January 23, 2024

UP Header
Positive Patient Comments
Green Team Tip of the Week

Aspirus Iron River Welcomes General Surgeon Amy Nielson

Please join us in welcoming Amy Nielsen, DO, to our excellent team of medical providers. She joins Dr. Medhat Fanous in providing the highest levels of comprehensive surgical care for patients at Aspirus Iron River.

 

Dr. Nielsen specializes in all aspects of general surgery, from treating critical illnesses to advising patients on outpatient surgical options. Her special interests include endoscopies, hernia repair, breast surgery, bowel surgery and soft tissue repair.


She completed her General Surgery Residency at Wayne State University in Detroit, Mich., and completed her medical degree from Midwestern University Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine in Downers Grove, IL.


Prior to joining Aspirus Health, Dr. Nielsen was a general surgeon at OSF St. Francis Hospital and Medical Group in Escanaba, Mich., and CHI St. Alexius Health Dickinson Medical Center in Dickinson, North Dakota.


Dr. Nielsen is originally from Gladstone, Mich. Her interests outside of work include spending time with her dog, Ari, spending time with family, reading and running.

 

When you see Dr. Nielsen, please give her a warm Aspirus welcome.

Aspirus Keweenaw Donates Hydroponic Garden to Calumet-Laurium-Keweenaw Washington Middle School

To support education and community well-being, Aspirus Keweenaw Hospital & Clinics is donating a state-of-the-art hydroponic garden to Washington Middle School. The project aims to cultivate not only fresh produce but also a deeper understanding of sustainable agriculture, nutrition and environmental stewardship among the students.

 

Aspirus Health is committed to promoting health and strengthening communities and recognizes the importance of education that extends beyond traditional classroom learning. The hydroponic garden donation is a step toward fostering an understanding for students of the connection between food, health and the environment.

Click here to read the exciting news!

Aspirus Keweenaw Welcomes Mark Brown, PA-C

Please join us in welcoming Mark Brown, PA-C, our newest addition to Aspirus Keweenaw Hospital & Clinics. Mark will join us in delivering a higher level of care to patients of all ages. He will begin seeing patients in Laurium the week of March 18, 2024.


A veteran of the United States Army, Mark served in the military during Operation Iraqi Freedom and supervised 27 Army Combat Medics as a Platoon Leader. Mark was also a member of the Peace Corps in Peru working on sustainable, community-based environmental projects from rural Peruvian communities.


Mark earned a Master of Physician Assistant Studies from Duke University in Durham, NC. He also holds a Master of Science degree in Botany and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Botany with a Minor in Military Science from the University of Wyoming in Laramie, WY.


Prior to joining Aspirus, Mark worked as a physician assistant at Essentia Health in Ashland, Wis.

Aspirus in the News

Could it be COPD? (Ontonagon Herald)


Aspirus welcomes chief financial officer (Daily Mining Gazette)

Welcome to Aspirus

Jody Dedamos

Surgical Technologist

Aspirus Keweenaw

Alexis Curtin

Registered Nurse

Aspirus At Home - Hospice

Welcome

Help Our Team Grow

Growth

You can help our team grow by reviewing your personal and professional networks for prospective team members and refer candidates to our organization.


You could earn a referral bonus of $500 for any new employee that is hired. You can earn a referral bonus of $2500 for any new employee hired into one of the following positions: RN, EMT/Paramedic, Med Tech/MLT, Phlebotomist, CNA, CMA, Physical Therapist, Respiratory Therapist, Imaging and Surg Tech.


See the Employee Referral Bonus Program policy in PolicyStat for full details and the referral form. Visit aspirus.org/careers to view current career opportunities at Aspirus. If you know someone right for a position, let them know we'd love for them to join our team.


Visit careers.aspirus.org to view current career opportunities at Aspirus. If you know someone right for a position, let them know we'd love for them to join our team.

Fitness Tip

Physiology of stress and how to manage it

Tips

You’ve likely experienced the physiological effects of stress—sweaty palms, racing heart, shallow breathing—and are familiar with the feeling of being overwhelmed it can bring. The stress response is part of the “fight or flight” mechanism that has helped our species thrive. However, the demands of modern life make this adaptive response problematic for our long-term well-being. 


