Monday, December 31, 2007
Shriners moving near BJC campus
St. Louis Business Journal - December 31, 2007
by Lisa R. Brown
Shriners Hospital for Children is moving forward with plans to build its new $150 million hospital within the BJC HealthCare complex in the Central West End.
After a year-long search process, Shriners Hospital is in the final stages of negotiations to purchase a nearly 6-acre property at 4400 Clayton Road, according to sources familiar with the negotiations. Upon completion of the new hospital, Shriners plans to close its hospital in Frontenac, where it has been based for nearly a half century.
Chesterfield rehab hospital sold to joint venture
The hospital is master leased to St. John's Mercy Rehabilitation LLC, a joint venture between St. John's Mercy Health System and Centerre Healthcare.
Financial terms of the deal, which closed Dec. 20, were not disclosed in a release late Friday. Duke Realty holds a 20 percent interest while Grubb & Ellis Healthcare REIT maintains an 80 percent ownership interest in the joint venture and acts as managing member, according to the release.
The 50-bed, 112,000-square-foot hospital, at 14561 N. Outer 40 Road, west of Timberlake Manor Parkway, opened in July. The more than seven-acre property also hosts a two-story, 90,000-square-foot parking garage that can accommodate 286 vehicles.
St. John's Mercy Medical Center in Creve Coeur partnered with Clayton-based Centerre Healthcare Corp. to build the $25 million, three-story hospital. Duke Realty developed the facility and retained ownership of the land and structure.
St. John's is a member of the Sisters of Mercy Health System, which oversees 18 acute care hospitals and one heart hospital in Missouri, Arkansas, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.
Centerre develops and operates inpatient rehabilitation facilities in partnership with acute care hospitals.
Duke Realty was represented by Philip Mahler and Jeffrey Cooper of Savills Granite of New York. Financing was provided by National City Bank and arranged by William Bennett. Asset management services will be provided by Grubb & Ellis Co.
Grubb & Ellis Healthcare REIT is sponsored by Santa Ana, Calif.-based commercial real estate services firm Grubb & Ellis Co. (NYSE: GBE).
Indianapolis-based Duke Realty Corp. (NYSE: DRE) is an office/industrial real estate development and services firm.
Friday, December 21, 2007
SSM restructuring local operation
St. Louis Business Journal
SSM Health Care-St. Louis is restructuring its operations, including dividing some of its hospitals into north and south regions, the organization said Thursday.
SSM said it is creating the north and south regions to enhance a regional approach focused on delivery of medical services, patient satisfaction and patient safety. The new organizational structure comes with new leadership.
Mike Graue, the current executive vice president of St. Louis network operations, will now oversee the south region as executive vice president of operations/south region. The south region includes SSM Cardinal Glennon Children's Medical Center, SSM St. Mary's Health Center, SSM St. Joseph Hospital of Kirkwood (the future SSM St. Clare Health Center) and SSM Rehab.
Steve Johnson, president of SSM DePaul Health Center, will become the executive vice president of operations/north region. Johnson will oversee operations for SSM DePaul Health Center, SSM St. Joseph Health Center, SSM St. Joseph Hospital West and SSM Behavioral Medicine.
Also, SSM Health Care named Sherlyn Hailstone executive vice president and chief operating officer of SSM Cardinal Glennon. Hailstone has served as president of SSM St. Joseph Health Center in St. Charles since 2005. The company has begun the search process for Hailstone's replacement.
SSM Health Care said it is also searching for a regional vice president/chief nursing officer who will oversee patient satisfaction and safety and the nursing practice.
"Our primary goal has always been to provide exceptional care for our patients and meet the health care needs of our community. We believe these organizational changes will further strengthen our ability to deliver on that goal," Jim Sanger, president and CEO of SSM Health Care-St. Louis, said in a statement.
The changes come a month after Sanger replaced Ron Levy, who announced he was leaving the health system's St. Louis organization in October. Sanger was previously president and chief executive of St. Mary's Good Samaritan Inc. in Southwestern Illinois, a two-hospital joint operating venture. Sanger was hired 10 years ago to lead the operation, which consists of St. Mary's Hospital in Centralia, part of the SSM network, and Good Samaritan Regional Health Center in Mount Vernon, part of the Felician Sisters health system.
St. Louis-based SSM Health Care (SSMHC), a health care ministry founded in 1872, is one of the largest Catholic systems in the nation. It is also one of the largest health-care providers in Missouri. SSMHC owns, operates and manages 20 acute-care hospitals.
Monday, November 26, 2007
Promoting Your Allied Healthcare Practice Tip #5: Don’t talk negatively about your competitors

