PHOTO BY BILL FAVIR WE ARE INVITED to "live in each season" as we join the many birds, crabs, fishes and other ani mals along the shore. Live In Each Season BY BILL FAVKR Our hot weather this summer reminds us we live in a place where we can cxpericncc the seasons in all their glory. We have just enough cold weather and snow to let us know about winter, i. and we have the most beautiful J springs and autumns we could imagine. Our summers arc hot and hu mid, sometimes more so than at others. We hear lots of people re mark how nice a cold winter day would be right now; just as we heard some folks yearning for summer last January. In the writings of Henry David Thoreau, we arc re minded to: Live in each season as it passes; breathe the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit, and resign yourself to the influences of each. Let these be your only di et-drink and botanical medicines... Be blown on by all the winds. Open all your pores and breathe in all the tides of nature, in all her streams and oceans, at all seasons... Grow green with spring... yellow and ripe with autumn. Drink of each season's influence as a vial, a true panacea of all remedies mixed for your espe cial use... For all nature is doing her best each moment to make us well. She exists for no other eml. Do not resist her. nature is but another name for health. While Thoreau here is writing about living off the land in a piece he calls "Huckleberries," wc can appre ciate the meanings for us today who cxpericncc the healthful aspects of the natural world. We know wc can find exercise and rest, excitement and content ment, and refreshing change of pace in a natural set ting. Such settings at this season of the year can renew us and help us put our purposes and problems in better perspective. What better advice can wc get than to "live in each season" and to enjoy this special season along the coast? So, "breathe the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit, and resign yourself to the influences of the sum mer as you join the birds and the fishes and the crabs and other creatures along the seashore. MORE LETTERS Engineer Offers Explanation For Shellfish Waters' Opening EDITOR'S NOTE: The writer is one of two engineers from Powell Asso ciates of NMB, Inc., under contract to the towns of Sunset Beach and Calabash to consult on the towns' proposed central sewer system. To the editor: Reference is made to a letter pub lished in the July 22 edition of the Beacon from Mr. Frank Nesmith re garding the temporary opening of waters to shellfishing on July 10. According to N.C. Shellfish Sani tation Branch records, certain estu arine waters in the Sunset Beach and Bird Island area were temporarily opened on July 10, 1993, and then cluscd oil July 19, 1993. Siicimsii Sanitation records also show that similar openings occurred for 31 days in 1990, and that Jjnks Creek was opened for six days in 1991. What is most interesting about this most recent temporary opening is that the opening included all estu arinc waters between the Intra coastal Waterway and the Atlantic Ocean from the N.C./S.C. state line to Ocean Isle Beach, with the excep tion of the estuarine waters directly between the island of Sunset Beach and the mainland west of the Sunset Bcach bridge (the Blanc Creek area). In other words, the opening in cluded Mad Inlet, Tubbs Inlet, Jinks Creek, and all waters west of the is land of Sunset Bcach to the state line, even including Little River Inlet, but specifically excluded the Blane Creek area. Why? There were 40 sampling locations within the area for which samples were taken on July 6 and 7, 1993, and tested for fecal coliform counts. Of the 40 samples tested, the highest fecal coliform count was measured a? sampling station 33 on Blanc Creek adjacent to the island of duusci. Bcach. This siaucn showed a fecal coliform count of 79. The next highest fccal coliform count measured was 23, which was observed at two sampling stations. One of these two stations is the con fluence of Little River and the wa terway, and the other, the Calabash River at Calabash. During periods of extended dry weather, the groundwater level gets ?ower. Tidal fluctuations do influ ence the groundwater elevation, but the degree of influence diminishes rapidly with distance inland from the ocean. Mainland pollution of cs tuarine waters from septic tank sys tcr.s, and from other sources as well, should be significantly reduced during dry weather periods. It is therefore not surprising that with no rainfall and a lowered groundwater elevation that cstuannc water quali ty, in general, will improve. But, hascd on our investigations to date, it is also not surprising to see an elevated fecal coliform count around the island, despite the lack of rain, as the island is more suscepti ble to tidal influence on groundwa ter elevations. Our previous investi gations have shown a link between scplic tank systems and water qua!: ty in the groundwater and immedi ately adjacent estuaries around the island. Samples taken by the Bruns wick County Board of Health on June 30, 1993, in the canals and es tuaries around Sunset Beach, as re ported in the Beacon, provide fur ther substantiation of the conclu sions of our investigators. We hope this information may be of benefit to Mr. Nesmith and other interested readers. James R. Billups North Myrtle Beach, S.C. Sprinkler System Treatment For Rust RG-200 Rust Remover Eliminates existing rust residues or deposits. RG-100 Plus Heavy Rust Solution Rust stain preventative solution. ? Safe ? Effective ? Economical Rust Prevention MILLIKEN HOME CENTER The Shallotte Electric Stores, Bus. Hwy. 17, Shallotte ? 