Check it out…If you are a nurse, you can snag a couple yummy freebies this week in honor of Nurse’s Week!
Starting today through May 12th, Cinnabon is celebrating Nurse’s week and offering up a FREE Cinnabon Classic Roll or Mini Roll to all nurses when you show their healthcare badge. Note that there is a limit one offer per nursing professional per visit during promotion while supplies last; and no purchase is necessary.
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Nurses can also head over to Buca di Beppo this week (May 6th-10th) and snag a FREE Buca-Taster Bowl of Macaroni & Cheese with the coupon found here. Note that this offer is for dine-in only and you will need to show your hospital or Nurse’s ID.
And to all those Hip Nurses out there, I thank you for working such long hours and taking great care of all of us. We love our nurses!
Although stroke can happen to anyone, certain risk factors can increase your chances of having a “brain attack”. Studies show up to 80 percent of brain attacks can be prevented by working with a healthcare professional to reduce personal risk. Come hear Abhineet Chowdhary, MD, Neurosurgery Program Director, discuss what symptoms to watch for and what you can do to decrease your chances of a brain attack.
SnoValley Senior Center Steak Dinner & Pie Auction!
Saturday, November 10, at 4:30 & 6:30 p.m.
Join us for a delicious dinner with friends and a riotously fun chance to bid on fabulous pies baked by some of the best cooks in the Valley and auctioned off by local farmer George Magnochi. One of the Valley’s favorite fundraisers for one of the Valley’s favorite causes, our local seniors.
Steak, Chicken or Salmon with sides, dessert: Just $15. Pie that you bid on….priceless! Buy your tickets or make reservations at the Center or over the phone (425-333-4152), or buy tickets online to skip the cashiering line and go straight to your seats.
A Benefit Luncheon for Evergreen Hospice and Palliative Care Program
Thursday, November 15, 2012
11:30 AM – 1:30 PM
Lynnwood Convention Center
Support the Evergreen Healthcare Foundation for the Fourth Annual Seasons of Hope Luncheon, benefiting Evergreen’s Hospice and Palliative Care Programs and Services. These services provide for the physical, emotional and spiritual needs of people suffering from chronic and life-limiting illnesses as well as those who love them, regardless of one’s ability to pay. Hospice and Palliative Care isn’t about giving up – it’s about providing hope to people facing life-limiting illness – hope of living their lives free from pain, without fear, and in the comforting circle of family and friends.
To carry out this mission, Evergreen Hospice and Palliative Care Programs rely on your generosity. Please join them for a very special luncheon in support of these valuable services to our community.
Date: Thursday, November 15, 2012
Time: 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM
Location: Lynnwood Convention Center
Cost: $45 per person; $450 for a table of ten
October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month (NBCAM). Since the program began in 1985, mammography rates have more than doubled for women age 50 and older and breast cancer deaths have declined.
National Breast Cancer Awareness Month
This is exciting progress, but there are still women who do not take advantage of early detection at all and others who do not get screening mammograms and clinical breast exams at regular intervals.
Women age 65 and older are less likely to get mammograms than younger women, even though breast cancer risk increases with age.
Hispanic women have fewer mammograms than Caucasian women and African American women.
Women below poverty level are less likely than women at higher incomes to have had a mammogram within the past two years.
Mammography use has increased for all groups except American Indians and Alaska Natives.
If all women age 40 and older took advantage of early detection methods – mammography plus clinical breast exam – breast cancer death rates would drop much further, up to 30 percent.
The key to mammography screening is that it be done routinely – once is not enough.
For more information about NBCAM, please visit www.nbcam.org. For additional information, please call one of the following toll-free numbers: American Cancer Society,
(800) 227-2345, National Cancer Institute (NCI), (800) 4-CANCER, Y-ME National Breast Cancer Organization, (800) 221-2141.
The National Breast Cancer Awareness Month program is dedicated to increasing public knowledge about the importance of early detection of breast cancer. Fifteen national public service organizations, professional associations, and government agencies comprise the Board of Sponsors, who work together to ensure that the NBCAM message is heard by thousands of women and their families. For more information, please visit their website.
Please join us at Life Care Center of Kirkland car show featuring Bobby Medina and the Red Hot Band plus the Hep Cat Dancers.
• Outstanding door prizes for car owners!
• Free hot dogs, soda pop, popcorn and dash plaques!
• Free massages by Massage Envy!
• Have your portrait drawn by caricature artist Steve Hartley!
• Call 425-823-2323 to reserve a space for your car!
This will be an event you won’t want to miss! Free blood pressure checks by the Life Care Center of Kirkland nursing staff. Therapists available to counsel you on rehabilitation needs.
Call 425-823-2323 to reserve a space for your car, or just come and dance!
Aegis of Bothell invites you tothe Fifth Free Summer BBQ and Concert Series Kickoff!