When competition is seen as an important but friendly (and fun!) game, everyone has the chance to win. But when competition devolves into warfare and turf battles, everyone looses, especially your patients and their doctors.
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Neuroscientists Uncover Brain Region Involved in Voluntary Behavior

Monday, November 19, 2007
Physician Ranking Program. Is O&P Next?
Promoting Your Allied Healthcare Practice Tip #4: Be a Valuable Resource

Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Scientists Help Panda Find Love

SCIENTISTS from Salford are helping a three-legged panda in China find love.Experts from the city's university are flying half-way round the world to fit the romance-starved bear with an artificial limb.
The panda, named Nui Nui, lost her paw in a fight and has been unable to feed or mate since.There are only an estimated 2,000 giant pandas remaining and zoologists around the world are working on a breeding programme to save them from extinction - but the species are famously reluctant to mate.
Dr Glyn Heath, an expert in animal prosthetics, and his team will travel to Beijing next month to create and fit a prosthetic and train the animal to use it. He said: "We will be performing a procedure which will transform Nui Nui's life and ensure that she is able to reproduce and nourish herself."We will only know the final design of the limb once Nui Nui has been clinically assessed. "However, we envisage that it will feature a hook or false thumb enabling her to grab bamboo from the trees for food.
"We will engineer the leg so that it will bear the animal's full body weight, allowing her to balance on all fours, while walking around and standing."Specialists at the School of Health Care Professions in Salford are rapidly gaining a reputation for being able to help stricken animals. Dr Heath trained to build prosthetics for humans, but has since created mini-chariots for disabled rats and false legs for injured dogs.Since Nui Nui lost her paw in a fight with three other pandas, she has been unable to grasp bamboo and keepers at the Shaanxi Province Rescue Centre have had to feed her by hand.
The animal has also been unable to walk or balance herself properly, making breeding all but impossible.Dr Heath has successfully fitted artificial limbs for animals that otherwise have been put down, but Nui Nui will be the first panda he has treated. He said: "I'm confident Nui Nui will take to her new leg - most dogs we've worked with have been able to walk almost immediately after we've fitted false limbs."It's rewarding to know we're playing a part in protecting such a beautiful species."
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
NPR Story about Medicare Fraud

Allied Healthcare Promotions Tip #3: Smile

Monday, November 5, 2007
American Healthfront
P&O Care recently appeared in a segment of American Healthfront on St. Louis NBC affiliate KMOV4. The two minute segment features two of our prosthetists, Jon Wilson and Greg Doerr, as well as two of their patients, Denise and Sharon.
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Patient Testimonial: Denise
An amputee talks about her experience with P&O Care and what it's like to be a shoe-shopper and a mother of two.
Allied Healthcare Promotions Tip #2: Don't Wast Anyone's Time

Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Healthlink Outtakes
Have you ever wondered what it's like to film a commercial? Check out this authentic behind-the-scenes peek at the filming of our two-minute news clip that appeared on KMOV4's "American Healthfront" September 6, 2007. It might make you laugh.
Monday, October 29, 2007
Churck Norris & Diabetes
Monday, October 22, 2007
Amputee's Experience
An Amputee talks about the need for parity in insurance coverage for prosthetic care.
Coping with Amputation: The Top Ten Online Articles from the National Limb Loss Information Center
- Getting Ready for an Amputation
- Body Image, Relationships, and Sexuality after Amputation
- About Depression
- Do you Suffer in Silence? It Could Hurt Your Health
- How Physical Therapy Can Help in Your Recovery after Amputation
- When a Parent Loses a Limb: Helping Children Cope,
Cuando un padre pierde una extremidad: Cómo ayudar a los hijos a entenderlo - National and regional support groups reach out to new amputees
- Pain Management and the Amputee
Control del dolor y el amputado - Ways Children Adjust to Limb Loss
Cómo se adaptan los niños a la pérdida de extremidades - Going Public: Moving Beyond the Barriers That Keep You Inside
Mostrarse en público: Cómo derribar las barreras que nos impiden salir
Allied Healthcare Promotions Tip #1: There is No Little Guy

