
Friday, November 5, 2010
Update on Progress

Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Health Ministries Meeting
* Participants shared information about programs and activities in their health ministries. We had representatives from parishes, outreach ministries, and health care providers
* We heard about grants available from the Margaret T. Stoeckinger Foundation for parish health ministry. We also heard about the Foundation's scholarships for nursing students who are enrolled in programs within the region encompassed by the Diocese of Lexington and participating in a church-based health ministry.
* We took a tour of the updated Margaret Stoeckinger Foundation website, which is chock full of links to resources as well as the grant application and scholarship application mentioned above.
* We quickly looked over the informative articles included in our packets, including
-the updated Blood Pressure Screening/Hypertension Protocol (as published by the International Parish Nurse Resource Center)
- articles about how parish nursing can integrate spiritual dimensions of care and spirituality in nursing
- an article reporting on recently published results that noted patients' ranking spiritual care as a high need during advanced stages of cancer
- easy ways for a parish to "go green"
* We participated in a continuing education unit to learn more about "Domestic Violence and the Faith Community." Above left, Rosalie Albright, RN and Coordinator of Faith Community Nursing Services for Ephraim McDowell Health in Danville, led us in the interactive presentation
And finally, we thanked Eileen TeKrony for her many years of service to the Stoeckinger Foundation in
Friday, August 27, 2010
Parish Health Ministries Meeting Coming Up

The Annual Stoeckinger Health Ministry meeting will be held on Thursday, September 9, 10am-2:15pm at Pax Christi church,
4001 Victoria Way, Lexington, KY. This annual meeting is sponsored by the Margaret T. Stoeckinger Foundation, to promote health ministries within the Catholic parishes in the Diocese of Lexington.
Date: Thursday, September 9, 2010
Time: 10:00 AM-2:15 PM
Place: Pax Christi Church
10:00 AM-11:00 AM
· Welcome
· Introductions
· Prayer
· Announcements
· Grant Program-Stoeckinger Foundation: Mary Jo Votruba
· Scholarship Program-Stoeckinger Foundation: Eileen Kelty
· Caring for the Caregiver/Respite Care-Stoeckinger Foundation: Cathy Lerza, Caregiver Assistance Coordinator
11:00 AM-12:00 Noon Resources and Sharing
12:00 Noon-12:30 PM Lunch
12:30 PM-2:15 PM "Domestic Violence and the Faith Community Nurse", Rosalie Albright, RN,MSN,CNS-BC,ARNP,FCN, Coordinator, Faith Community Nursing Services, Community Service Department, Ephraim McDowell Health
2:15 PM Wrap-up
Thursday, August 26, 2010
St. Joseph - London is now open!

Above: View of the new facility for St. Joseph-London while it was under construction

St. Joseph-London includes 120 private rooms, artwork from local artists, and a lake and garden on 52 acres. The hospital's "Serenity Garden" is being designed by Kentucky celebrity gardener Jon Carloftis.
The new facility is nearly twice the size of the hospital it replaced in downtown London, which was the former Marymount Medical Center. St. Joseph-London is now located right off Interstate 75 for more convenient access.
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Article about Manchester KY
(Note: Manchester is a beautiful place, as you can see from the photo views of St. Ann's "front yard," above and her "back yard" below. The church is actually situated on 40 acres, and the setting is truly lovely. The reporter did end his story noting the view of the beautiful valley, although he goes on to say the population does not reflect so well on the town).
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Remote Area Medical Clinic in Pikeville

teers for each clinic. The organization has also worked out some snags over the past two years about temporary licensing of volunteers and rules that affected certain medical professions, such as allowing optometrists to volunteer outside their offices. Above right, a volunteer nurse checks blood pressure for a patient who visited the clinic for vision and dental services.Monday, June 21, 2010
Visit to St. Joseph Hospital in Martin KY
Billie, Neva and Judy also talked about some of the satellite clinics that SJM opera
At right: Inside the beautiful chapel at St. Joseph-Martin
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Catch Up Coming Soon!
In the meantime, the blog will pass along a very nice resource for prayers for healing and health. They are from the book 600 Blessings and Prayers from Around the World by Geoffrey Duncan. You can find the Google book entry at
http://books.google.com/books?id=-fyQez5AAwAC&printsec=frontcover&dq=600+blessing+and+prayers+from+around+the+worlds&source=bl&ots=00vfTWBnnm&sig=vOc0ML2R7QFCnmp52KPD-6OUz3c&hl=en&ei=43HkS_veKcWBlAf9-KiDAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CBwQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q&f=false
(or go to Google and type in "600 blessings and prayers").
You will see that the prayers "Toward Health" begin on page 310. A number of them are quite lovely, so please take a look!
Here at our diocesan offices, we have had a spell of illness and injury to a number of people we love, and no doubt many of you also know of individuals and families who need our prayers for healing. So while we continue our plans for a Mission Trip, let's take time to pray for those who are in need of restored health as well as for the health care providers and support personnel who work for healing and wholeness.
Friday, April 30, 2010
April 9 - Visit to Berea
The team was looking at a shorter jaunt - only about 40 miles - for the last day of fact-finding, so we took a little time in the morning to spread out the map once again, recap some of the information we’d collected, and assign some action items for the next steps, including:
*Compile a list of attendees from the kick off meeting and also a list of people we met at health care locations while we were on the road.
*Prepare an information sheet for the MMDM’s to use to generate interest and enthusiasm for a medical mission in the Diocese of Lexington.
*Continue to contact potential collaborators
*Check out possible funding strategies, including grants and sponsorships
*Set mid-November as the date for the MMDM's next visit to Lexington, with an eye for setting a date for the medical mission!
Friday, April 23, 2010
April 8-The MMDM team visits Grayson & Morehead

