Idaho
UnitedHealthcare Commits $335,000 to Idaho Organizations To Expand Health Care Workforce and Access To Care
October 03, 2024–(BUSINESS WIRE)–UnitedHealthcare today announced a $335,000 commitment in funding to Idaho organizations to help close gaps in care among underserved communities, including people in rural areas, individuals with chronic conditions and seniors.
“Expanding programs for caregivers, community health workers and providers allows us to address unmet health needs more effectively, helping to ensure that underserved communities access high-quality care and social services they need,” said Dr. Alex Billioux, Government Programs Chief Medical Officer, UnitedHealthcare. “By equipping our health care workers with the necessary resources and training, we can help improve health outcomes and quality of life for all Idahoans.”
Idahoans have experienced increasing food insecurity1 and 10% of the adult population annually report living with diabetes.2 Additionally, Idaho ranks 38th for availability of primary care physicians and 33rd for availability of mental health providers nationally.3
Organizations supported through this commitment include:
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Alzheimer’s Association (Greater Idaho Chapter and Washington State Chapter) and Idaho Caregiver Alliance ($60,000) to train 500 Direct Care Workers on Alzheimer’s essentials to improve care for individuals with memory-related conditions.
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Area Agency on Aging of North Idaho ($35,000) to expand transportation options in rural Northern Idaho, allowing individuals to choose the transportation options that best suit their needs.
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Centers for Independent Living (Disability Action Center Northwest, Living Independence Network Corporation and LIFE, A Center for Independent Living) ($25,000) to expand access to assistive technologies and durable medical equipment to constituents through its “loan libraries” and build capacity on self-direction, a long-term care service delivery model which empowers people to maintain independence at home and control the support they receive.
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Diabetes Alliance of Idaho ($50,000) to support innovative diabetes prevention programs for older adults in Hispanic or American Indian communities.
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Idaho Caregiver Alliance ($30,000) to the Family Caregiver Navigator to support their efforts to connect caregivers with local resources, like respite care, to enhance the caregiver’s quality of life.
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Idaho State University ($50,000) to increase access to health care for members of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes by supporting an apprentice serving tribe members while completing a certified Community Health Representative program.
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Southwest Idaho Area Agency on Aging ($20,000) to enhance access to the “Living Well with Diabetes” program to teach individuals with diabetes and their caregivers about healthy living with chronic health conditions.
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Western Idaho Community Health Collaborative ($50,000) to implement its Regional Health Implementation plan, including promoting findhelpidaho.org, a website which connects Idahoans with social care and community resources, especially in rural areas.
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The Idaho Food Bank ($15,000) to pilot a program where food delivery personnel offer companionship and social interaction to address both food insecurity and social isolation.
“With UnitedHealthcare’s generous support, we can significantly enhance our efforts to provide equitable diabetes prevention programs, particularly for older adults and underserved communities,” said Dorothy Plaza, chair, Diabetes Alliance of Idaho (DAI). “This funding will implement and expand evidence-based programs, ultimately helping reduce the impact of diabetes across Idaho.”
UnitedHealthcare serves more than 160,000 members enrolled in employer-sponsored, individual and Medicare plans in Idaho, with a network of 50 hospitals and over 12,000 physicians and other care providers statewide. For more information on how UnitedHealthcare is working to build healthier communities across Idaho, visit uhccs.com/id.
About UnitedHealthcare
UnitedHealthcare is dedicated to helping people live healthier lives and making the health system work better for everyone by simplifying the health care experience, meeting consumer health and wellness needs, and sustaining trusted relationships with care providers. In the United States, UnitedHealthcare offers the full spectrum of health benefit programs for individuals, employers, and Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries, and contracts directly with more than 1.7 million physicians and care professionals, and 7,000 hospitals and other care facilities nationwide. The company also provides health benefits and delivers care to people through owned and operated health care facilities in South America. UnitedHealthcare is one of the businesses of UnitedHealth Group, a diversified health care company. For more information, visit UnitedHealthcare at www.uhc.com or follow UnitedHealthcare on LinkedIn.
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1 https://idahofoodbank.org/feeding-americas-annual-map-the-meal-gap-report-shows-increase-in-food-insecurity/
2 https://healthandwelfare.idaho.gov/health-wellness/diseases-conditions/diabetes
3 https://assets.americashealthrankings.org/app/uploads/allstatesummaries-ahr23.pdf
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241002911522/en/
Contacts
UHC Media Contact:
Jon Fenech
Jon_Fenech@uhc.com, (763) 361-1127
Idaho
College of Idaho Professor Awarded Prestigious Barker Fellowship from Durham University – The College of Idhao
Dr. Greg McElwain, Professor and Chair of Philosophy and Religious Studies at The College of Idaho, has been awarded a Barker Fellowship from Durham University in the United Kingdom. The fellowship is a prestigious, one-month residential award that supports scholars at all career stages in conducting original research using Durham’s libraries and archives.
During his fellowship next summer, Dr. McElwain will work in Durham’s historic Palace Green Library, where he will access the Mary and Geoff Midgley Papers collection. Using correspondence, publication manuscripts, research notes, and other materials, he will advance his forthcoming book, Mary Midgley on What Matters: Conversations on Science, Ethics, and Nature (Bloomsbury, 2026), and develop a high-quality companion website to complement the work.
The Barker Fellowship recognizes scholars who are expanding the frontiers of knowledge through archival research and intellectual collaboration. Dr. McElwain’s work at Durham continues his longstanding commitment to exploring the intersections of science, ethics, and the natural world.
