Sunday, July 24, 2011
State health commissioner retiring after seven years in the job, fighting for public health and expanding its role
By Tara Kaprowy
Kentucky Health News
After dealing with the aftermath of 9/11, an anthrax scare, H1N1 flu, the worst ice storm in Kentucky's history and a series of budget cuts, it's been a busy decade for Dr. William Hacker at the state health department. But after 10 years at the agency, seven as its boss, Hacker will retire at the end of the month.
"Dr. William Hacker has been an exemplary leader for public health and has led by example with his professional and genteel leadership style," said Linda Sims, director of the Lincoln Trail District Health Department and president of the Kentucky Health Department Association. "Dr. Hacker has been instrumental in helping local health departments during budgetary challenges with guidance and support. The development of new services and screenings for children have increased under his efforts that will make a difference for many years to come."
Kentucky Health News
After dealing with the aftermath of 9/11, an anthrax scare, H1N1 flu, the worst ice storm in Kentucky's history and a series of budget cuts, it's been a busy decade for Dr. William Hacker at the state health department. But after 10 years at the agency, seven as its boss, Hacker will retire at the end of the month.
He is getting great reviews for his work as commissioner, which has included expanding the role of public health beyond its traditional roles, including disaster response and prevention.
"Dr. Hacker has always provided quality leadership," said Scott Lockard, president of the Kentucky Public Health Association. "He has been a great advocate for public health. He has been well respected both in state and on the national level and he will be deeply missed."
Hacker, a native of Manchester, joined the department in February 2001 to work in the maternal and child health division. He'd practiced as a pediatrician in Corbin for 18 years and subsequently spent six years with Appalachian Regional Health Care.
Just eight months after he came on board at the health department, his role expanded drastically. "On 9/11, we were asked how many burn beds we had available in Kentucky because they felt they would be flying burn victims to us," he said. "We had never had funding to establish the ability to actually track the beds available. Public health did not have a role to play in critical health care. But they called on public health that day."
Three weeks later, suspicious white powder started appearing in the mail, and public health offices nationwide were called again. Though anthrax spores were not found in Kentucky, envelopes containing white powder were, and they needed to be tested by public-health officials.
Dr. Rice Leach, then the commissioner, asked Hacker to establish the Public Health Preparedness Branch of the Division of Epidemiology and Health Planning, marking a major shift for the department. Traditionally, public health had not been involved in incident management, which occurs when first responders are sent in to handle a crisis. "We were the backup to deal with consequence management," Hacker said. "But when you're dealing with bioterrorism, public health needs to step in. There was a lot of learning that went on between law enforcement, emergency medical services and public health. That was a cultural shift. We were forced through the natural evolution of events to step up to the plate."
In 2004, following Leach's retirement, Republican Gov. Ernie Fletcher named Hacker commissioner. He established the Kentucky Outreach and Information Network, which expanded the department's ability to reach vulnerable populations like senior citizens and people with language, hearing or motor difficulties. Partnerships are still in place with other state agencies, Family Resource Youth Service Centers, literacy programs and faith-based organizations such as the Christian Appalachian Project. "We'd say, 'Here's the message we need to get out, whether we were talking about a hot weather advisory or how long is it safe to eat food out of your refrigerator if your electricity is out," he said.
In 2005, Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans, prompting several thousand people to come to Kentucky. "We had to figure out how to take care of these people without any resources and many times without any family connections," Hacker said. Hurricanes Gustav and Ike followed, presenting similar challenges.
The next major disaster was the 2009 ice storm. The role of public health was to provide shelter, which Hacker called "a major challenge." But emergency stockpiles obtained by the Public Health Preparedness Branch proved useful. "We use cots, satellite radios and generators that were supposed to be used for an inflatable hospital," he said. "That provided power in Elizabethtown."
Emergency stockpiles were also tapped for items like face masks in 2009-10, when people started getting sick with H1N1. "We responded efficiently because of the training we had been planning for," Hacker said. In 2006, department officials prepared extensively for a bird flu "that is still smoldering," Hacker said, but has never reached the ability to spread quickly from person to person.
In the middle of all this, the state changed governors, but not health commissioners. Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear, who took office in December 2007, appointed a new secretary of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, but showed confidence in Hacker by keeping him as commissioner of the cabinet's Department of Public Health. "I was prepared for Gov. Beshear to select someone else, but I was very pleased when he gave me the opportunity to continue to serve," Hacker said. Apart from Leach and Dr. Carlos Hernandez, Hacker has served one of the longest terms of any commissioner in the past 40 years.
Beshear told Kentucky Health News in July 2011, "Dr. Hacker’s commitment to public health and education is unassailable, and he provided great leadership and vision for our Department of Public Health. Dr. Hacker built teams, mentored, encouraged and connected organizations and people to achieve better outcomes for Kentuckians’ health. His success is largely driven by his belief in inclusion -- that bringing together many organizations can improve health in Kentucky. Kentucky will miss him."
