Florida Helping Hands, LLC

Florida Helping Hands, LLC Florida Helping Hands, LLC provides quality and compassionate home health care, personal care, companionship, and more.

We provide RN's, LPN's, CNA's, and HHA's for people of all ages. Please visit our informative website at: www.floridahelpinghands.com We also have informative public health articles and tips at: https://floridahelpinghands.com/blogs/

06/18/2023

Happy Father's Day from Florida Helping Hands!

“for jina & neda & jila,” by Sofia Neda McDaniel, for the “Woman. Life. Freedom.” movement around the world.This poem is...
03/09/2023

“for jina & neda & jila,” by Sofia Neda McDaniel, for the “Woman. Life. Freedom.” movement around the world.

This poem is not only a reflection on the protests in Iran and the injustice inflicted upon Mahsa Jina Amini, but is also a reflection on her own upbringing and family, especially her grandmother.

“Growing up, my grandmother, Jila, was my best friend. My grandmother had a giving heart and a larger than life personality. (I often tell the story of when I was first born and my grandmother had a dream that I was a lawyer named Neda so she coerced my parents to change my middle name in the hospital. She refused to take ‘no’ for an answer!)

As a child, I struggled balancing my different identities and Muslim faith while growing up in America. However, my grandmother proved to be a constant support in my life and she was proudly Iranian (to say the very least). My grandmother only had a high school education and married young, but she taught me so many valuable lessons about femininity, life, and freedom. She emphasized the importance of getting an education, speaking your mind, and being proud of your roots. She often lamented about the circumstances in Iran and wished daily ‘for Iran to be free.’ That's the heart of what I wanted to convey in my poem—that many generations of Iranian women have been vying for change and have been fighting the good fight. If my grandmother was alive today, I think she would be proud of the women fighting across the world for change and also saddened that Iran is still not free. I tried to weave in this latter thought when I alluded to the unfortunate number of women fighting and ultimately dying for this cause. Like many, I pray for a free Iran and one where ‘woman, life, freedom’ is a part of the country's mission instead of a battlecry against it.”

You can find Sofia's poetry book Lovebug at: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B085RQNMRB?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details and Queen of the Monarchs at: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08W7JTYPC?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details

Happy Valentine's Day!
02/14/2023

Happy Valentine's Day!

Thousands In Germany Thought They Had Their Vaccine. It May Have Been Saline InsteadA nurse in northern Germany is suspe...
10/21/2021

Thousands In Germany Thought They Had Their Vaccine. It May Have Been Saline Instead

A nurse in northern Germany is suspected of having duped thousands of people into receiving a shot of saline rather than a COVID-19 vaccine.

Authorities say that a Red Cross nurse working at a vaccination site in Friesland is believed to have given out the fake shot to residents during March and April, Reuters reported. Around 8,600 people could have received the saline solution instead of the vaccine, Sven Ambrosy, a district administrator of Friesland, said on Facebook.

“I’m totally shocked by the incident,” Ambrosy said. “The district of Friesland will do everything possible to ensure that the affected people receive their vaccination protection as soon as possible.”

The saline solution is not dangerous, but officials are urging anyone who got vaccinated at the Roffhausen Vaccination Center during that period to get vaccinated again. They are contacting by phone or email those who may have received a fake vaccine, and a dedicated information phone line has also been established, officials wrote on Facebook.

Health officials in Lower Saxony said that the nurse in question had access to the vaccines because she was “responsible for the preparation of vaccines and the preparation of syringes during her working hours in the vaccination center,” CNN reported.

It is unclear if there have been any arrests or charges filed related to the case, according to Reuters. The nurse has not been named publicly, and the possible motivation has not been stated; however, the person in question did reportedly have social media posts expressing skepticism about the COVID-19 vaccines.