Aegis Living of Bothell10605 NE 185th Street
Bothell, WA 98011
(425) 487-3245
Friday at 12pm, June 22, 2012
And EVERY Friday through September
Enjoy the best barbecue and summertime refreshments in our Aegis of Bothell Park. Entertainment provided by the long time 17-piece swing band The Tempos. Grandmas, Grandpas, Moms, Dads, Kids, Pets, ALL are welcome!
Five years ago, my kids’ dad died from pancreas cancer. At the time, I did not know what it was like to lose a parent. Both my parents were still living. They were still married to each other and seemed pretty content. All that changed a few months ago. My dad died. Around last Thanksgiving, he was diagnosed with lung cancer…with bone involvement, so it was pretty serious. He decided to take on treatment and fight this cancer. He definitely had ups and downs, and we could all tell he was slowing down. Slowing down…not stopping. He did his best to fight a disease that is pretty horrible. I watched my husband die from another pretty horrible cancer. It can bring out the best and the worst in people all at once. For my children and me, this was not our first major tragic event. For my mom and my siblings, it was one of the worst. They saw a disease robbing them of someone they love dearly. It would change their daily being. I know of this a bit…my life was first changed by disease and then shaken and turned upside down by the death of my husband. So my story is different than theirs…as all our stories of loss are different. When my husband died, my story was different than my kids’. Even now as I reflect on the past months and my father’s death, my experience is very different that that of my children. I had my father with me until my middle age He saw me grow up, and he met my kids. He enjoyed his last decade of life in retirement taking care of the daily duties while mom continued to work. I had plenty of time to love him and to hate him! He was there when I was toddler, a child, a snotty teenager, a young adult and grown woman. I had a dad my entire life up until a few months ago. My kids…no such luck. My youngest didn’t even have one birthday party with his dad. My older son won’t have his dad to teach him to drive or to watch him graduate…all these things my boys won’t have that I did have. Now, they don’t have their grandpa any more either. Does this make my grief in losing my dad easier than my children losing theirs? Yes, I think so. I have a lifetime of gratitude for a man who was present to me in the best way he knew how to be. Does this make it easier for my siblings, my mom? No, I don’t think so. Grief is so individual yet has so many common elements too. My grief when I lost my husband was like being swept to sea. I really thought I would drown. As time has passed and as I have worked toward my own healing and chosen life over drowning, other things that come along are easier for me to handle. I am more calm in the face of tragedy because I know I will survive. It’s almost like some warped sense of peace…and any sense of peace I will have gratefully! I think my dad had this too. His dad died when he was young. He was a young adolescent and his dad was killed in a tragic accident. He too was raised by a single mom like my boys. He had this peacefulness about him though. Maybe it is the peacefulness of knowing that we will survive even when our hearts are shattered? Maybe it isn’t? I don’t know. What I do know is that my dad had a happy adult life. He was friendly, hardworking and in general a good guy. He loved his family even though his family of origin lived through a heartbreaking experience. He risked loving and loss again after being hurt so badly. It gives me hope. It gives me that warped sense of peace again…and it gives me an example of how to move through heartbreak and tragedy. So I will mourn my dad. I will be sad. Mostly I will be grateful for his example that with even a little hope and faith life goes on…and it can be happy too!
Acupuncture has been shown to be beneficial for treating chronic pain symptoms in some individuals. Find out which conditions respond well to acupuncture and acupressure.
June 20, 2-3 pm at Life Care of Kirkland Retirement Facility, 10101 Northeast 120th Street Kirkland, WA 98034.
FEATURED SPEAKER: Helen Thayer
Helen is a renowned explorer and adventurer named as “One of the Great Explorers of the 20th Century” by National Geographic Society. The first woman to circumnavigate the North Pole solor, Helen’s philosophy of overcoming obstacles and perservering through hard times both inspires and delights her audiences.
RSVP: To RSVP click here or the RSVP Now button to the right. The Spring Luncheon cost is $50 per person.
If you have questions, feel free to call Arlene Carter, Executive Director of the Foundation at425-391-2895.
CELEBRATING SPONSORS
Presenting Sponsor: Hall Wealth Management Group of Wells Fargo Advisors
Gold Sponsors: Swedish Medical Center, US Bank, Sodexo, Denali Advanced Integration, Silver Sponsors: Fischer Plumbing, Aegis Living, Bellevue Healthcare, Overlake Medical Center, University House of Issaquah/ERA Living, Verizon
Bronze Level: NW Landscaping, Kiwanis Club of Providence Point
Thanks to these generous sponsors, all the money raised at the luncheon wil go directly to providing care for the elderly, chronically ill and disabled residents who live at Providence Marianwood.
To learn more about Ms. Thayer and her explorations and adventures, go to www.helenthayer.com