The Physiology of Stress 

Stress can be defined as a state of disharmony or altered homeostasis within an organism. In other words, we strive to live in a stable and balanced environment, but stressful events alter homeostasis and upset the harmony of the body's systems. The body’s stress response is governed by the sympathetic nervous system. When faced with acute danger, your body responds with a cascade of physical and hormonal changes that prepare you to respond. Some of these changes include: 


  • A surge of stress hormones (epinephrine, norepinephrine and cortisol) 
  • Reduced blood flow to internal organs and increased blood flow to muscles 
  • Heightened muscle tension
  • Inhibition of immunity, digestion and reproductive functions


When confronting danger, these physiological responses play a protective role in promoting survival. Once activated, the stress response mobilizes the body’s available resources to meet the demands of a dangerous or stressful situation. Any bodily functions and processes not immediately necessary, such as growth, digestion and the maintenance of hormones responsible for reproduction, get downregulated. Unfortunately, when the perceived threat stems from constant daily pressures, these responses can impact your overall well-being. Eventually, the body’s stress response may wreak more havoc than the stressor itself, impacting numerous health outcomes. 


Chronic Stress and Body Weight 

For some people, chronic stress may be associated with higher body weight. A variety of factors underlie this relationship. While some of the hormones associated with the stress response inhibit hunger, others increase it. Cortisol typically spikes in the latter parts of the stress response and stays elevated during the recovery phase. This hormone increases hunger and motivation to eat as a means of replenishing calories that might have been lost while responding to a stressor. The body’s stress response stimulates the sensitivity of the reward system leading to cravings for hyperpalatable comfort foods, such as quick-digesting carbohydrates and those that are high in fat, and people may begin to eat for emotional reasons rather than nutritional ones. In addition, cortisol spurs an increase in fat storage, particularly around the midsection. The fat cells located in the abdomen, known as visceral fat, are particularly sensitive to cortisol and store more fat than other areas when exposed to it.

 

Chronic Stress and Digestive Function 

Digestion is rapidly inhibited during stress. Blood flow is diverted away from digestive organs, gastrointestinal enzymes responsible for breaking down food decrease, and peristalsis (the muscular contractions of the intestines that help move food along) is inhibited. When facing a critical threat, this is beneficial. Digestion is not immediately necessary and blood flow is redistributed to other working tissues, such as the muscles needed for fight or flight. When stress becomes chronic, however, this alters the flow of the digestive system, and it no longer functions efficiently. Stress can also increase markers of gastrointestinal inflammation and is related to conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome, ulcers, Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. 

 

Chronic Stress and Mental Health 

Chronic stress can negatively impact mood, and high levels of stress are related to increased rates of both depression and anxiety. Prolonged exposure to cortisol and other corticosteroids can increase feelings of anxiety and contribute to the development of depression. Elevated cortisol levels are often seen in individuals with major depression, and animals with high corticosteroid levels show symptoms of depression, such as poor sleep, reduced appetite and low libido. Additionally, individuals exposed to early-life stress are more likely to experience clinically significant mental health outcomes in adulthood. 


Chronic Stress and Disease 

Inflammation is part of the immune response to illness or injury, where white blood cells, antibodies and cytokines defend compromised tissues. Like stress, this is beneficial in the short term. Chronic inflammation, however, promotes the development of most chronic diseases. Unchecked stress can incite or perpetuate systemic inflammation, and research reveals that stress is a common risk factor in 75 to 90% of modern diseases, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, liver disease, Alzheimer’s disease and cancer. 


The Benefits of Stress 

While it may seem that stress is inherently negative, it can be beneficial. Stress can boost cognition, motivation, memory, creativity, vigilance and perseverance. Furthermore, the way we perceive a stressor has a significant impact on how it affects us. Simply viewing a stressor as a “challenge” rather than a “threat” yields better physical and psychological consequences. Stress mindsets (our attitudes and beliefs about the effects of stress) alter our behavioral and psychological responses to threats, and thus, our long-term outcomes. For example, a study examining the association of perceived stress and depression in college students found that the higher the level of stress perception the more likely the person is to experience depression. 

 

To objectively test the effect of mindset on the physiological stress response, researchers set up an experiment involving a mock interview and measured two stress hormones: cortisol and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA). As mentioned earlier, cortisol is behind some of the deleterious effects of chronic stress. It helps break down stored fuel and inhibit unnecessary systems during the stress response, but chronically high levels can hamper health. DHEA also rises during a stress response, and promotes brain growth and recovery and affects emotions, immune reactions, mood and behavior because it easily crosses the brain-blood barrier. Researchers randomly assigned participants to watch either a “stress is enhancing” or “stress is debilitating” video before their mock interviews. They found that, compared to the “stress is debilitating” group, those who watched the “stress is enhancing” video had a dramatically greater rise in DHEA, which is linked to improved health outcomes in response to stress.