A similar scandal unfolded in India last month. Thousands paid to receive the COVID-19 vaccine at a “vaccination camp” but instead were given shots of saline solution. Authorities arrested 14 people, alleging they gave around 4,000 people fake or expired vaccines and collected thousands of dollars in the process.

Call us at 941-806-5727 for a completely FREE no-obligation evaluation and assessment by a highly experienced, qualified and trained RN in your home.

Please read our informative articles at: https://floridahelpinghands.com/blogs/
Please read about our many services at:
https://floridahelpinghands.com/

We are always looking for hiring top quality nurses and caregivers. Call us at: 941-806-5727 today! E-mail us your resume to: jobs@floridahelpinghands.com today!

Why A Hard-Sell Pitch For COVID Vaccines Won’t Work In This Rural Illinois TownLee Wright was hard at work, constructing...
10/20/2021

Why A Hard-Sell Pitch For COVID Vaccines Won’t Work In This Rural Illinois Town

Lee Wright was hard at work, constructing a nail salon near the abandoned hospital in Cairo, Ill., when Jody Johnson stopped by to introduce himself on a recent afternoon.

Johnson, who works for the University of Illinois Extension program, chatted with Wright casually in the summertime heat. For Johnson, it was the first step to building trust in this city of fewer than 2,200 people, as extension programs across the U.S. — long valued in many rural communities for helping farmers and supporting 4-H clubs — expand their service to include educating the public about COVID-19 vaccines.

Wright, 68, was unvaccinated and planned to remain so, even though he’d followed other public health guidelines during the pandemic. But when it came to getting the shots, he’d decided to leave his fate to his faith.

“Doctors are good. Don’t get me wrong,” Wright said. “But we got to have something that we can really depend on.”
Johnson didn’t talk to Wright about the vaccines that day. He just listened instead. “No one wants to feel ashamed or belittled because they’re not doing something,” Johnson said later.

Only 16% of residents here in Alexander County are fully vaccinated against COVID-19. That’s the lowest rate in Illinois, according to the state health department, and case counts of coronavirus infections are rising. So the Cooperative Extension System, which is tied to a network of land-grant universities, plans to spend the next two years talking about vaccines in this community and elsewhere across the U.S. It may take that long or more to convince enough people to get vaccinated.

The extension system has a long tradition of bringing research-based information to communities on a wide variety of topics, including water quality, food safety and disaster preparedness. With its roots sunk deep in rural America, where vaccines have been slow to catch on, the system is now using state and federal funding to pay for immunization education efforts tailored to specific communities.

Already 4-H clubs have been making masks and face shields. In Illinois, the agency has a COVID-19 resource guide for families, business owners and farmers. The office covering the southern portion of the state is now looking to hire someone in the community to help get out the word on why vaccinations matter. Johnson also wants to team up with local churches, civic groups and business owners to get the job done.

Why only a nuanced vaccine strategy will be persuasive

“This is not our first global pandemic,” said Carissa Nelson, a spokesperson for 4-H programs in Illinois. The organization’s agents and club members nursed patients during the 1918 flu pandemic that devastated the world.

This time around, the extension service’s strategy could also help in these rural communities and the urban areas it serves. But local leaders say there’s no quick solution for improving vaccination rates in Cairo or across the country; getting people vaccinated is a nuanced challenge in every community. In Cairo, a long history of racial tension dating to the Civil War still stings. Like many rural towns across the U.S., the community also feels underappreciated and misunderstood.

Vaccine apathy is common here, where infection rates remained low until recently.

“We haven’t had great turnouts,” said Tyrone Coleman, president and co-founder of the Alexander and Pulaski NAACP chapter, which has helped organize vaccine clinics in Cairo.

In June, he invited the health department to the city’s Juneteenth celebration at St. Mary’s Park. More than 300 people attended. But the event’s pop-up clinic hosted by the state didn’t have many seeking vaccinations during its six hours of operation.

“We only had two,” Coleman said.