Promoting Your Allied Health Care Practice
- There is no little guy.
- Don't waste anyone's time.
- Smile.
- Be a valuable resource.
- Don't talk negatively about your competitors.
- Don't be pushy.
- Don't ever treat people like they owe you.
- Emphasize quality and accountability.
- Gather information.
- Keep your loyal users happy.
These tips will also appear in the weekly e-newsletter of Outsource Marketing Solutions.
Tips for Marketing Your Health Care Practice
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Government Research Continues on Arm Prostheses

Now, prompted by veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, a government agency known as DARPA within the Pentagon has begun funding new initiatives to make natural, lighter weight, more versatile prosthetic arms.
There is an excellent article in The Boston Globe on one of these new arms still in development. Here is an excerpt about the inventor:
Kamen hopes the market for the product won't get too big. But he's gratified to see the arms being used by patients, and he brags like a proud parent about what they can do with them. For example, one patient shows off by picking up individual M&Ms, and another can use a power drill. "We've given them a new perspective on life," Kamen said.
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Award-Winning Blog and Newsletter Lift St. Louis Health Care Practice
The Care Digest’s frequent blog posts profile patients and practitioners, and it allows anyone to rate their experience with the clinical practice. It also summarizes news and provides commentary with a personal perspective on the P&O industry here in St. Louis and around the world. Together, the blog and newsletter reach over 1,100 people in St. Louis and enable P&O Care to connect better with their patients and referring health care professionals. “We hope patients take the opportunity to upload their own commentary, pictures, video and unique stories,” says blog creator Bill McLellan.
Both versions of The Care Digest form part of an innovative outreach campaign begun just over a year ago. Since August 2006, the successful plan has enabled P&O Care to grow from five prosthetists and orthotists to eight, and from twelve to twenty employees. Prosthetists Manny Rivera and Dan Luitjohan came on in 2006, and Orthotists John Lartonoix and Shawn McAdams started this year. The practice also added orthotic intern Luke Brewer and prosthetic resident Maggie Ware-Smith in June and July. With the addition of Bill McLellan as Director of Sales and Marketing a year ago, P&O Care has a dedicated liaison coordinating the crucial relationships among patients and their doctors, nurses, therapists, prosthetists and orthotists.
“We don’t want to be the biggest P&O practice in town, just the best,” says CEO Jim Weber. “This business is all about providing a superior clinical service, not just manufacturing limbs and braces. Though not widely utilized by health care practitioners, good marketing ensures that competition works the way it’s supposed to. Patients get more for their money, such as fast, quality service and complementary home visits.” McLellan adds, "Turning a quality newsletter into a blog is easy and fun. It's a good idea for any professional practice, whether in health care or other fields of specialized service. Blogs are interactive and easily updated with stories, pictures, and online video; and they provide an excellent way to stay connected with patients and colleagues."
To sign up for the e-mail or snail mail versions of The Care Digest, or to become a contributor on this blog, contact Bill McLellan at BMcLellan@PandOCare.com. P&O Care is a team of health care professionals with a common goal of creating innovative prosthetic and orthotic solutions to help people live their lives to the fullest by regaining their mobility, strength and independence. Their care centers are located in Des Peres, MO, and Fairview Heights, IL.
Tuesday, October 9, 2007
The prosthetics lab at Walter Reed Army Medical Center
This is exactly how we laminate our prosthetic sockets, too. The infrared oven heats the plastic; and the vacuum pump, that thing making all the noise, pulls the plastic down smooth and tight over the carbon fiber, which usually has some kind of fabric over it.
Monday, September 24, 2007
Josh Sundquist, CNN Hero