mmunities for Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital (OLBH) - that's her on the right - served as our liaison with the medical staff there. The clinic in Grayson is one of seven Primary Care Centers operated by Our Lady of Bellefonte, including the Main Hospital in Ashland. See the map above left - Grayson is number 4 on the map and about the southernmost of the locations.
how our proposed medical mission might fill in some gaps. Dr. Shields also provides geriatric care services at a local nursing home, and talked once again about the challenge of providing dental care - in this case, to many of her elderly patients who cannot get adequate dental care through their Medicare coverage. Another challenging area is providing dermatological care for elderly patients. Dr. Okudoya, who also works out of the South Shore BPC facility, talked a little bit about his work with helping patients manage chronic health problems, including diabetes, COPD, hypertension, etc. Our team also learned that at one time OLBH had operated a mobile unit to provide basic screening procedures for women, including Pap Smears and mammograms. The hospital has not done this for a few years, but our team may want to check on the possibility of utilizing this unit and/or its equipment for a medical mission.
ay, 80% of cases presented, would not be all that difficult or even expensive in these days of the discount department stores' $4 formularies. As examples, Dr. M noted that health care providers can take excellent care of people with diabetes for about $12/month. Likewise, hypertension can be controlled for about $8/month and heart disease for about $20/month. The trick, of course, is to sustain the treatment and make sure people are enrolled in the programs or have the means to obtain the medications. Another big component for meeting these widespread health challneges is to get people to buy in to the wellness components of managing disease, including eating properly, exercising, not smoking, etc. Dr. M also noted that a focus on screening and intervention/wellness might actually be the mission trip activities that yield the greatest benefits. Certainly something to think about!Thursday, April 22, 2010
April 7 - The MMDM Team Visits Hazard


Wednesday, April 21, 2010
The Fact Finders Arrive!

Encouraged by their results in Laredo, the MMDM's are looking to help other stateside dioceses expand their health ministry efforts.
Monday, April 12, 2010
We're on a Mission!

Welcome to the first entry of this blog! Through a running commentary, we hope to keep everyone updated about the efforts of the Medical Missionaries of Divine Mercy (MMDM) and the Diocese of Lexington to develop a program that continues the healing ministry of Jesus in a very special place - the mountains and hollers of Eastern Kentucky.
Our ultimate goal is to promote better health in body, mind and spirit for those in need in this part of Appalachia, one of the poorest regions in the United States. To achieve this, we will bring together volunteers from the MMDM organization of the Diocese of Galveston-Houston and volunteers from the Diocese of Lexington for a week-long "Medical Mission" in Spring, 2011.
A fact-finding team from the MMDM's visited the Diocese during the week of April 6 - 9. We traveled to several different health care sites and parishes in the eastern part of the Diocese to learn about the needs of the region and how a mission team might help out. We'll look at some of our early findings in upcoming blog entries.
The Medical Missionaries of Divine Mercy is a lay organization based in Sugarland, TX, that takes its inspiration from the devotion based on the revelation about Divine Mercy received by Sister Mary Faustina in 1931. The image on this page depicts Sister Faustina's vision, in which Jesus raises a hand in blessing and with the other hand indicates two rays issuing from the depths of His Sacred Heart. Sister Faustina noted in her diary: "The pale ray stands for the Water which makes souls righteous. The red ray stands for the Blood which is the life of souls.... We are not only to receive the mercy of God, but to use it by being merciful to others through our actions, our words, and our prayers; in other words, we are to practice the Corporal and Spiritual Works (Acts) of Mercy."
In 2000, Pope John Paul II designated the Second Sunday after Easter as Divine Mercy Sunday. It was very fitting that the MMDM team was able to visit the Diocese of Lexington during the week leading up to Divine Mercy Sunday!