“Cairo is not a ghost town”

More than 15,000 people lived in Cairo in the early 20th century, helping it earn the nicknames “Little Chicago” and “the Gateway to the South.” Old factories, antebellum homes, an ornate library and a vacant hospital remain as reminders of the city’s majestic past. The city’s library prominently displays the work of Samuel Clemens, the American writer best known as Mark Twain. After traveling through Cairo, Twain wrote about the city in his 1884 novel “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.”

In the novel, Cairo represents freedom and the chance for a better life.

But the hospital shut down in 1987. The only grocery store in town closed years ago; public housing was torn down in recent years, and the only nursing home closed during the pandemic, forcing residents to find a new place to live without much notice. On top of all that, flooding has threatened to wipe the city out more than once.

Today, fewer than 2,200 people, the majority of them Black, live here. And locals say the population has continued to drop with all the closures. The city is often mislabeled by the press and travel guides as abandoned.

“Cairo is not a ghost town,” said Ronnie Woods, a local pastor and retired schoolteacher. “It’s not dead at all.”

Tourists still stop by to see the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers. But they don’t typically see the rocky riverbank where residents fish for their dinner. Beverly Davis, 60, heads there often with rod in hand and gives much of her catch away to other members of the community. The scenic waterfront, though, is carpeted with driftwood and dead fish that washed ashore.

“I guess it’s meant to be like this,” Davis said, standing on the riverbanks among the fish carcasses. ” ‘Cause if not, it would be better.”

But many residents continue to believe their city will return to its past glory. “The world hears that this is a negative part of the country, and it’s not,” Johnson said. “We’ve got too many good things and people here.”

On this day, the only outdoor basketball court in the city, anchored by a single hoop, was busy in a rural community that was fighting to stay alive long before the pandemic hit. The men on the court didn’t seem worried about catching COVID-19.

“I haven’t had COVID, so I feel like I don’t need to get vaccinated right now,” said Jeffery DeWitt, 24. “I’ll just take it as it goes.”

Wright’s son, Roman Wright, 36, said much the same thing while helping his dad build the nail salon across town. He works for the prison system. One of its facilities nearby reported COVID-19 cases, but Wright hadn’t contracted the disease. Like his father, he said he didn’t plan on getting the shots.

“I’m like my dad,” Roman Wright said. “I was born and raised in church all my life. So I say we believe in God. I know my parents pray for me. We pray for each other and we just believe in God.”

Woods, the pastor, has a different point of view. He keeps his vaccination card in a plastic sheath and carries it with him wherever he goes.

“God placed science there to help us”

“I have strong faith,” said Woods, 66. “And at my age, my risk factors, I just felt that God placed science there to help us.”

But Woods said it’s going to take work to persuade others in Cairo to get vaccinated, even if they know someone who died of COVID-19. A prominent doctor was among the dead in the community. “It’s going to take more than explaining, it is going to take a cultural shift because people are just not trusting,” he said.

That’s one reason Johnson is searching for a local voice to lead the extension service’s vaccine education program over the next year. As a 51-year-old white man who grew up in a predominantly white community 45 miles outside of Cairo, he recognizes that local residents would be more likely to share their thoughts with someone who lives here. Plus, he spends most of his time talking with community leaders and public officials. He is searching for someone who will spend time with locals who don’t hold titles and positions.

“Everybody doesn’t think like me,” Johnson said. “So we need to take that into consideration.”

Call us at 941-806-5727 for a completely FREE no-obligation evaluation and assessment by a highly experienced, qualified and trained RN in your home.

Please read our informative articles at: https://floridahelpinghands.com/blogs/
Please read about our many services at:
https://floridahelpinghands.com/

We are always looking for hiring top quality nurses and caregivers. Call us at: 941-806-5727 today! E-mail us your resume to: jobs@floridahelpinghands.com today!