Learn more about the fellowship here.
Idaho
New Idaho Falls business provides custom prosthetics and breast replacements – East Idaho News
OrthoPro at 3438 South 15th East, Suite 100, in Idaho Falls provides custom prosthetics and mastectomy products for customers. In the video above, Christine Miller shows what the breast replacement products are like. | Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com
Do you want to know what’s happening in the eastern Idaho business scene? We’ve got you covered. Here is a rundown of this week’s business news across the valley.
BIZ BUZZ
IDAHO FALLS
Idaho Falls couple behind prosthetics and mastectomy business say it’s a joy to serve customers
IDAHO FALLS – Helping people improve the quality of their lives is a cause that brings Rod and Christine Miller a lot of joy.
They are the faces behind OrthoPro, a business that provides customized prosthetic limbs and mastectomy products. It opened in September at 3438 South 15th East, Suite 100, in Idaho Falls.
Christine tells EastIdahoNews.com she’s thrilled to be one of only two mastectomy fitters in the state and explains more about what they offer.
“There are shops that sell some of the pocketed bras, but none of them are certified (by prosthetic, orthotic and mastectomy practitioners),” Christine says. “I (primarily) do off-the-shelf (products). I can do custom, if off-the-shelf doesn’t work. Rod’s expertise is that he can do custom fit (braces or prosthetics).”
Rod says the certifications from the American Board of Certification for Prosthetics and Orthotics and the Board of Certification is a big deal because it requires continual education and experience.
Christine says patients in need of mastectomy products are often unaware of what options are available. Educating people about it is her passion. See what it’s like in the video above.
There are limited options for this service in eastern Idaho and that’s what prompted them to open a business in Idaho Falls.
Although the couple have ties to the area, they were the owners of OrthoPro in Carson City, Nevada, for 25 years. Michael Johnson recently launched the company in Twin Falls, and the Millers sold the Nevada business to work for him and launch an Idaho Falls branch.
“Mike and Stacey up in Twin Falls knew that I had come to the end of that journey. I have family in Rigby, which includes three grandkids. They said, ‘How would you like to come and work for us?’ We said, ‘Let’s do it,’” Rod says.
The seeds for Rod’s interest in this profession stem back to his childhood. His dad was diagnosed as a Type 1 diabetic in his mid-30s because of exposure to Agent Orange, a chemical used by the U.S. during the Vietnam War.
Rod’s dad served in the Navy for 24 years. The exposure to the toxic chemicals damaged his immune system. His body started attacking vital organs as a result. His pancreas was destroyed, which stopped the production of insulin. He was eventually diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes.
“A lot of diabetics end up becoming amputees. They often lose sensation in their feet due to circulatory problems because of high blood sugar,” Christine explains.
Rod’s dad never lost a limb, but making prosthetics for veterans became a cause he was passionate about during retirement.
Rod’s upbringing made him interested in health science. When he started college, he decided to follow in his dad’s footsteps.
Decades later, Rod says it’s been a joy to help change people’s lives for the better. He starts to tear up as he recalls people he’s helped over the years.
“We watch them go from dragging their foot when they come in to looking around as they walk out because they no longer have to stare at the ground and worry about walking on it,” he says.
Christine expresses a similar sentiment, but with a caveat.
“My job brings some joy to women, but it’s not life-changing. They can get by without it. I like to say I can scatter sunshine,” she says.
The Idaho Falls office is currently open on a part-time basis because the Millers serve clients in Twin Falls two days a week. They’re hoping to have a full-time presence in Idaho Falls soon.
To schedule an appointment or learn more, call (208) 733-0505. You can also visit the website.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT…
Pocatello’s oldest family-run restaurant opens brand new food truck
Boutique store with custom hat and denim bar opening in downtown Idaho Falls
New gym in Ammon offering $1 memberships for a limited time
Lumber company opens ‘appetizer version’ of larger store coming to Idaho Falls in 2027
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Idaho
Idaho higher ed enrollment increases across state
Lewis-Clark State College: 4,037, a 4.1% increase
College of Eastern Idaho: 3,351, a 10.2% increase
Total: 89,073, a 4.2% increase
The State Board headcounts include full- and part-time degree-seeking students, and career-technical students. They do not include dual-credit enrollment: high school students taking college classes.
The new headcounts show a continued surge, after Idaho colleges and universities recovered from an enrollment decline during the COVID-19 pandemic. Headcount is up 19.1% since fall 2020.
Colleges and universities must file fall enrollment reports with the State Board by Oct. 15. The State Board provided this data to Idaho Education News on Friday.
However, college and university leaders have already been touting highlights from their fall numbers: a record in-state freshman class at Boise State; Idaho State’s highest enrollment in 13 years; record undergraduate enrollment at the U of I; and LC State headcount surpassing 4,000 for the first time in school history.
A heightened sense of urgency surrounds the 2025 enrollment report. College administrators in Idaho and across the nation have long been bracing for a “demographic cliff” — a dwindling number of college-aged students, resulting from lower birth rates during the Great Recession.
This demographic dropoff hasn’t hit yet, in Idaho or nationally. According to a National Student Clearinghouse Research Center report issued Tuesday, higher education enrollment is up by 2% nationally.
Nationally, enrollment at four-year schools is up by 1.9%, while community college enrollment is up by 4%. Idaho’s enrollment is up by 4.2% across the board, at four-year schools and community colleges alike.
Idaho Education News is a nonprofit supported on grants from the J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Family Foundation, the Education Writers Association and the Solutions Journalism Network.
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