VA Celebrates 75 Years Of Academic Partnerships

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The Chillicothe VA Medical Center announced today as part of its 75th anniversary commemoration of academic affiliations that it has trained 2,040 health professionals since 2013.  The facility first started hosting psychiatry residents from Grandview Medical Center in 2011.  In addition to psychiatry residents, the Chillicothe VA Medical Center has hosted pharmacy residents since 2004, psychology interns since 2012, and began its nursing partnership with Hocking College in 1990.

The Chillicothe VA partnerships currently include 50+ affiliates, including Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Adena Health System, Ohio University, The Ohio State University, Ohio Northern University, and University of Cincinnati, primarily in the fields of nursing, medicine, dental and associated health. These future professionals are the Nation’s health care workforce pipeline who will go on to care for Veterans and other patients in urban and rural communities across the U.S.  

The commemoration is part of the Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) overall 75th anniversary celebration of the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) occurring throughout 2021.

“It is an honor to be a part of positive advancements and cutting-edge efforts serving those who served our nation.  The Chillicothe VA takes pride in its local academic partnership and achievements during the past three decades,” said Dr. Kathy Berger, Medical Center Director.

During the pandemic, VA has worked with medical schools and programs across the country to utilize health professions trainees to care for Veterans virtually and in-person while completing their training requirements. The number of physician residents training in VA over the past year increased by more than 2,000 and, according to the American Association of Medical Colleges, applications to medical schools have increased by 18% for the upcoming 2021 academic year.

VA’s academic mission began in 1946 with the adoption of Policy Memorandum No. 2, establishing a remarkable partnership between VA and its academic affiliates. Seventy-five years later, VA provides training to nearly 70% of all U.S. physicians. Approximately 120,000 health professions trainees help care for more than 9 million Veterans at clinical sites around the country.

Affiliated with more than 1,800 academic institutions including 97% of America’s medical schools, VA trains future health professionals in over 40 disciplines including physicians, psychologists, nurses, pharmacists and social workers. For more information about VHA’s 75th anniversary, visit www.va.gov/vha-history.

RCHD Ready For New Vaccination Station

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Ohio University-Chillicothe’s Shoemaker Center will be the mass vaccination site for all Ross County Health District COVID-19 clinics, moving forward, starting February 2nd.

Administrators from the Ross County Health District took Litter Media on a “test run” Monday of their new clinic site at OU-Chillicothe.

Ross County Health District Commissioner Garrett Guillozet says they can get many more people vaccinated in a single days time at Shoemaker Center compared to their health district office.

“At our office on a very busy day, we can accommodate about 100 individuals coming into receive their COVID vaccine. Here at this location with this capacity, we can accommodate between 300-500 people per day, and that’s really over about a five to six hour time period.”

He added that if they receive more doses of the vaccine, they would be able to offer it over a longer period of time each day.

Currently, all vaccinations through the health department are being done through appointment only, which began registration in early January for those age 65 years of age and over. Guillozet says they are working off that original list and not currently taking any additional registrations until they work through many of the 5,000 people they have already registered.

When it is time for those registered to get their shots, they will be notified by a phone call from the the health district concerning the date of your appointment with a follow-up automated call that gives you the location and time of your shot. Eventually when the general public is allowed to get their vaccinations, the clinics will continue at Shoemaker Center with as many as several hundred vaccinations per day, possibly without registrations.

Guillozet says the health district is not charging anything for the COVID-19 vaccinations. “It is entirely free, there is no cost. We are not currently collecting insurance information for insurance billing. Some providers are doing that, but the health district is not doing that at this time”.

Ohio school employees are being vaccinated in February, but Guillozet says the health district will only be vaccinating school personnel from Chillicothe City Schools and Paint Valley Schools. Employees in those two districts will be notified about the specific times and days, scheduled for the week of February 22nd.

The remaining Ross County districts will receive their vaccinations through Wahlgreen’s, who will notify those school administrators concerning the times and dates for their vaccinations the final week of February. 

Beyond the current 1B vaccination schedule, Guillozet says they do not yet have the specifics of the upcoming 1C vaccination categories.

Ross County Health District Commissioner, Garrett Guillozet discusses how the RCHD will dispense the Phase 1B Coronavirus vaccinations at Ohio University- Chillicothe
Upon arrival, those keeping their appointments will enter a screening station.
Clipboards await registrants for the screening process.
The waiting area for the vaccination.
In the foreground, the waiting area for vaccinations. In the middle the vaccination stations and in the background, the observation area. Those receiving vaccinations will be observed for a 15 minute period before being permitted to leave the Shoemake Center.