‘Dear Dad, It’s Just A Pinch’ — Readers Share Letters Inspired By Vaccine Hesitancy In a letter we shared last week, Bal...
10/19/2021

‘Dear Dad, It’s Just A Pinch’ — Readers Share Letters Inspired By Vaccine Hesitancy

In a letter we shared last week, Baltimore-based doctor Edward Kenyi appealed to his mother, who lives in South Sudan, to get a COVID-19 vaccine. He pleaded with her to take COVID seriously and trust her son over the “rumors and stories from WhatsApp group messages” that spread false information about microchips and infertility related to vaccination.

We asked our readers to share letters they’ve written about vaccines to a family member or loved one. Here are three submissions that are especially poignant: a daughter urging her diabetic father to trust modern science, a woman reflecting on the moment her dear uncle became a COVID statistic, and a son thanking his father for finally getting the vaccine after cancelling many, many times.

Letters have been edited for length and clarity.

‘It’s just a pinch’
A letter from Alicia Lynn Caton in Puerto Natales, Chile, to her father in the U.S.

Dear Father,

I want to urge you to get vaccinated. First, for yourself because you are at high risk at 66 years old and because you have diabetes and have lost 2 toes due to bone infections that were not treatable. Second, I urge you to get vaccinated for your grandkids [in the U.S.] whom you are around almost every day — and not to mention your great grandchild who was just born just months ago. You are a mentor and role model to them each day. How are you teaching them to care for themselves and for others if you will not get vaccinated? How are you teaching them to trust science and modern medicine by believing myths or conspiracies surrounding the vaccine? How is that information more valuable than science and statistics? How could you trust vaccines from my generation or yours but not now?

Your granddaughter and I will be coming home soon after 3 years living in Chile. You will finally get to spend some incredible time with her. She is so excited. She wakes up talking about you and her trip to see you. I am scared because of the new delta variant. I know there is a possibility that this trip could be canceled due to it. I am hurt that you won’t think about yourself and others and get vaccinated. I am scared that you could expose Mia or that we could expose you after traveling so far. I am trying to take every precaution necessary, but I would hope that you would do the same for yourself and for your grandchildren.

Please get vaccinated. Please think about protecting yourself and others: your family, friends, neighbors. The vaccine is free and readily available. The United States has some of the best vaccines that have been developed. How could you not appreciate this and take advantage of a privilege not all have? We got vaccinated as soon as it was available here in Puerto Natales. I never hesitated because I knew it was what I had to do for myself, my daughter and the people around me. I never doubted the quality of the vaccine or worried about anything unusual that so many people believe.

It’s just a pinch.

‘Tears quietly cried between Zoom meetings’
Lise Lafferty from Sydney, Australia, pays homage to her Uncle Dan and asks us all to get vaccinated.

I’m a social health researcher. In essence, I talk with people who are living with an infectious disease and learn from their stories. The work I do gives a voice — an identity — to the numbers produced by epidemiologists. My research is an opportunity to give human meaning to the statistics.

The New York Times reported 2,190 deaths in the U.S. on December 5 attributed to COVID-19. My Uncle Dan is included in that number. He is the face I know, the person who implanted the statistics firmly into my inner circle. Ironically, in his passing he brought life to the numbers.

What has been the buffer of the pandemic is that these burgeoning numbers have felt so distant. As many of us lived with few restrictions in Australia, the pandemic ravaged and raged out there. But now, as the delta variant sweeps across the globe, we are all (again) affected by COVID-19. It impacts our lifestyle, our livelihoods, our ability to embrace and be surrounded with loved ones.

We have learnt over the 18 months of this pandemic that severe illness and death are isolating; that public health measures are in place to protect the healthy; and that in efforts to reduce spread, people often die alone, perhaps with only a health-care worker by their side, a stranger compelled to be with them in their final moments.

