DU have self-directed care. Through that program you can train your  
providers after your doctor writes that you can train your providers. I don't  
know where you live?
Dana
 
 
In a message dated 4/27/2011 7:24:26 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Hello  again.  I also wanted to see how I can get someone delegated  for
suctioning.  My home health agency doesn't want to let the  providers remove
my flem via suctioning because they are not  delegated.  Suctioning is one 
of
my needs.  The agency does not  want to train the providers for this.  
Again,
your help is greatly  appreciated.

Thank you.

Ismael Cavazos


-----Original  Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent:  Wednesday, April 27, 2011 11:59 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject:  [QUAD-L] Re: ADAPT to Washington: "Stop De-funding Our FREEDOM!"

In a  message dated 4/27/2011 11:40:30 A.M. Central Daylight  Time,
[email protected] writes:

<res://C:\Program
Files\Nuance\NaturallySpeaking10\Program\web_ie.dll/QMARK.GIF>
<res://C:\Program
Files\Nuance\NaturallySpeaking10\Program\web_ie.dll/ARROW.GIF>  For 
Immediate
release
For information contact:

April 26, 2011

Bruce Darling, 585-370-6690
Rahnee Patrick,  312-320-5111
http://www.adapt.org

ADAPT to Washington: "Stop De-funding Our FREEDOM!"

Washington, D.C.- Over 400 members of the national  grassroots
disability 
rights organization, ADAPT will  converge on Washington, D.C. from
all 
parts of the  country April 30-May 5 to tell Congress and the Obama 
Administration to "Stop De-funding Our FREEDOM!"

"For people with disabilities and those who are aging, it feels  like
we 
are being drowned in a man-made tsunami of cuts  to Medicaid
services," 
said Bruce Darling, ADAPT  organizer from Rochester, NY. "Between the

draconian cuts  we are experiencing in our home states, and the added

threat of collateral damage from the budget wars here in Washington,
we  
are not only at risk for losing our freedom to live in our  own
homes, but 
we are truly afraid for our  lives."

The 1999 U.S. Supreme Court  Olmstead decision, affirming Title II of
the 
1990  Americans with Disabilities Act, mandates that people with 
disabilities of all ages should be served in the "most integrated 
setting," which almost always is their own home and  community.
Olmstead 
further states that isolating people  unnecessarily in institutions
is 
segregation, and  therefore illegal.

Yet today, at least 38  states are proposing or have made cuts to
Medicaid 
that  threaten the civil rights of older and disabled Americans to
live in  
their own homes and neighborhoods. These cuts are proposed  in a
variety of 
areas, from home-based attendant  services, to medications, vision
and 
dental services, to  mental health services, and durable medical
equipment 
like wheelchairs. All of these services and equipment are medically 
necessary for the health and safety and freedom of those  with
disabilities 
and who are aging.

"Our own home states are treating us like second class  citizens, and
it's 
no better here in Washington," said  Mike Ervin, ADAPT organizer from

Chicago. "For 20 years  we've been telling everyone that removing the

institutional bias from the Medicaid program, giving people who need
some  
daily assistance the choice to stay in their own home to  receive
services, 
would save the government money along  with being in compliance with
the 
law. And yet, even with  research to back us up, Congress has chosen
not to 
make  this simple change in the law and save both money and lives."

Medicaid currently mandates states to pay for nursing homes,  but
does not 
similarly mandate that states can pay for  the same services in a
person's 
own home. This is not a  partisan issue. The Obama administration
says it 
is open  to any solutions that could help reduce the deficit, and 
Democratic congressional leaders like Sen. Tom Harkin (IA) and Rep.
Danny  
Davis (IL) and Sen. Max Baucus (MT) have long supported home  and 
community-based legislation. Republican Representative  Dennis
Rehberg (MT) 
has stated, "To control long-term  care costs, Congress and the 
Administration should also  examine ways to move Medicaid away from 
institutionalized  care and toward home and community based care,"
and 
Republican Governor (WI), Scott Walker, recently wrote, that
Medicaid is  
"...is biased toward caring for people in nursing homes  rather than
in 
their own homes and  neighborhoods."

"We'll be in Washington  this week DEFENDING OUR FREEDOM, and
demanding 
that  Congress stop de-funding our freedom," said Rahnee Patrick,
ADAPT  
Organizer from Chicago. "Many of us live on $674/month, 75%  of
poverty 
level. Federal and state budgets should not be  balanced on the backs
of 
the poorest of the  poor.

# # #
FOR MORE  INFORMATION on ADAPT visit our website at
http://www.adapt.org/






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