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Wellness Expo caters to Menomonee Valley workers

Wellness Expo caters to Menomonee Valley workers

Recently, the Menomonee Valley Workplace Wellness Committee hosted the “2012 Wellness Expo,” at Potawatomi Bingo Casino.

Employers and Menomonee Valley workers engaged in a variety of free wellness-related demonstrations at the “2012 Wellness Expo,” at Potawatomi Bingo Casino..... Read More

Support groups improve quality of life for black breast cancer patients

Support groups improve quality of life for black breast cancer patients

Bonnie Anderson says surviving breast cancer is about having hope. The now 60-year-old Milwaukee native first discovered the cancerous lump in 1993 in her right breast. She was terrified and thought she was going to die.

Cynthia Hooker, 49, who works at Northwestern Mutual, found what she thought was a cyst in her right breast in 2007. It turned out to be two cancerous lumps, even though her last breast exam was just three months earlier.

Both cancer survivors, Anderson and Hooker say the social, emotional and spiritual support that they received from peer mentors and support groups contributed to their recovery.

Anderson attended a monthly African American support group at Aurora Sinai Medical Center, and then became..... Read More

Ozaukee, Waukesha among Wisconsin’s healthiest counties

MADISON — Ozaukee and Waukesha County residents are among the healthiest in WIsconsin according to a new study released by the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Milwaukee County residents are among the least healthy.

Gilda’s Club takes cancer support to the neighborhoods

Gilda’s Club takes cancer support to the neighborhoods

When Oakland Avenue in Shorewood turned into a river during the flood of July 2010, water poured into the building that housed Gilda’s Club of Southeastern Wisconsin and caused extensive damage. But the cancer support organization turned the natural disaster into an opportunity.

“One of the things that I always noticed about Milwaukee is that people like to stay in their neighborhoods, and we heard a lot of people say, ‘Oh, you’re too far away, you’re all the way in Shorewood,’” said Susan Mingesz, clinical program director at Gilda’s Club of Southeastern Wisconsin.

“We understand that when people have cancer it’s very hard to travel across town, possibly in bad weather, possibly when your feet may be slightly numb from chemotherapy,” Mingesz said. “There were several of us who really felt it was too bad we couldn’t be in more communities.”

When the directors of the Jewish Community Center in Whitefish Bay and Agape Community Center in Milwaukee’s Thurston Woods neighborhood offered space in their buildings, Gilda’s Club was happy to accept.

Initially, Gilda’s Club opened a “living room” at the JCC because it is closest to its former clubhouse. About a year ago, it began to offer programs at Agape Community Center.

The activities, wellness groups and information sessions Gilda’s Club offers to people with cancer and their families did not attract many people at Agape in its first year there.

“I think it’s hard for people who often can be very busy, who are sick with cancer and aren’t quite sure why they should take the time to come to a community center,” said Mingesz.

Getting support is important, she said, because cancer impacts lives in so many ways. The disease and its treatment often cause trauma to the body that affects a person’s body image, position in the family, financial situation, social life and sense of control.

Gilda’s Club offers help through support groups, workshops, healthy lifestyle information and activities, lectures and a resource library, Mingesz explained. The organization also offers social and cultural activities such as a Korean drumming workshop held recently at the Jewish Community Center site.

“Gilda’s Club [at Agape] is really in it for the long haul, even though to this point we haven’t had people come. We want people in the community to know that we aren’t going to abandon them,” Mingesz said.

She plans to work with local churches and others in the neighborhood to get the word out that Gilda’s Club is at the Agape Community Center to help people with cancer. A new schedule of programs will be offered there, beginning in March.

Until the flood, the local Gilda’s Club, like all Gilda’s Clubs in the U.S., held most of its programs at centralized “clubhouses.” Since it lacked the funds to repair the building, Gilda’s Club asked its parent organization for permission to give up the clubhouse and pilot a program at various locations in the community.

The parent organization granted permission, and Southeastern Wisconsin became the first Gilda’s Club to move all of its activities into other community facilities.

It is now also offering Spanish language cancer support in Waukesha at the Hispanic Community Resource Center, a department of ProHealth Care as well as programs at other locations throughout the area.

For more information about Gilda’s Club at the Agape Community Center, contact Justine at 414-962-8201 x102 or jlucore@gildasclubsewi.org.

Lindsay Heights health fair targets sexual health and tobacco risk

Lindsay Heights health fair targets sexual health and tobacco risk

Heather Ronaldson, Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service

With trophies in hand, participants of the youth basketball tournament at North Division High School, 1011 W. Center St., trickle into the hallways. They are surrounded by cheerful fans, and posters—reading, “What you need to know about Diabetes,” “Tobacco Prevention,” “No Condom, No Way.” Everyone is given a plastic bag with free goodies, and encouraged to participate in the Lindsay Heights “2K12 Connecting Communities” event going on in the high school hallway... Read More

Milwaukee Board of School Directors Honors Wisconsin Vision and Prevent Blindness Wisconsin

Milwaukee Board of School Directors Honors Wisconsin Vision and Prevent Blindness Wisconsin

The Milwaukee Board of School Directors will honor New Berlin based Wisconsin Vision and Prevent Blindness Wisconsin with Excellence in Education Awards at the Board’s meeting tonight. The optical company and non-profit organization recently partnered on a program that provided free vision screenings to more than 500 students at Clarke Street School and Gwen T. Jackson Early Childhood and Elementary School. More than 100 of those children were then provided with free follow-up care including eyeglasses for many of them.

The Excellence in Education Award recognizes an outstanding school, student, staff member, parent, or community member for a display of excellence, achievement, and innovation that may serve as an example to our school district and the entire Milwaukee community.

Patrons, providers welcome healthier meals at Agape Community Center

Community meal providers and diners are happy about the healthier dinners that the Agape Community Center recently started to offer.

The center has taken the lead in upgrading the nutritional value of community meals by asking its 19 volunteer providers to substitute lower fat meats, such as turkey for beef, and adding more whole grains and fresh vegetables and fruits. Agape also asked providers to eliminate fat- and sugar-laden desserts.

Churches, synagogues and businesses are among the groups who buy, cook and serve dinners at the center on a rotating schedule.

These changes are the most recent in a series of adjustments the center has made over the last several years to promote healthy eating and combat the national obesity epidemic. Agape’s surveys of meal recipients have shown a desire for healthier food, according to the center’s executive director, Ann Bachrach.