But what I didn’t realize until Uncle Dan’s passing is how isolating grief is amid the pandemic. Friends and colleagues don’t observe any changes in your life – for all intents and purposes, life continues as usual. Grief is compounded by the inability to gather with those closest to the deceased. The sadness becomes hidden, tears quietly cried between Zoom meetings. My uncle died before vaccines were available.

But we have the opportunity to protect our loved ones from illness, and to protect them from grief. We can get vaccinated.

‘I speak for all of us when I say thank you. I love you’
A letter from Dr. Josh Williamson of Oley, Pa., thanking his dad for finally getting a vaccine.

Dear Dad,

Many people are writing letters to implore family members to get vaccinated.

I wanted to write one to you to thank you for getting your vaccine. I know how difficult your decision was. Many of your news sources frequently downplay the pandemic, vaccination success and need for mitigation measures and vaccinations.

As I look back, I couldn’t believe the day you told me not to schedule you when I scheduled mom’s vaccine appointment. Obviously with mom on oxygen and her history of heart disease, she is at ultra-high risk, but since you are both in your 80s, you both have a much higher risk of adding to the 600,000+ deaths we have endured in the U.S.

I cannot tell you how relieved I was at Uncle Tim’s funeral when you told me to schedule your vaccine. No one can grasp how such a vital 64-year-old mountain of a man was taken down by this tiny virus.

I was equally stunned when you declined the appointment I was finally able to make 2 weeks later. Why was it taking 2 weeks for a doctor to be able to schedule a vaccine for an 80-year- old patient? I’m sure the inefficiency of the health-care system added to your suspicions about the vaccine.

After further pressure, at least 1 of your 12 grandchildren influenced you to get the vaccine. Again you canceled, but I think it was just cold feet this time. Frankly I had given up pushing you. I lacked faith that you were, as you said, truly “cancelling your appointment for the vaccine in order to get a different version.”

But then you did it! Quickly and quietly at the local grocery store of all places. By that time the vaccine became available to all. Too bad Uncle Tim never got the option.

I know I speak for all of us when I say thank you. I love you.

Call us at 941-806-5727 for a completely FREE no-obligation evaluation and assessment by a highly experienced, qualified and trained RN in your home.

Please read our informative articles at: https://floridahelpinghands.com/blogs/
Please read about our many services at:
https://floridahelpinghands.com/

We are always looking for hiring top quality nurses and caregivers. Call us at: 941-806-5727 today! E-mail us your resume to: jobs@floridahelpinghands.com today!

Is It OK To Lie For A Booster? Here’s What Some Of You Had To SayIs it OK to lie to get a booster shot? What about to ge...
10/18/2021

Is It OK To Lie For A Booster? Here’s What Some Of You Had To Say

Is it OK to lie to get a booster shot? What about to get a vaccine for your not quite 12-year-old? Last week we published a post exploring the medical, practical and ethical consequences of lying. And we asked our readers to weigh in: Is it unethical to get a vaccine when the government says it’s not your turn. Some of you gave us a “Heck yes, it’s unethical!” Others are willing to break, or at least bend, the vaccine rules if you 1. Think those rules won’t keep you or your loved ones healthy and/or 2. Believe unused vaccines will end up in a dumpster.

Here’s a sampling of what you had to say. Thanks to everyone who responded. Responses have been edited for length and clarity; initials rather than full names are used to protect the respondents from online harassment.

‘Zero’ regrets about telling a lie
L.M., Texas

Our son turned 12 on August 12 – school starts on August 16. Earlier that week I took him to get his first dose of the Pfizer vaccine. He was basically days away from being 12 — and the governor is offering our kids no protections. He has backed us into a corner and we are taking matters into our own hands to protect our kids. I am not alone — I am in MANY mommy groups on Facebook, and this is happening everywhere, not just in Texas.

When parents fear for their children’s lives when they are headed back to school, you know there’s a problem. I can rest somewhat easier knowing our son has at least some protection from his first vaccine dose, and he will wear a mask to school at least until he’s a few weeks beyond his second dose.