754-6000 RUST TUNING Baby, You Can Drive My Car I've suspected all along lhal there would come a day of atonement lor my misspent youth. It's so close now I can smell it. By the end of this summer, my 15-year-old son Patrick will possess legal authority to operate a motor vehicle as long as 1 am there. In the "death scat." Curled in the fetal po sition with my face contorted in a silent scream reminiscent of Edvard Munch's "The Cry." This is serious business for both of us. For three hours a day for the past two weeks, we've left home every morning at 7:30 to get him to driver's education class, after which he has ? without pleading, threaten ing or any manipulation whatsoever from mc ? actually studied the man ual. For the past several Sunday after noons, he has disappeared to the car port with a handful of cassettc tapes to spend hours washing and waxing our vehicles and cruising all ten feet of driveway to the sounds of bands with names like Green Jelly. He even bought a can of paste wax with ? and only 1 know how in credible this is ? his own money. "I'm going to be driving them, so I want them to look good," he says, his expression as sincere as the witch's must have been as she sat Hansel and Gretel down to a sump tuous meal. 1 am thankful for driver's cd. It's one facet of my parental responsibil ity I cheerfully abdicate to the N.C. Department of Public Instruction. I grew up in South Carolina, where you could get a daytime dri Lynn Carlson / ver's liccnsc at 15. I got mine after my dad look me out in the country and put me behind the wheel of a '64 Chevy Impala until I could stay in the right lane without having to squint and line up the chrome hood trim with the shoulder of the road. My only classroom training was what we called "hamburger on the highway" films from the Highway Patrol. These gruesome shockumen laries were shown in health class ? usually after lunches of cold greasy barbecue and warm coleslaw ? in a futile effort to dissuade our class mates who owned GTOs and Super Sports from exceeding the posted speed limits. As if they had any brains to leave on the pavement... I'd like to think that the kinder, gentler modem method of driver's education will leave my only child with a keen sense of responsibility and a profound awareness that the most dangerous thing about a motor vehicle is the loose nut behind the steering wheel. For his own protection, I wish I could find him a Chevy like the one 1 drove. By 1969 standards, it wasn't a big car. Today, it would be a veri table land yacht, with length and breadth of steel able to withstand al most any serious assault by Hyundai or Toyota. A side benefit would be that he'd only be able it) afford a fraction of the cruising 1 could gel for my 32.1> cents a gallon (plus a quart of trans mission fluid every fill-up.) My childless friends attempt 10 soothe me into this new era by say ing things like, "Just think, you won't have to run any errands after he gets his license. You can send him after groceries, to return ihe videos, 10 lake the cal to the vet..." Like I don't remember the fact that as a teenager 1 never ran a sin gle errand that took less than four hours. And that I have yet to pro duce a dime of change from those many fives, tens and twenties with which I was entrusted. Like 1 don't remember that any errand, be it only a half-block mis sion to fetch the dry cleaning, was a call to cruise every high school hangout in town. In my little town these included Hardee's, the Tastcc Free/, and the football stadium, any of one which was five miles from another. It was necessary, of course, to slay at each place for a little while in order to sec and be seen. And Mama surely would understand how all that errand-running had left me with a hunger only a chili chcesedog and fries could satisfy, even though sup per might be on the table at home that very minute. After all, it was just a couple of bucks. Her bucks. They don't call it a trip to the cleaners' for nothing. GUEST COLUMN Program Reduces Medicaid Costs , Improves Care Quality BY \V. VANCE FRYE Ten years ago, the Kate B. Rey nolds Charitable Trust received a proposal to fund a program designed to achieve two objectives that many people considered to be in direct conflict: to reduce Medicaid costs and to improve the quality of health care for Medicaid recipients. Today, after three grants from the trust totaling S744.000 and thou sands of hours invested in education, training and coalition-building, Car olina ACCESS, a managed health care program, has proved its merit and is being expanded to reach al most every person in North Carolina who is eligible for Medicaid. That it has taken 10 years for the demonstration project to get this far illustrates that changing the health care system takes time, patience and cooperation. It also illustrates that, with the proper approach, costs can be reduced at the same time quality of care is improved. The Division of Medical Assis tance, which operates the state's Medicaid program, projects that Carolina ACCESS will generate a net savings for the state of S778.000 in Medicaid costs this year, S2.0 million in 1994 and S3. 5 million in 1995. Full implementation of the program could result in savings of S30 million a year. At the same time, thousands of people ? many of them children and the elderly ? now have their own personal physicians for the first time. As the nation struggles with the question of how best to reform the health care system. North Carolina has already begun to address the problem through Carolina ACCESS. It is becoming a model for other states, and many people see it as a bridge between today's system and the health care delivery system of the future for the nation's poor. The project was conceived and has been nurtured along by Jim Bernstein and staff of the North Carolina Foundation for Alternative Health Care Programs (NCFAHCP) in conjunction with the Division of Medical Assistance, a unit of the Department of Human Resources. The original concept of the founda tion was to build public-private part nerships that address health care needs in