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New Program Will Help Restore Home Care Services For Terminally Ill Children

Moira Ermentrout, 5, is one of the children who lost services when Hospice and Palliative Care of Greensboro cut services last month. Photo Credit: Sara Brennan and shared by Dania Ermentrout

A new partnership among local agencies will allow home health care for terminally ill children to continue. This comes after Hospice and Palliative Care of Greensboro announced it would stop these services at the end of November.

Cone Health will lead the effort, which includes a new clinic to treat seriously ill children.

“That also means that our staff and the providers who will function there will be the central contact for each family and we will design a personalized care plan for each child and each family and make sure that our community partnerships deliver a very high level of care,” says Dr. Elizabeth Golding, medical director of palliative care at Cone Health.

The hospital says it has been growing its pediatric palliative care operations over the past several months and it stepped up to meet the community need after the cuts were made.

Cone Health is collaborating with Advanced Home Care, which will provide in-home services. Hospice and Palliative Care of Greensboro will also be involved.

Dania Ermentrout's five-year-old daughter Moira suffers from a rare, life threatening disease. She's been an advocate for other parents who are struggling to find the help that they need. Ermentrout says she's upset with the way some of the organizations involved have handled the change in services. But she's relieved they'll continue.

“Our daily lives are complicated and filled with a lot of uncertainty and pain already and that kind of service is monumental. I would like to know why. Why did we have to be put through that surprise discharge in the first place?”

Hospice and Palliative Care of Greensboro said it had to end its home care services last month because they are difficult to sustain when the volume of patients is small and the geographic care area is large.

Cone Health says the new pediatric palliative care clinic will open in the coming weeks and home services are available now for families to access.

“This is a really vulnerable population and this is a population who really needs our services," says Dr. Golding. "This is really the ideal for all of health care. Pediatrics requires a special sensitivity, really an expert level of communication, and I think this system will be a model for people who have complex illnesses across the lifespan.”

*Follow WFDD's Keri Brown on Twitter @kerib_news

 

 

 

Keri Brown is a multi-award winning reporter and host at 88.5 WFDD. She has been honored with two regional Edward R. Murrow awards for her stories about coal ash, and was named the 2015 radio reporter of the year by the Radio Television Digital News Association of the Carolinas (RTDNAC).Although she covers a variety of topics, her beats are environmental and education reporting.Keri comes to the Triad from West Virginia Public Broadcasting, where she served as the Chief Bureau Reporter for the Northern Panhandle. She produced stories for the state's Public Television and Radio programs and was honored by the West Virginia Associated Press Broadcasters Association for her feature and enterprise reporting.She also served as an adjunct instructor at Wheeling Jesuit University and Bethany College in West Virginia. She worked with the Center for Educational Technologies in Wheeling, WV, and other NASA centers across the country to develop several stories about the use of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) concepts in the classroom.Keri's journalism career began at WTRF-TV 7 in Wheeling. She worked in several roles at the station, including the head assignment editor. She also was a field producer and assignment manager at WPGH-TV Fox 53 in Pittsburgh.Keri is a graduate of Ohio University. When she's not in the studio or working on a story, she enjoys watching college football with her family, cooking, and traveling.Keri is always looking for another great story idea, so please share them with her. You can follow her on Twitter @kerib_news.

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