I have exactly zero regrets.

Dismayed By An Acquaintance’s Misrepresentation
J.B., Pennsylvania

I just found out two people I know lied about their vaccine status to get a booster. I was stunned they did this for many reasons but particularly the ethical and health reasons. Both are educated professionals and one of the two works in the health-care field. I felt they exhibited a selfish entitlement attitude by taking vaccines that could have gone to others. Also, the misrepresentation that it was their first vaccine taints the actual state department of health where they live and the CDC reporting of newly inoculated people.

I blame in part this rush for a third vaccine on the Pfizer CEO. How self-serving of him when he made an announcement about the reasons why their company thought boosters were required, stepping ahead of WHO and CDC.

The immunocompromised need to do what they need to do
B.Z., Maryland

You did not address the very real issue of immunocompromised people and their need for a third vaccine.

After extensive collaboration with my medical team, they advised me to “do whatever I needed to do” to get a third vaccine as soon as possible and not to wait for FDA to make a decision. So I lied. I don’t know who will pay the costs and frankly I don’t care. I could not get into a study and we needed to try to get my antibody levels up. When vaccine doses are being discarded because there are not enough people who want them, I do not feel at all guilty for using one of them.

As it turns out, the FDA announced a week after I got the 3rd vaccine that they would be making a decision ‘within a week’. We’ll see. I hope so.

[Editor’s note: On August 12, the FDA authorized a third COVID-19 dose for people with weakened immunity.]

Looking for global balance
T.W., California

I’m on a temporary hiatus from New York City and have found myself in a very rural part of California where it is all big trucks, confederate flags and maskless militia supporters. Every pharmacy window has handwritten signs trying to encourage people to walk in off the street: “Extra vaccines! They are free!” It has been this way since the very beginning and it is clear that no one is taking them up on the offer.

Is there any strategy coming down the pipeline to better allocate these shots, which are inevitably expiring, to the places that actually need and want them? Are these locations constantly getting a stream of usable vaccines only to trash them shortly after? I’d love to believe that by not using these unclaimed vaccines that they are actually being reallocated to people in need. What is the system for balancing out the national/global supply, and are we watching what could be extra protection for those who need it be washed down the drain?

‘If I could have sent that dose to Africa, I would have.’
R.T., Fla.

I got a Pfizer backup for my J&J and I didn’t lie, but I may not have answered in the most direct way either.

“First shot?”

“Pfizer? Yes.”

I can’t say that I feel bad about it. I live in a huge hotspot surrounded by every variant. Look at Sturgis, Lollapalooza, Rolling Loud and countless other large events. Look at the pastors and politicians, radio and TV personalities and social media influencers telling people to not trust or take the vaccine at all.

What could possibly go wrong? It’s like when Patrick had 10 hooks in his mouth and he tells SpongeBob, “I sense no danger here.” Except it’s tens of millions of Patricks. I can’t help them.

If I could have sent that dose to Africa, I would have. We all know that at the end of that day doses were thrown out. Odds are very high that all I took was something that was pre-garbage. Alabama has reportedly had to toss 65,000 doses. Don’t try to judge me for protecting myself as I wade through a sea of idiots.

Not up for discussion

P.R., Philippines

No one should lie, period.

Call us at 941-806-5727 for a completely FREE no-obligation evaluation and assessment by a highly experienced, qualified and trained RN in your home.

Please read our informative articles at: https://floridahelpinghands.com/blogs/
Please read about our many services at:
https://floridahelpinghands.com/

We are always looking for hiring top quality nurses and caregivers. Call us at: 941-806-5727 today! E-mail us your resume to: jobs@floridahelpinghands.com today!

Florida Helping Hands, LLC is a home health care agency in Sarasota, FL providing skilled nursing, personal care, and hospice services.

Address

5250 17TH Street, SUITE 101
Sarasota, FL
34235

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Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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+19418065727

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