Uncategorized

GSK honors Alliance and 8 other area nonprofits through IMPACT Awards

GlaxoSmithKline's London, Philadelphia & Triangle Leadership were all on hand to honor the recipients of the Triangle region's first annual GSK IMPACT Awards.  Alliance was one of 9 area nonprofits awarded a $40,000 check in recognition of the award.  Other recipients included: Wake Teen Center, Urban Ministries of Wake County, and 6 other nonprofits who do great work in the are of health care for those disadvantaged populations in the Triangle.

To read more on this monentous event, click on the following link:

GSK IMPACT AWARDS

Have you finished your end of year giving? We have your solutions...

With the Alliance Holiday Giving Program, now giving a gift of health can be easy and meaningful. With Alliance's Holiday Giving Form

http://www.alliancemedicalministry.org/our-story/newsletters.asp

You can designate a monetary gift (or gifts) in honor or memory of a loved one or business associate.  Giving the gift of health in this extrodinary time of need is one of the most significant and heartfelt gestures one can make for this Holiday season.

Download the form, fill out and send attention to: Loree Idol at: Alliance Medical Ministry, 101 Donald Ross Drive, Raleigh, NC 27610.  We will send out seasonal cards recognizing those who you designated.

AMM Featured in Raleigh Downtowner Magazine

Great publicity for Alliance Medical!  Give the gift of health this holiday season.  Go to our website and download the holiday giving program...give a gift in honor or memory of someone this holiday season.  With your help more Wake County families can look forward to a healthy and happy 2010. http://raleighdowntowner.com/RaleighDowntowner-Vol5-Iss11.pdf

http://raleighdowntowner.com/RaleighDowntowner-Vol5-Iss11.pdf

We Are Thankful For You

The leadership of Alliance Medical Ministry want to say a special thank you to our beloved volunteers, board members and generous supporters during this special time of year.  Without you all, Alliance would not have the wonderful opportunity to serve the thousands of uninsured individuals in our community.  We wish everybody a safe, healthy and proserous Thanksgiving Holiday.

UNC Experts will Contribute to Mammography Screening Debate

November 18, 2009 Chapel Hill, NC - The US Preventive Services Task Force's (USPSTF) recommendations regarding breast cancer screening have touched off a heated national debate.  Lost in this tumult is one critical recommendation that everyone agrees upon:  average risk women aged 50-74 years old should get regular breast cancer screening with mammography.  In addition, women aged 40-49 years who are at higher than average risk (due to genetic factors, family history or medical history) should continue to get regular screening.  No matter where this breast cancer screening discussion takes us, we should not lose sight of this.

Of course, this doesn’t help women aged 40-49 years who are caught in the middle of this evidence cross-fire.  One expert group says this, another says that.  What will my insurance company pay for? What should I do?

Clinicians are also caught in the middle.  Where do I stand? Which experts do I believe?  What should I tell my patients and their families when they ask?

The USPSTF, the American Cancer Society, and other expert groups have put forth recommendations they believe are based on a comprehensive and fair review of the existing evidence. They have reached different conclusions. A national debate has begun and it seems that everyone is being asked to take sides. Rather than rush to judgment, what's needed is a careful airing out of the issues and evidence. UNC, with experts like Dr. Etta Pisano (a radiologist who led development of digital mammography), Dr. Russell Harris (an expert on cancer screening), Dr. Michael Pignone (an expert in patient/physician decision-making), and an outstanding breast cancer clinical team (led by Dr. Lisa Carey, Dr. David Ollila, and Dr. Larry Marks) has the expertise and experience to help mold this debate.

In the meantime, what do we do? Along with expert consensus, it seems that clarity has evaporated. But, has it? We should ask ourselves whether the breast cancer screening landscape changed so much as to be totally unrecognizable. The answer is "no."

The USPSTF's new recommendation is against routine screening, not screening altogether. They recommend that women aged 40-49 years and their physicians should decide when screening should start after taking into account how each individual feels about the benefits and harms of screening. For women in this age group and for those who support the USPSTF, breast cancer screening mammography remains an important option -- just not a hard and fast standard.

The fear, of course, is that younger women will now hear a mixed message and decide against mammography -- not only in their 40's but in their 50's and beyond. There is also worry that third party payers may now use this recommendation as an excuse for not paying for this screening test. These are important worries that must be addressed as we move forward.

For now, until we have fully examined and weighed the USPSTF's challenge to the status quo, the prudent action seems to be to continue to look to current guidelines. Whatever happens, women aged 50-74 should continue to get regular breast cancer screening and breast cancer screening should continue to be a choice for women aged 40-49.

Whatever happens, UNC will have the expertise and experience to help.

 

Shelley Earp, MD Director

Michael O’Malley, PhD Associate Director

Check out North Hills THIS WEEK while supporting AMM

Supporters and Friends,   Enjoy dinner out with friends or family and save on early holiday shopping, all while also helping Alliance Medical Ministry. This week, a few North Hills merchants are offering shopping/dining discounts or a percentage of sales back to AMM for shoppers/diners who present the attached flyer at the time of purchase.  The shopping days are Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of this week – November 17, 18 and 19.  See the attached flyer for more specific details.   This is a great opportunity to get into the holiday spirit and help our neighbors in need.  Please forward the flyer to your friends so they can save and Alliance can help the working uninsured.

Check out specials in support of Alliance

GlaxoSmithKline Announces their 2009 IMPACT Award Winners. Congratulations to Alliance!

Read the News & Observer article below detailing all those Triangle area nonprofits who will receive the 2009 GSK IMPACT Awards!

posted on Friday, Nov. 06, 2009, News & Observer

$40,000 grants given to nonprofits working on health care

 

Nine local nonprofit organizations have each been awarded $40,000 GlaxoSmithKline IMPACT grants to further their work providing access to health care in the Triangle.The first-time awards are a partnership between the pharmaceutical giant and the Triangle Community Foundation, which provides grants to nonprofits.Groups receiving the grants are: Alliance Medical Ministry Inc.; The Alliance of AIDS Services-Carolina; Diabetes Management Solutions; Family Violence and Rape Crisis Services Inc.; Lucy Daniels Center for Early Childhood; National Society to Prevent Blindness-North Carolina Affiliate; Threshold Inc.; Urban Ministries of Wake County Inc.; and Wake Teen Medical Services Inc.
// "These organizations are on the front lines as change agents, working to build stronger and healthier communities," Mary Linda Andrews, GlaxoSmithKline director of community partnerships, said in a prepared statement.

GlaxoSmithKline has one of its two U.S. headquarters in Research Triangle Park, where the company also has research and development facilities focused on metabolic and viral diseases. The company employs about 5,600 people in the Triangle.