Friday, September 21, 2007
She Glides on Ice
Earlier this year, P&O Care did a profile in The Care Digest on Janetta Roggers. Since then, these two videos of Janetta have been viewed over 16,000 times online. Always adventurous, Janetta is continuing to experiment with new activities, the latest being soccer.
Virginia Parity Push
http://www.roanoke.com/business/wb/wb/xp-132817
In Missouri, by contrast with Virginia, the effort to get a prosthetic parity law on the books is being led by a committee of amputees, rather than a prosthetic company like P&O Care. The Missouri Coalition for People with Limb Loss will, of course, eventually raise money from prosthetic companies to hire a lobbiest, and it's only right that we help. But patients who have been denied coverage by their insurance companies are leading the push here.
We would also take issue with the characterization of prosthetic parity as a traditional "mandate." Limb loss is a tragic, sudden (even when caused by diabetes) medical condition, the kind of thing that health insurance exists to cover. No one will cut their limb off to benefit from "mandated" prosthetic coverage. We will simply see more amputees going back to work and fewer depending on Medicaid for their prosthetic coverage. Less than ten years ago, insurance policies used to all cover prosthetics on their own. Why not now?
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Late Morning

Eventually, they found him in a corn field between our office and another building which houses the local IRS office. Unfortunately, the suspect shot himself before he could be apprehended. More information can be found at http://www.ksdk.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=129883.
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
What Happens in Vegas...

AOPA's National Assembly is the largest gathering of prosthetists and orthotists in the U.S. each year. It offers a chance to swap ideas, network with colleagues all over the country, take in a few continuing ed courses, and schmooze with vendors.
Thursday, September 6, 2007
Watch Us on TV (Hi, Mom!)
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Practitioner Profile: Maggie Ware-Smith
This past July, Maggie started her year-long prosthetic residency, seeing patients and building limbs with P&O Care's Jon Wilson, CPO. She plans to do an orthotic residency after she gets her ABC certification in prosthetics next year. Maggie hopes to practice someday as both a prosthetist and an orthotist, capable of providing the same patients with artificial limbs and custom bracing. P&O Care is lucky to have such an ambitious rising star.
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
The Sound of Prosthetics in Action
Thursday, August 23, 2007
John Lartonoix, ABC Certified Orthotist

In 2000, John and Jon both attended Northwestern Medical School's Orthotic Program and often talked about working together in the future. However, after graduating John Lartonoix took a residency in Columbus, Ohio, for Columbus Orthopedic, and Jon Wilson returned to St.Louis to form P&O Care. Columbus Orthopedic was later purchased by the Hanger Corporation and was an extremely respected practice. The office serviced all local hospitals including Children's Hospital and the Ohio State University Hospital.
In his patient care, John says he was lucky enough to be exposed to most aspects of the orthotic field. "I worked closely with several doctors from the Children's Hospital developing a strong pediatric background. In 2006 P&O Care developed a need for a certified Orthotist, and I was looking for new career experiences. After meeting with Jon Wilson and Jim Weber, CEO of P&O Care, I found what I was looking for. P&O Care is a group of wonderful people who make for an amazing team. I see such a variety of patients each day, which allows me to help people in many different ways. Being part of the P&O Care team enables me to do my job with care and pride."
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Rocket-powered Mechanical Arm Could Revolutionize Prosthetics

Science Daily — Combine a mechanical arm with a miniature rocket motor: The result is a prosthetic device that is the closest thing yet to a bionic arm.
A prototype of this radical design has been successfully developed and tested by a team of mechanical engineers at Vanderbilt University as part of a $30 million federal program to develop advanced prosthetic devices.
"Our design does not have superhuman strength or capability, but it is closer in terms of function and power to a human arm than any previous prosthetic device that is self-powered and weighs about the same as a natural arm," says Michael Goldfarb, the professor of mechanical engineering who is leading the effort.
Read the full original article at http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/08/070820130638.htm.
Friday, August 17, 2007
Introducing Shawn McAdams
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Farewell, Jen

