Find the Best in Lubbock, Texas

H1N1 vaccines available for children 6 months to 5 years of age (KCBD-TV Lubbock)

The City of Lubbock Health Department will provide H1N1 vaccine to the first 200 children ages 6 months to 5 years of age on Tuesday, November 17th from 1:00 -4:00 p.m. in the Health Department auditorium.

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H1N1 vaccines available for children 6 months to 5 years of age (KCBD-TV Lubbock)

Good news for Lubbock’s new housing market (KCBD-TV Lubbock)

The cornerstone of any economy:  New Housing.  New numbers shed light on the health of Lubbock economy.

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Good news for Lubbock’s new housing market (KCBD-TV Lubbock)

Register your special needs with the city

The Lubbock Avalanche-Journal:Local News — Fri Nov 06 12:00:00 UTC 2009 The city of Lubbock Health Department and the Special Needs Alliance have established the Special Needs Registry of Lubbock County to better serve the special needs community in the event of a public health threat. about: Disabled Family Resources Health Local News Lubbock County Texas Lubbock Health Department Social Issues Special needs Special Needs Alliance

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Register your special needs with the city

HIV cases triple in county

The Lubbock Avalanche-Journal:Local News — Tue Oct 27 12:00:00 UTC 2009 Staff at Lubbock's Health Department knew an increase in syphilis cases last year would mean more local HIV infections. about: AIDS Conditions and Diseases Health HIV HIV infections Immune Deficiency Immune Disorders Local News Lubbock Texas Social Issues syphilis

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HIV cases triple in county

Military family keeps focus on sacrifice

The Lubbock Avalanche-Journal:Local News — Sat Oct 24 12:00:00 UTC 2009 Health care and the economy may dominate headlines, but at least one family hopes Lubbock residents don’t forget soldiers who continue to risk their lives in the war on terror. about: Health Health care Health Policy Local News Lubbock Texas Politics

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Military family keeps focus on sacrifice

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center’s Dr. Ron Cook Gives Information On Swine Influenza

Dr. Ron Cook, a family physician in the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center Department of Family Medicine and Health Authority for the City of Lubbock, gives information on symptoms of Swi…

Firstcare Health Plans

FirstCare began as a health maintenance organization (HMO) in 1985. Since then, it has expanded its roster of products to include preferred provider organizations (PPOs) and Health Savings Accounts…

Lubbock Chamber Employer Health Plan Testimonials

Testimonials from member businesses of the Lubbock Chamber Employer Health Plan. The plan provides members of the 5-Star Accredited Lubbock Chamber of Commerce with affordable, quality health care …

As nation discusses health care, Texas doctor shortage expected to worsen : Corrie MacLaggan

To understand why Harvey Laas, a rancher with no medical training, runs a health clinic out of a spotless 40-foot truck, it helps to know that his family has worked to bring doctors to the area since shortly after arriving in Waller County in 1896.

Today, the family’s work is not done. The growing county west of Houston, where Laas and a team of nurses run a community clinic on wheels, has the fewest primary care doctors per capita of any Texas county where a doctor is practicing. There was one doctor for every 14,000 residents as of the state’s last count in 2008.

“It is, I guess, the family disease,” Laas, 52, said of his work to better the community where he expects to spend the rest of his life.

As talk on national health care reform centers on providing insurance for everyone, Texas and the nation are already struggling with a shortage of primary care doctors that is expected to keep growing. In Texas, 114 of the 254 counties have been designated by the federal government as primary-care shortage areas. Some clinics spend months trying to lure doctors, and some patients drive one or two counties away for even the most routine health care.

Tom Banning, CEO of the Texas Academy of Family Physicians, said that the number of primary-care doctors the state produces hasn’t kept pace with its birth rate and the influx of residents from other states. Nationally, there are 81 primary-care doctors for every 100,000 people; in Texas, the average is 68.

“There aren’t enough doctors currently practicing in Texas to care for the folks we have, much less the uninsured,” Banning said. Texas has the nation’s highest rate of uninsured ? one in four.

And the problem is expected to get worse, as doctors age and retire and medical students continue to choose specialties that pay more than family medicine or internal medicine.

Proposed national health care reforms would change how Medicare ? and therefore private insurers ? pays doctors, increasing payments to those who provide primary care. Banning said that would encourage medical students to choose primary care, which could help alleviate the shortage.

This year, Texas lawmakers tried to address the doctor shortage by enhancing the state’s medical school loan repayment program to encourage doctors to practice in underserved areas.The changes increase the amount of money available to each doctor from $45,000 over five years to $160,000 over four years.And money from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is going toward expanding a similar federal program that has far more applicants than spots.

Texas’ 2003 reforms limiting medical liability have brought a significant number of primary care doctors to Texas, but getting them to rural areas remains a problem, said Jon Opelt, executive director for Texas Alliance for Patient Access.