Stress is a natural part of life. When unchecked, the body’s physiological response can negatively impact health. However, your mindset can transform your stress response, allowing it to enhance creativity, motivation and perseverance, ultimately helping you become more resilient in the face of future stressors.

Marketing and Communications Request

Do you need help with graphic design, website update, print, intranet, video or communication needs? There is an ONLINE FORM AVAILABLE ON THE INTRANET TO REQUEST SUPPORT FROM MARCOM. This request form should be used to request ANY marketing support.



It is crucial everyone needing Marcom support complete the marketing request form available on the Aspirus intranet. This is the most efficient way for Marcom to prioritize and manage projects and leverage the skills and experience of team members. It also helps ensure Marcom provides you the best possible service. 

 

Look for the Marketing, Communications, Graphic/Print Support link under “Service Requests” within the Work Tools & Resources menu.

Because We Love, We Lead

Every day, Aspirus staff do amazing things for our patients, visitors and each other. Here are just a few examples randomly selected from the Rewards & Recognition section on the intranet.

 

You can recognize employees who go above and beyond by visiting the Rewards & Recognition site.

Because We Love

Sara Gasperini

Clinical Optimization Coach - Specialist

Aspirus Iron River



It is such a pleasure to work with you and how knowledgeable you are for blood workflows but also all things tickets. Thank you for showing the supervised enrollment during our KEIP meeting on the fly. Very appreciated.

Melissa Detray

Medical Receptionist

Aspirus Ironwood


Thank you so much for helping get insurance information together for the new Iron River Eye Clinic. This is going to be very helpful for them!

Kathie Klenner

Laboratory Assistant ll

Aspirus Keweenaw


Thank you for returning to the lab after your shift last week to help out with the busy emergency room. It was a crazy night, and I know that your co-workers truly appreciated it. It's great to know that we have such a great team that is willing to go the extra mile for each other. Thank you!

Diane Penegor

Laundry - Housekeeping Aide

Aspirus Ontonagon


Diane reorganized the laundry and linen rooms at AOH during her first week on the afternoon shift. She did the spring cleaning of the area and organized all the clean linen to one area and organized the boxes of unwashed linens. Diane, Thank You for taking the initiative to organize this!

Winter Crisp

Ingredients

  • 3 medium pears about 1 ½ lb., peeled, cored, cut into ½” pieces
  • 3 medium apples about 1 ½ lb., peeled, cored, cut into ½” pieces
  • 1 cup cranberries fresh or frozen
  • ¼ cup raisins optional
  • ⅔ cup packed light brown sugar
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • ⅛ teaspoon ground cloves
  • ¼ teaspoon nutmeg
  • ⅛ teaspoon salt


Topping

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • ¾ cup old-fashioned oats
  • ½ cup light brown sugar
  • ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • ½ cup 1 stick unsalted butter at room temperature, cut into pieces


Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 400°.
  2. Toss pears, apples, cranberries, raisins, sugar, flour, lemon juice, and spices in a large bowl. Transfer to a 13x9” baking dish.
  3. To make the filling, whisk flour, brown sugar, cinnamon, and salt in a large bowl. Add the butter and work into dry mixture with your fingertips until pea-sized lumps form.
  4. Sprinkle topping over the fruit.
  5. Bake until filling is bubbling and streusel golden brown, about 40–45 minutes; let cool for 15 minutes before serving (if serving warm). Serve with ice cream.

Want to Include Something in the Newsletter?

Do you have an announcement, event recap, certification or important news you'd like to include in the Upper Peninsula Regional Newsletter?

 

Please send it to Regional Communications and Community Engagement Lead Jenn Jenich-Laplander ([email protected]). Provide any items for the newsletter by end-of-day Thursday for use the following week.

Be in the Know
Events & Information

CopperDog 150 Sled Dog Race | Calumet | March 1, 2 & 3


MSU Extension - New Year Healthy Lifestyle Choices Ironwood

Northstar Employee Assistance Program

Aspirus Health's employee assistance partner offers mental and emotional support services for employees and their families. Click here for information.

Chris Harff
President, UP Region

Submit newsletter contributions by noon Thursday to Jennifer.Jenich-Lapla[email protected].

Aspirus Health | Aspirus.org
Facebook  Twitter  Linkedin  Instagram  Youtube  
Do not unsubscribe from internal communications,
or you risk being removed as a recipient of other internal newsletters and communications.