Wednesday, August 8, 2007
We Want Your Feedback!
Friday, August 3, 2007
Hemicorporectomy Prosthesis Discovered

Helping Landmine Victims

Get a Grip

Thursday, August 2, 2007
Chance Encounter Lifts Two Amputees
Next month, Denise and Sharon will both be featured in a segment about P&O Care on American Health Front, a half-hour show about advances in medical technology. It will air after the evening news on KMOV 4, September 6, at 6:30 pm. It's the relationship that our prosthetists and orthotists develop with their patients, and sometimes the relationships they develop with each other, that we feel make P&O Care a special place.
Run, Oscar, Run!

Friday, July 27, 2007
MO Medicaid Re-Instates Payment for Orthotic Devices

In 2005, the Missouri State Legislature was also ready to cut prosthetics from Medicaid coverage, but citizens from across the state called their legislators and P & O Care’s Clinical Director Jon Wilson, CPO, our CEO, Jim Weber, and one of our patients testified before a legislative committee. At the time, the trade journal O&P Almanac reported that it was their testimony that saved prosthetic coverage for Medicaid recipients, but unfortunately orthotic coverage was still stripped.
This decision led to the bizarre situation in which Missouri would pay thousands of dollars for a prosthesis but would not pay a few hundred dollars for a custom boot that could have prevented the amputation. Now two years later, we’re thankful that they’ve finally decided to pay for both.
Technician Profile: Mark “Doc” Woodson
Doc got into prosthetics back in the early Nineties, a few years after loosing his leg below the knee in a trucking accident. He always enjoyed creating things with his hands and helping people, so he was a perfect fit for fabricating prosthetic limbs. Doc says he gets special enjoyment from making the limbs our pediatric patients use to walk. A single father, he and his son love to take road trips out West, often deciding each day where to go next. Doc also has a special knack for numbers and has become better than anyone else at P & O Care at predicting our monthly billing based on the devices in fabrication. Always competitive and ambitious—and incredibly funny—Doc drives all of us to continually improve the quality of care we provide our patients.
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
The Fight for Prosthetic Parity Heats Up in Missouri and Across the Nation
That’s the question before twenty-three state legislatures across the country. Parity laws require health insurance companies to cover prosthetic limbs when deemed medically necessary by a physician, without setting unrealistic price caps or once-in-a-lifetime clauses. When insurers fulfill their obligations, amputees are much less likely to depend on government services like Medicaid.
Medicare, Medicaid, and the Department of Veteran Affairs already provide the coverage required by parity laws. But a movement to cut healthcare costs has led some private insurers here in Missouri to place annual limits on prosthetic coverage, ranging from $1500 to $4000, not quite half the cost of a below-knee prosthesis.
Insurance companies and government payers have always used provider contracts with companies like P&O Care to dictate how much they will pay for different types of prosthetics. But these new caps are imposed directly on patients, regardless of their different needs. Individuals and employers shopping for health coverage should not be expected to know that $1500 is an unreasonable cap on prosthetic coverage. In essence, these insurers are advertising that they cover prosthetics, but when patients need that coverage, it isn’t actually paid for.
One of P&O Care’s own patients, orthopedic surgeon Dr. Matthew Bradley (picture above), has testified before the Oregon State Legislature on behalf of a parity law that seems likely to pass there this year. Now, Matt has plans to use his expertise to help work for parity legislation here in Missouri. Through a new committee, P&O Care is joining with individual citizens, prosthetic providers, and advocacy groups all over the Show Me State to get a parity law passed here in 2008.
Besides Oregon, six other states have already passed prosthetic parity laws, including Colorado Maine, New Hamshire, Rhode Island, California, and Massachusetts, where former Governor Mitt Romney was a key supporter. Missouri Governor Matt Blunt has announced that he is supporting Romney’s bid for President: Does that mean he might support prosthetic parity, too?
Jennifer Burget, ABC Certified Orthotist