Beshear's retention of Hacker greatly pleased Al Smith, who had just concluded 33 years as producer and founding host of "Comment on Kentucky" on KET. A former newspaper publisher in London and Western Kentucky, Smith helped Hacker campaign for a comprehensive hospital to serve Corbin and London. "He was ahead of his time, as usual, and we lost the political game," Smith recalled. "Fortunately, his great gifts have been appreciated by the state and other health providers who have kept him in leadership for many years. I hope there will be other opportunities for his influence and service at another time. . . . In or out of public service, Dr. Bill Hacker is a leader who always seeks the best for Kentucky."
That responsiveness, however, has a lot to do with funding, which Hacker said is his biggest worry, because public health tends to be invisible. "If you ask, most people think public health just takes care of poor people. We, in fact, take care of all forms of people. It's just we do our jobs well and so it's invisible to those folks unless they need a public health service."
Already, Hacker has dealt with several rounds of budget cuts and is worried that "political leaders and the public don't really understand the impact of what the future may look like" with a less well funded public health system. "It could mean slower response to diseases, slower response to disasters, less cervical cancer screening, less prenatal care. There's a whole host of services being provided but they cost money," he said.
Still, though it's not without concern for the future of the department, Hacker, 64, said it's time to head home. He will continue to live in Lexington. "My wife has some health problems and for 44 years she's made sacrifices to support my career. I think the time has come to reverse the equation," he said. "My decision to leave was a difficult one because I love the mission of public health. But it became clear to me that this was the right time to transition from employment to retirement. I will continue to support the mission of public health in any way I can contribute."
Dr. Steve Davis, longtime deputy commissioner of the department, will take over as interim commissioner Aug. 1. He called Hacker "a good doc and a good man. Simply put, we have been blessed to have him for many years."
Louisville hospital merger could thwart some patients' final wishes
More concerns are being raised about the merger that would put a Catholic hospital group in charge of the University of Louisville's hospital. First, it was the prospect that women getting Caesarean sections would not be able to get their tubes tied at the same time. Now, "A growing chorus of protest from local residents, doctors and others has erupted over the fact that Catholic doctrine could override patients' end-of-life wishes," Laura Ungar and Patrick Howington report for The Courier-Journal.
"While many wealthier patients could simply choose a different hospital, indigent patients have little choice but University Hospital for treatment, including end-of-life care," the reporters note. "That has left some worried about how end-of-life decisions will be affected if living wills and decisions to remove a feeding tube, for example, will not be honored if they are 'contrary to Catholic teaching'."
Denver-based Catholic Health Initiatives told the newspaper that advance directives such as living wills would be honored “in the vast majority of cases” but “There may be the rare situation, such as a patient in a persistent vegetative state who is not in the dying process, when what the patient is requesting through his or her advance directive is not consistent with the moral teaching of the Church. In those few cases, a Catholic health care facility would not be able to comply, and with the family's guidance, the patient would be transferred to another facility, or to their home under hospice and family care.” (Read more)
UK center probes the science of muscles and exercise
Exercise is good for you. But it's not that simple. "Doctors and scientists have a lot of questions about why exercise is so beneficial, how muscles work and the role muscle strength plays in overall health," columnist Tom Eblen writes on the front page of today's Lexington Herald-Leader, and reports that some of those questions are being addressed by the University of Kentucky Center for Muscle Biology, which was created three years ago. "With outside grants of more than $12 million, center researchers are looking at everything from injury prevention in young athletes to rehabilitation for elderly stroke patients," he writes.
"Physical activity and muscle strength seem to contribute to everything from better memory to disease prevention. For example, even moderate exercise can help Type 2 diabetes, which has become epidemic among overweight Kentuckians. Muscles store most of the body's insulin." The center's director, Karyn Karyn Esser, told Eblen, "When you exercise and make muscles work, it creates a separate path for absorbing glucose." (Eblen photo: Caitlyn Kerins demonstrated equipment for measuring muscle control as faculty member Patrick McKeon watched.)
Two researchers are studying how to strengthen diaphragm muscles, which are essential in breathing, "to help patients get off ventilators. It is a huge problem: about 60,000 Americans are on ventilators at any given time, and it costs billions of dollars to care for them," Eblen writes. "The longer most people are on a ventilator, the more likely they are to die." And "muscle weakness is the main culprit in about 70 percent of ventilator patients." Other researchers are investigating why lifting weights can improve memory in the elderly, why certain patients lose muscle strength soon after being hospitalized, how injuries caused by repetitive motion can be avoided, and exactly how massage and ice help repair and strengthen muscles.
Eblen, who took up bicycling at 35 to lose weight and is still an enthusiast in his mid-50s, is writing a lot lately about exercise in response to Lexington's designation by Men's Health magazine as the nation's most sedentary city. And the center's Esther Dupont-Versteegden is even researching inactivity: "We know that people feel better when they exercise regularly, but why is that?" she asked. "What is inactivity doing to people?" (Read more)
SUNDAY SPECIAL - Flaviana Matata
Flaviana Matata attends the Hublot and African Wildlife Foundation Auction Dinner at American Museum of Natural History - African Mammals Room in New York City.
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