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North Florida Regional Hospital Abruptly Suspends Surgeries Amid Concerns Over Sterile Equipment

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By VALENTNA SANDOVAL / Fresh Take Florida
Local
18 January 2024
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GAINESVILLE, Fla. – North Florida Regional Medical Center, one of the state’s largest hospitals, is abruptly suspending surgeries for at least four days to deal with significant concerns about its processes to sterilize surgical instruments.

The suspension affects operations in Gainesville at one of the flagship hospitals for HCA Florida Healthcare, which has 510 beds, sources said. It treats more than 50,000 patients each year and has more than 1,000 employees.

The hospital announced its decision internally late Wednesday. A spokeswoman said in a statement Thursday the move was proactive and described it only as an unspecified “operational matter.”

“We are proactively addressing an operational matter at HCA Florida North Florida Hospital that resulted in the need to temporarily reschedule certain elective surgeries and have notified impacted patients,” communications director Lauren Lettelier said. “Our commitment has always been and continues to be to provide the highest quality of safe patient care to the citizens of North Central Florida and the surrounding area. We thank everyone affected for their patience and understanding.”

Lettelier declined to answer questions or provide any further information.

The hospital directed Alachua County Fire Rescue not to transport patients to the hospital for surgeries but told the agency to disregard that warning early Thursday, assistant fire rescue chief Misty Woods said.

The hospital’s concerns involve the activities of its Sterile Processing Department, the unit that cleans and sanitizes equipment, such as drills and other precision medical tools, that are reused after surgeries, sources said. Its chief medical officer told doctors and others the hospital wants to ensure it has sufficient numbers of instruments that have been sterilized properly before it reopens its surgical bays.

The hospital said it began diverting emergency surgeries to other area hospitals late Wednesday. Some cardiac surgeries were still scheduled to take place Thursday at the hospital. It said it hopes to resume all types of surgeries as early as the weekend and said it may only be functioning at half its expected capacity next week.

UF Health Shands did not immediately have any information on the transfer plans from the neighboring hospital, communications manager Peyton Wesner said.

Such suspensions are highly unusual but not unprecedented at U.S. hospitals coping with issues involving sterilization procedures and equipment. At least some surgeries were suspended for those reasons last year at hospitals in California, Texas, Massachusetts and Kansas. In southwest Colorado, patients in December sued Mercy Hospital, an 82-bed acute care facility, over allegations they contracted infections about the time that Mercy suspended elective surgeries two years earlier.

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Publix Breaks Ground in Newberry

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Administrator
Local
18 January 2024
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Photo special to Alachua County Today

NEWBERRY ‒ What has been touted as Alachua County’s largest Publix grocery store officially broke ground in Newberry on Thursday morning, Jan. 4. A crowd of citizens, local officials, a county commissioner and a state representative were in attendance to witness the event.  In addition to Newberry City Commissioners and Mayor Jordan Marlowe, Alachua County Commissioner Anna Prizzia, Alachua County Sheriff Emery Gainey and U.S. Rep. Kat Cammack were in attendance.

The chain store bought the nine-acre plot on the corner of West Newberry Road and County Road 235 in August and is working with Carolina Holdings to develop a 55,000-square-foot grocery store and 7,700 square feet of retail space on the site.

Although Publix has not yet announced an official timeline, it estimates the store will be open about nine months after the groundbreaking. The Florida-based grocery chain has a spate of new store openings scheduled in Florida this month. New locations include Fort Myers, Sanford, Wesley Chapel, and Panama City.

Publix itself is not only expected to be a source of jobs, but it will also attract other businesses to the retail areas within the shopping center to provide additional income sources for the community.

In an earlier interview, Marlowe said a Publix in Newberry is more than a grocery store. Publix does extensive vetting of an area’s growth rates and demographics before establishing a location there, so this move signals a shift in growth patterns.

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Alachua County Public Schools Magnet Program Application Window For 2024-25 School Year Is Open

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Administrator
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16 January 2024
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GAINESVILLE, FL - The window for local families of students in PreKindergarten through 10th grade to apply for their children to attend one of the district’s academic or career-technical (CTE) magnet programs opened today, January 16. It will close at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, February 13.