There are 27 Texas counties that have no doctor at all, including Motley County in the Panhandle. In Matador, residents packed a town hall meeting on health care last fall. They weren’t talking about national health care reform efforts, but about how to cope with the loss of the physicians assistant at the town’s only clinic.

The doctor shortage also extends to some urban areas. In Pasadena, just outside of Houston, one clinic searched for a primary care physician for eight months before finding a doctor willing to practice alone in the clinic.

Filling the need

Waller County has been trying to lure doctors since at least the early 1900s, when Laas’ great-grandfather wrote to Tulane University medical school and what is now the University of Texas Medical Branch, offering a place to live if a doctor would come to the county. A Dr. Stewart accepted the offer, and made such an impression that Laas’s father ? and, later, Laas and his son ? got the middle name Stewart.

Later, Laas’ great-grandfather joined other residents in paying for the medical school education of a local man who later returned to practice in the county.

In 1985, Waller County’s only hospital closed, which has hurt the county’s ability to attract doctors, Laas said.

Laas, a father of two who is married to a nurse, started his clinic in December 1993. The clinic, which provides care to both insured and uninsured patients, is now part of the Fort Bend Family Health Center Inc.

When he isn’t managing his cow-calf operation, Laas runs the mobile clinic, which doesn’t currently travel to different locations. Some days, he’s the setup man ? moving traffic cones, folding down the steps and hooking up the truck to electricity and the Internet (for electronic medical records) at the United Way building.

Inside, there are two examining rooms.

“This is our baby,” Laas said. “It’s obviously cramped, but we can see more than 20 patients a day. We can do everything here you can do at a doctor’s office.”

But there are no doctors. On a recent afternoon, family nurse practitioner Mary Ann Neeley and licensed vocational nurse Olivia Morales took care of patients, many of whom had appointments for back-to-school immunizations. If necessary, Neeley can refer patients to doctors in Richmond, 25 miles away. But it’s easier to find a doctor’s office to send people with insurance, Laas said.

“People who suffer most in this county are the uninsured working poor,” Laas said.

Patient Teresa Villanueva, 60, came to the clinic because of neck pain. Her family’s income comes from her husband’s job as a maintenance worker at a home for people with disabilities, and the couple does not have health insurance, she said. Villanueva said she came to the clinic from her home 30 minutes away in Bellville, bypassing a pricier clinic in Sealy. The Brookshire clinic charges on a sliding scale according to income, and Villanueva pays $40 for a visit.

At night, a clinic staffer parks the truck at the safest place possible: the nearby police station. Laas hopes to build a freestanding clinic near the United Way building in Brookshire.

Searching far and wide

During the eight months Pasadena Health Center was searching for a doctor, there was one thing that kept scaring off potential applicants.

If they took the job, they’d be the clinic’s only physician. Nobody would be around to take over if they were sick or on vacation.

“They’d run out the door as fast as they came in,” Chief Executive Officer John Sweitzer said.

It’s a struggle that the city just southeast of Houston shares with rural clinics in the Texas Panhandle and in border communities. The Pasadena clinic, which is on the bottom floor of a brown office building, has the added challenge of going after some of the same doctors being recruited by Houston’s gleaming, world-class medical facilities less than 20 miles away.

After interviewing 15 people, Sweitzer last year hired Dr. Suchmor Thomas, who came to Pasadena from Lone Star Family Health Center in Conroe.

Like a quarter of Texas doctors, Thomas graduated from a foreign medical school ? in his case, T.D. Medical College in Kerala, India. In 2008, 37.9 percent of first-year participants in residency programs that could lead to primary care were graduates of foreign medical schools, according to the American Academy of Family Physicians.

Thomas said he likes working at the clinic because its patients often have nowhere else to go. But he knows that he has to come to work unless he’s really sick.

José Camacho, executive director of the Texas Association of Community Healthcare Centers, said that’s a dilemma common around the state, especially rural areas where doctors might be the only physician in a 40-mile radius.

“If you’re the only doctor to the area, if you want to play golf, who replaces you?” asked Camacho, whose member clinics serve the uninsured and underserved. “Not that there’s golf courses.”

Dr. John Zerwas, a Republican state representative from Richmond, said that although pockets of urban areas might have fewer doctors, that might not signify a shortage.

“If you look at how close they are to Houston, you have to ask yourself: ‘Is that region really underserved?’ ” said Zerwas, who is an anesthesiologist.

But Banning said that even if residents of an underserved area are getting care somewhere, that doesn’t mean it’s the right care at the right time and price.

“Why shouldn’t they have a physician in their community to care for them?” Banning asked.

Feeling the loss

Motley County, which doesn’t have a Dairy Queen, also doesn’t have any doctors practicing.