To gain more practical experience, Burget moved to Beverly Hills, California to work under one of the best, most well-respected orthotists in the field, Max Lerman of Lerman and Son. In California, Burget was one of two orthotists serving the highly respected Cedars Sinai Hospital.
After gaining priceless experience in Beverly Hills, Jennifer was ready to return to the Midwest. When she met with Jim Weber, CEO of P&O Care, Burget knew she had found the perfect fit. “Since moving to St. Louis, I have joined an amazing team of practitioners,” she says. Jennifer is dedicated to helping others and always strives for a perfect fit.
Kerth Langeneckert: Trucker, Harley Enthusiast, Amputee
Langeneckert’s insurance at the time of his amputation paid for his first prosthesis. His new leg even enabled him to go back to work driving a truck with a manual clutch. After two years, however, his residual limb has shrunk, causing the socket of his prosthesis, the part that fits over his leg, no longer to fit properly. A poorly fitting prosthesis is very painful and can sometimes lead to blisters, infection, and sometimes new amputations or death. Prosthetic limbs do show wear and most amputees experience some change in the size of their residual limbs and require new sockets from time to time. And a new prosthesis may be required, sometimes every 3 to 5 years.
The private insurance Kerth has with this new job won’t pay for him to get a socket replacement so his leg will fit. How was his employer, a trucking company, supposed to know that $2500 is an unreasonable cap on annual prosthetic coverage? Parity legislation (see cover story) is needed in Missouri so working amputees like Kerth Langeneckert can continue to live with the quality of life they deserve.
Dan Luitjohan: ABC Certified Prosthetist, Family Man

Luitjohan became a Certified and Illinois Licensed Prosthetist in 2001 after completing the prosthetic program at Northwestern Medical School in Chicago and a residency in St. Louis. Dan and his wife Julie live in Edwardsville, IL, and have two young boys. When he isn’t changing his patients’ lives, he can be found chowing down at Fast Eddies in Alton, hiking the bluffs of southern Illinois wine country, and spending time with his family.
Letter to the Editor
My husband, Ivan, is the bravest and most determined man I know. He was in a near-fatal accident almost two years ago. After several surgeries to save his right leg, it was amputated below the knee. A titanium rod replaced his femur above the knee.
Ivan works in construction. His employer saved his job for him for the seven months it took him to rehabilitate himself. He wears a below-the-knee prosthetic.
He worked hard to be able to go back to work and do the same job he has always done — and he succeeded! But now our future is unclear.
In return for premiums paid for health insurance, we consumers expect to be covered for catastrophic injury or illness. Sadly, without legislation to ensure coverage, many private health insurance providers (including our own) have decided to severely limit or completely deny coverage for prosthetic limbs.
Arms and legs are not a luxury! They are a necessity to lead a productive life. I have contacted my legislators to try to push for a bill to ensure prosthetic coverage without unreasonable limitations. I urge others to do the same. Hard-working people deserve the right to be able to work to support themselves and their families.
Teri Burgener, Republic, Mo.
Nationwide, Current Restrictions to Prosthetic Coverage by Private Insurers Include:
- No coverage for repairs or replacements
- Increased co-pays, deductibles and out-of-pocket expenses
- A cap on benefits if a patient receives a prosthesis from another insurance company
- Annual caps of $1000 to $5000
- $2500 to $7000 maximum lifetime cap
- One prosthesis per lifetime
(This information comes from Action Plan for People with Limb Loss, a publication of The Amputee Coalition of America)
Thursday, February 1, 2007
P&O Care Strengthens Orthotic Team and Promotes Richards

