rays and ultrasounds. Nurse practitioners may also prescribe certain medications, but no medications or narcotics will be kept on site.

Panagiotou will work with collaborating physician, Dr. Arash Zohoor, who works at Brantford General Hospital.

When Panagiotou is presented with an illness or medical situation outside the scope of her practice, she can consult with Zohoor or transfer the case to him, she said.

The Aberdeen agency originally opened a downtown clinic in 2003 at St. Andrew's Church on Darling Street, but after the January 2006 church blaze, the clinic relocated to the city's social services office on Colborne Street. The clinic operated there, staffed by Panagiotou, until 2006, when she left the post. Another nurse practitioner was recruited, but she too left in mid-2007.

A second nurse practitioner clinic operating out of Slovak Village on Sixth Avenue closed its doors in November 2007.

The closures left hundreds of patients without anywhere to turn.

In 2006, the downtown clinic served between 500 and 700 patients, Panagiotou said.

She said she is eager to reconnect with some of her former clients and meet new ones. "I've had a soft spot for Brantford," she said.

Aberdeen is also planning for growth and a possible second local clinic by participating in the provincial government Grow Your Own Nurse Practitioner Program. A registered nurse is currently being "grown" in the nurse practitioner training program and will be on board with Aberdeen by the end of the year, Cowan said.

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