This year 50% of the new students in each magnet program will be chosen through a districtwide lottery. The other 50% will be selected by the school. Students must meet certain academic, attendance and disciplinary criteria to be eligible for each magnet and must also meet program standards to remain enrolled.

The district uses an online process that allows families to apply for more than one program with a single application. Information about the magnet programs, the application timeline and more is available on the district’s website at https://www.sbac.edu/magnet. The online application is also posted on that website in both English and Spanish.

Open houses are being held at all magnet programs to allow students and families to learn more about what each has to offer. A schedule is also available on the magnet website at https://www.sbac.edu/magnet.

For specific questions about a particular magnet program, families can contact the school directly. For all other questions, they can email alachuamagnets@gm.sbac.edu or call (352) 955-7629.

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High Springs Seeks Volunteers for Advisory Board Openings

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Administrator
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17 January 2024
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HIGH SPRINGS, FLA. -- The City of High Springs is seeking community volunteers to serve on two city advisory boards.   

The Charter Review Board seeks five board members. Members will review the City Charter and make recommendations to the City Commission for any alterations, revisions, and amendments to the Charter. 

The High Springs Plan Board, which also serves as the Historical Preservation Board, needs one member. Members of the board review amendments to the land use and zoning maps; review and recommend developments; and hear and consider code variances. 

Interested parties must live within the corporate limits of High Springs to qualify. To apply, please visit highsprings.gov/boards.

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North Central Florida TRIO Talent Search Celebrates 30 Years and Over 4,000 Graduates

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Administrator
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16 January 2024
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FLORIDA, FL – Grace Huguley from Hawthorne High School always knew she wanted to go to college. She just didn't know how or where.

Or if she could afford it.

Coming from a low-income background and with no one in her family having gone to college, Grace simply didn't know the ins and outs of college and the application process. It was this need that prompted Grace to join Talent Search in 9th grade. Through the program, Grace received advice on what classes to take in high school, help to prepare for the ACT, college and career exploration sessions, and hands-on assistance applying for college, financial aid and scholarships. Talent Search helped Grace with her “how.” She is now attending Notre Dame University on a full 4-year scholarship.

Stories like Grace's are not uncommon. Schools are filled with students who have the desire to attend college but lack the "how." North Central Florida TRIO Talent Search (NCFETS) has been meeting this need since 1994, providing guidance to 9th-12th grade students to navigate high school and enroll in the college or university of their choice. Like Grace, the majority of these students are low-income and will be the first in their families to graduate college.

SFC Jesus Dominguez“Talent Search is aimed at those low-income, first-generation households where you don't know what you are doing and they're guiding you,” said Jesus Dominguez, ETS graduate. “So having that guide, having the resources, having people that are there to support you and guide you with everything, that's the biggest thing that they do and it builds a person, it builds them up for success.”

Talent Search is a federal grant, consortium project of the College of Central Florida, Florida Gateway College and Santa Fe College. Over the past 30 years, Talent Search has helped over 4,000 seniors plan for life after high school with 64% of students enrolling in college. These are students who will be the first in their family to graduate college.

The success of the program is a testament to the support of community partners, the dedication of the students and the commitment of its coaches. The program is fortunate to have the expertise of coaches Theresa Cothren (Baker County, Dixie County, Fort White and Union High Schools), Jacki Garcia (Dunnellon, Lake Weir, North Marion and West Port High Schools) and Lindsey Ragsdale (Bradford County and Hawthorne High Schools).

“Our coaches are the heart of Talent Search,” said Jodi Doher, Talent Search Director. “Our coaches have the benefit of working with students for four years and really getting to know the students and develop a relationship. Not everyone's path is the same so individualized guidance is key. There are so many decisions facing our teens and questions about what to do with their future. Having a trustworthy professional, someone to help make high school decisions, plan for the future after graduation, identify pathways to get there, and provide support and resources to achieve those goals, is imperative. Our coaches change lives and this program, Talent Search, is changing our community.”

North Central Florida TRIO Talent Search is a federal grant, consortium project of the College of Central Florida, Florida Gateway College and Santa Fe College. If you have a student at one of our target schools that could benefit from the project, apply online at https://sfcollege-ts-pub.studentaccess.com/appform/default.aspx?guid=9f956522-4de3-4e27-b933-e6bde4647f38

For more information, email talent.search@sfcollege.edu or call 352-395-5960.

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