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IU-BLOOMINGTON
CENTER ON AGING AND COMMUNITY RECEIVES $94,000 GRANT FROM BAXTER INTERNATIONAL
FOUNDATION
Funding
Supports Neighborhood Nurse Project to Serve
At-Risk Youth, Women and Seniors in Downtown Bloomington
BLOOMINGTON, Ind.,
February 19, 2003 - The Baxter International Foundation, the philanthropic
arm of Baxter International Inc., has awarded a two-year, $94,000 grant
to the Center on Aging and Community at Indiana University, Bloomington.
The university will launch an innovative Neighborhood Nurse project to
improve the health status and health literacy of at-risk youth, women
in transition and frail seniors who live, work and play in Bloomington's
Third Street Park neighborhood. A family nurse practitioner will oversee
the project. Senior nursing students from the Indiana University School
of Nursing will serve as volunteers and will get hands-on learning experiences
in community settings.
"The program
may potentially serve as a national model for university-community collaborations
around health and well-being," said Philip B. Stafford, Ph.D., director
of the Center on Aging and Community at Indiana University, Bloomington.
The Neighborhood Nurse project grew out of a research and community development
project among IU and community members - known as the Evergreen Project
- to create good environments for aging adults in Bloomington. Beginning
in 1995, community members began to create a shared vision of a healthy
environment for older adults. Some of the "design principles"
they articulated included having green space, intergenerational interaction
and a location accessible to services and amenities. The group identified
Third Street Park as an ideal area to carry those design principles forward.
The Third Street park
neighborhood is home to several current and future facilities that will
be served by the Nurse project. Planning and fundraising efforts continue
in anticipation of the construction of Evergreen Place, an affordable
senior housing project for 35-40 seniors, that will combine new construction
with the restoration of the 1924 historic Coca-Cola Bottling Plant. The
site currently houses the non-profit Evergreen Institute on Elder Environments,
which will serve as home base for the Neighborhood Nurse project.
Complementing some
of the traditional Medicare-reimbursed services, Nurse Practitioner services
will include a focus on prevention, early detection, treatment of minor
illnesses, symptom management for chronic diseases, health education and
referral. The neighborhood nurse will also extend services to other programs
surrounding Third Street Park:
- Rise/Middle Way
House is home to 86 women and children who have escaped domestic violence
and are in transition. The project will offer bi-weekly discussion groups
on women's health issues.
- The Boys and Girls
Club of Bloomington operates in a rehabilitated Armory at the edge of
the park and offers recreation and education for 500 members. The project
will help children use computers to investigate health and safety issues
and do health-related research projects.
- The Bloomington
Adult Community Center is a resource for education, recreation, socialization,
travel opportunities for more than 700 local seniors. While the center
provides some health education and screening services, the neighborhood
nurse will complement those activities by providing more individualized
health support.
"The Baxter International
Foundation is proud to support such an innovative project," said
Patricia Morgan, executive director, The Baxter International Foundation.
"The neighborhood nurse project improves access to health care and
health education for underserved community members, while at the same
time giving nursing students valuable opportunities to work with various
patient populations in community settings."
As the philanthropic
arm of Baxter International Inc., the Baxter International Foundation
helps to increase access to health care in the United States and other
countries. In 2001, foundation grants totaling $4.8 million improved access
to care for children, the uninsured and the elderly, helped prevent child
abuse and neglect, promoted health education, expanded education opportunities
for health-care providers, and helped victims of global disasters.
Baxter International
Inc. is a global medical products and services company that, through its
subsidiaries, provides critical therapies for people with life-threatening
conditions. Baxter employs more than 550 people in Indiana at its facilities
in Bloomington and Indianapolis.
FOR ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION:
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- Media Contacts:
- Raquel Powers, Baxter,
(847) 948-4557
Philip Stafford, IU, (812) 855-2163
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