the state, and Carolina AC CESS was an excellent example ot what could be attempted. Although it is a quasi-governmen tal organization, NCFAHCP has transcended state politics. It was es tablished in 1982 during the admin istration of Democratic Gov. Jim Hunt, received support during the two terms of Republican Gov. Jim Martin and continues with Hunt again in the Governor's Office. The goal of Carolina ACCESS is to provide quality health care ser vices to all citizens, regardless of their ability to pay, without exhaust ing the state's limited resources. Its original objectives were to: ?Improve access to comprehen sive and quality health care for the poor: ?Improve the participation of pri mary care physicians in Medicaid: ?Reduce inappropriate use of emergency rooms, specialists and in-patient services; ?Strengthen the patient/health care provider relationship; ?Promote the educational and preventive aspccts of health care; ?Maximize the investment in care for recipients. Those were lofty objectives, con sidering the challenge in changing the system. To achieve them, NC FAHCP had to deal with a large number of parties, many with vested interests. It also had to obtain wai vers from the Health Care Financing Administration, secure massive changes in the state's computer sys tems and create behavioral changes among Medicaid recipients. The role of the Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust has been to provide the funding for the administrative, technical and educational support needed to get Carolina ACCESS on a sound footing. NCFAHCP provided staffing throughout the nine startup years. Now that the program is estab lished, full responsibility and control has been transferred to the Division of Medical Assistance, and the two foundations can give their attention to other innovative programs. The demonstration project was conducted in Wilson County in the mid-1980s at the request of the med ical community there. During the first year of operation, the average number of hospital days per Med icaid patient declined by 58 percent. The net savings to the state and to Wilson County was more than S300,(XX) in that 12-month period. Ironically, the two private clinics that were involved in starting the project have been dissolved by the participating physicians, and Wilson County is rebuilding its program. In 1991, after two years of prepa ration, the demonstration was ex tended to Durham, Edgecombe, Henderson and Moore counties. Local implementation continue 1 to advance painstakingly, gaining pri vate support and recipient participa tion while responding to territorial concerns of local government units. The results in these counties mir rored the results in Wilson. An inde pendent report by the Office of State IN-HOME Therapeutic, professional massage given in the privacy of your own home or mine, for your convenience. Please call and make your appointment today. (919) 754-7705 I C1993 THE BRUNSWICK B?ACON | Budget and Management document ed a net savings of S25 per Medicaid recipient between September 1991 and February 1992 in the initial five counties. Currently, 16 counties arc partici pating in the program: Beaufort, Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Dur ham, Edgecombe, Forsyth, Greene, Harnett, Haywood, Henderson, Ma dison, Moore, Nash, Pitt and Wayne. The Division of Medical Assis tance wisely has resisted pressure to hurry the program across the state. The division is adding counties only as they indicate a desire to partici pate and demonstrate a capability to implement and sustain the program. Approximately 85,(XX) citizens arc enrolled now, and it is projected that enrollment will increase to 3(X),(XX) within two years. In the participating counties, Car olina ACCESS has the support of primary care physicians, private clinics and hospitals, the Depart ment of Social Services, the Depart ment of Public Health and local gov ernmental leaders as well as the re cipients of Medicaid. These local coalitions have been built one at a time across the state. As a managed carc program, Car olina ACCESS enlists the participa tion of primary care physicians and allows them to accept any number of Medicaid patients up to 1,200. Physicians usually take only a small number of patients until they be come comfortable with the program. They agree to provide Medicaid re cipients with 24-hour availability of primary care or referrals for other neccssary medical services, just as they would do for their other pa tients. In addition to their normal Ice for services, they receive a S3-a month administrative fee for each Medicaid patient assigned to them. Medicaid recipients arc permitted to choose their primary carc physi cian from among the list of partici pating physicians in their county. Once they have made that choice, all of their health care is coordinated through that physician. If they try to see another care-giver, they arc told that they first need the approval of their primary care physician. This practicc has reduced inappropriate use of emergency rooms, has virtu ally eliminated the duplication of services and prescription cum* and has provided a continuity of preven tive carc that reduces the likcliluxxl of more expensive carc later. The dilemma for all states has been how to provide quality health carc services to all citizens, regard less of their ability to pay, without exhausting the state's limited re sources. While many states have fo cuscd on reducing costs through their Medicaid managed carc pro grams, North Carolina has attempted to find ways to get more mileage out of currcni resources. Few states have changcd the delivery and utilization of health carc services as successful ly and substantially as North Car olina has been able to do through Carolina ACCESS. Vance Frye is director of the Health Care Division, Kate B. Rey nolds Health Care Trust, Winston Salem.