P&O Care now has three certified orthotists serving patients on both sides of the river: Dennis Richards, Jennifer Burget, and our newest orthotist, John Lartonoix.
"I'm excited about our growth," Richards said. "It will enable us to serve more patients even faster than we have before. By making more braces in-house, we should dramatically reduce our turn-around time."
Richards began working with P&O Care in 2002 as an orthotic technician. In 2003, he graduated in the top five percent of his class from Northwestern Medical School's Orthotist Program. He then completed a residency and clinical training, which focused on TLSO applications for spinal deformities and impression techniques for all types of scoliosis.
Dennis received his ABC certification for orthotics in 2004, and since then has designed several new systems including a popular new custom knee brace.
Ossur Introduces New Computerized Foot

Until now, a wide variety of prosthetic feet have been designed for various activities from walking around the house to competing in track and field events. Meticulously crafted components such as carbon fiber springs and rubber bumpers make many prosthetic feet similar to human feet in the way they transfer energy, absorb shock, and rotate at the ankle for better stability. But the Proprio Foot can automatically lift the toe just the right amount depending on what a person is doing, something no other foot can do.
Something as simple as sitting in a chair can look very awkward if your toe is always pointing up in to the air, so the Proprio Foot automatically lowers the toe when sitting. Additionally, when some amputees walk, they make a little more effort to keep the toe of their prosthetic foot from dragging the ground. By automatically lifting the toe at just the right moment in a person's stride, the Proprio Foot removes the limp associated with this now-unnecessary thought process.
The Proprio Foot costs between $12,000 and $18,000 and is not yet covered by Medicare, Medicaid, or insurance companies in the United States.
Santa Gets New Leg, Begins Rehab
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention, located in Atlanta, GA, estimates that 84,00 Americans lose their legs each year to complications from diabetes. Diabetes is a disease that weakens the body's ability to regulate blood sugar levels and blood pressure, making it very easy for diabetics like Santa Clause to damage the blood flow to their legs and feet. The same process damages nerves, making it easy for diabetics to injure their feet without ever knowing it.
North Pole, Inc. hopes that Santa's condition creates greater awareness of diabetes and the procedure of amputation around the world. Santa also hopes to increase social understanding for those diabetics who struggle to maintain a healthy diet.
With Santa's mobility temporarily diminished, prosthetists from St. Louis have been making regular trips to the North Pole. Just one month after his surgery, Santa is now doing therapy with his new prosthetic leg. He plans to be right back up to speed by mid year and is eagerly anticipating the Christmas of 2007.
100% Excellent Care!
Osseointegration Offers Promise, Problems

Titanium implants are so promising because the human body almost never rejects one as a foreign object, as sometimes happens with other implants and transplants. As the bone heals, it integrates fully with the titanium rod screwed into it. As a result, a prosthesis can be attached easily without the need to fabricate a custom socket around an amputee's residual limb.
Over the past several years, advances in prosthetic science have enabled prosthetists to make sockets that fit much more comfortably than in the past. Still, a few amputees have a difficult time wearing their prosthesis because of chronic pain or decreased circulation. For them, osseointegration offers a big improvement. However, the procedure has been most successful in younger, healthier people whose bones heal best.
The two greatest barriers to the complete success of osseointegration technology seems to be loosening within the bone cased by the stress of walking, and infection at the site where the implant protrudes through the skin. Efforts to overcome these problems look promising.
Amputees Rehabbing in Skilled Nursing and Out-Patient Facilities
Within a hospital, they benefited from the care of experienced therapists and the camaraderie of other amputees. In the past several months, however, it has become increasingly difficult for new amputees to qualify with Medicare for such extensive rehab care.
While some remain in an acute setting, most amputees are now doing their therapy in skilled nursing and out-patient therapy facilities. This means that instead of being concentrated at a few specialized locations, St. Louis amputees are spread throught the region.
Area rehab organizations are working to get their best therapists into the settings where amputees now find themselves. Prosthetic companies like P&O Care are scrambling to educate more therapists in more facilities. Mroe than ever, amputees and their rehab team need to make sure they get the best care available.
Nothing Slows Down Janetta
Monday, January 1, 2007
We Want Your Stories!

Please lest us know if you have an interesting story about a person, event, or trend that would be interesting to people who wear prosthetic and orthotic devices, or their doctors, nurses, and rehab therapists. Contact Bill McLellan, Blog Administrator.