It’s a farming and ranching county of about 1,300 people located a 90-minute drive northeast of Lubbock. Until last year, residents could visit Motley County Clinic, which is on Main Street in Matador and was staffed by a physician assistant. The clinic hasn’t operated since last year, when the physician assistant left for a job in a neighboring county.

The clinic was run by Regence Health Network, which has several Panhandle clinics. Regence couldn’t find another medical provider to go to rural Matador, said Cynthia Wetzel, Regence’s chief nursing officer.

“It’s an awesome place,” Wetzel said. “It’s got rolling hills, neat little crevice-looking canyon things and mesquite trees. It’s definitely a cowboy setting.”

But, she said, “a lot of people aren’t looking to live where there’s no movie theaters, a limited number of churches, no choices in schools.”

Motley County Judge Ed D. Smith said the loss of the clinic “had a terrible impact on us.”

Last September, Regence held a town hall meeting in Matador on the future of the clinic.

The meeting was to be held at the library annex, but so many people showed up that it was moved to a Baptist church, Smith said.

“We all moved over there and pretty well filled the place up,” Smith said. “It was a very highly emotional, angry type of situation.”

Regence considered offering telemedicine ? consultations by phone and video conferencing ? but ultimately pulled out of the county completely, Wetzel said.

The county is looking at options for the clinic’s future. Meanwhile, residents such as Dianne Washington and her soon-to-be 89-year-old mother, Jo Scott, seek health care in places like Crosbyton (about 45 miles by car from Matador), Paducah (30 miles) and Plainview (60 miles).

“Now it’s a major half-day production,” Washington said. “You don’t want your 89-year-old mother driving to Plainview to have her blood checked by herself.”

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Best Chiropractors in Lubbock

If you are looking for a back adjustment or possibly whiplash rehab, visiting a skilled chiropractor can help relieve your pain and assist with long term prevention.  Below are the ten best chiropractors in Lubbock:

Verified Listings:

Helton Chiropractic
806-589-1981
5224 75th St #B
Lubbock, TX 79424

Business Information: Dr. Helton is a native west Texan and has been in practice for over 10 years. He’s treated patients as young as 9 days old to patients older than 90 years old. Dr. Helton is Lubbock’s only doctor certified in Non-Surgical Disc Decompression. At Helton Chiropractic, we not only have the most advanced equipment but also the most advanced training available. Dr. Helton uses multiple techniques, disc decompression, cold laser therapy, active therapeutic rehab, and whole body vibration training in order to give his patients a greater chance of success in achieving health.

Southwest Chiropractic Center
806-589-0851
4417 71st Street, Suite 42
Lubbock, TX 79424

Business Information: With many years of biomechanical correction, strength, and nutritional training and education under our belt we have treated many patients with conditions ranging from whiplash to scoliosis to herniated discs. We have had stunning success with these conditions and many others. Patients seeking treatment at Southwest Chiropractic Center are assured of receiving only the finest quality care, because we have a genuine concern for your well-being and long-term health.

At The Southwest Chiropractic Center we educate our patients on how the body works, and its ability to heal. Read our patients’ testimonials to hear how we help to eliminate pain and restore quality of life.

Please refer to our technology page for further information.

Our clinic recognizes this new technology can help many patients who have had little success with other conservative treatment. Spinal Decompression has been the most important medical advance in the non-surgical, non-invasive treatment of back pain in the past 10 years. This FDA cleared Spinal Decompression technology is presently being utilized by neurologists, orthopedic surgeons, chiropractic physicians, family physicians, pain specialists, and physical therapists across the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia.

We now can help patients that prior to Spinal Decompression would have had to live in pain for the rest of their lives. They come to us when other treatments have failed to give them relief.

We look forward to being of help to you!

1. Helton Chiropractors

806-797-4000
5224 75th Street
Lubbock, TX 79424

2. Global Health Chiropractic

806-722-3533
8004 Abbeville Ave
Lubbock, TX 79424

3. Boston Chiropractic & Wellness Center

806-762-2334
2630 26th Street
Lubbock, TX 79410

4. All Family Chiropractic & Injury Clinic

806-785-7246
4505 82nd St # 9
Lubbock, TX 79424

5. Southwest Chiropractic Center

806-785-2000
5805 64th St
Lubbock, TX 79424

6. Coolbaugh Chiropractic

806-792-4077
2318 50th St
Lubbock, TX 79412

7. Bruce G Adams, DC

806-794-4009
5147 69th St # A
Lubbock, TX 79424

8. Alternative Health Alliance

806-792-4041
3335 70th St # A
Lubbock, TX 79413

9. 34th St Chiropractic

806-763-1479
1807 34th St
Lubbock, TX 79411

10. Lubbock Chiropractic – Wellness

806-794-6907
5137 69th St # F
Lubbock, TX 79424

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