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HealthNews

The making of two M.A.s

HealthNews · October 15, 2018 ·

“I’d been working at Starbucks for 8 years and 3 months, and it was about 8 years and 3 months too long.”

No disrespect intended to the international coffee giant. Life just had other plans for Alisha Liedtke.

After a stint selling bamboo sheets for Costco across the continental U.S., Liedtke found herself wanting something that kept her closer to home, and to husband Drew, who at the time was getting his Master of Fine Arts from CWU.

“We’d lived in Ellensburg for three years,” Liedtke recalls, “but I’d never been part of the town.”

She was ready for a change.

Photo: Flores and Liedtke take a moment to confer in a clinic exam room.

Liedtke found a local job opening for a scribe in a clinical environment at Kittitas Valley Healthcare. She applied, and was chosen out of more than forty applicants for the position. “I thought it was an established program,” she laughs. “Turns out I was the first one.”

Soon, Liedtke found herself working alongside teammates José Diaz, April Grant, Laurie Rost, and Carrie Barr, laying the groundwork for the program now in place at KVH, where scribes serve in exam rooms alongside patients and providers, handling the computer charting during the visit.

Rightfully proud of what the team accomplished, Liedtke sees the scribe’s role as “helping the provider to focus on patients.” Now, much of the documentation work that added hours to a provider’s already long day rests in the capable hands of scribes.

Six months before Liedtke began her journey at KVH Family Medicine – Ellensburg, Flores became the newest dietary aide in Food and Nutrition Services at KVH Hospital. Unlike Liedtke, the healthcare setting was familiar to Flores. The daughter of an RN, “I’ve always worked in the medical field,” she explains. “I got my CNA (Certified Nurse Assistant) when I was 16.”

She put that degree to good use for the next 16 years, working as a residential trainer for people with disabilities, then at a nursing home.

About a year into her time in the KVH kitchen, Flores underwent surgery. While convalescing, she received a call from Chief Clinic Officer Carrie Barr, asking Flores if she’d be interested in becoming a medical assistant (MA).

It was a tough decision for Flores to make.

“I’ve always wanted to work in a doctor’s office,” she admits, “but I was thinking about my family in the hospital kitchen. I loved working with everyone there. It was comfortable, and I didn’t want to leave them hanging.”

Around the same time, Liedtke got a call of her own. She was summoned to the manager’s office for a private meeting. “I was terrified! What did I do?” she’d wondered. She then learned that KVH was about to launch another program in the clinics, this time an apprenticeship for medical assistants.

They asked me, “Are you interested?”

That one question led to some sleepless nights for Liedtke, who would be facing yet another major transition. Being an MA “is a whole different ballgame,” she says. “And I’d also be leaving a job that really nurtured me into becoming the person I was supposed to be.”

Despite their initial hesitancy, both women ultimately made the courageous decision to move forward into the exciting world of medical assistants.

Things took off quickly once the apprenticeship began. After a one-day orientation, they shadowed with their coaches (certified MAs), who roomed patients, gave immunizations and EKGs, and did documentation and data entry. “By Day 3, we felt comfortable,” recalls Liedtke. “The coaches were still there, but we were ‘driving.’”

Now that the one-year apprenticeship is drawing to a close, Flores and Liedtke both agree they made the right decision.

“I can’t believe how much I love it,” beams Liedtke. “I’m doing things now that in the past I’d only hoped for. I’m living this life I never could have imagined for myself. I get to wake up and put on PJs (scrubs) and go to work and help patients all day. It’s like the greatest job in the world!”

Flores agrees. “It’s never boring.” As a mother of two, Flores is a hit with the clinic’s pediatric patients. Other than her son Colton and daughter Dakotah, “I’ve never worked with children before,” says Flores. She quickly got past that barrier, finding ways to encourage youngsters who often aren’t thrilled about being at the clinic. “No matter how they do, with their parents’ permission, I give them a popsicle and tell them ‘Thanks for being a good kid. You’re a super hero!’”

The two women’s families are also thrilled, with both mothers aspiring even more for their girls. “My mom thinks I should become an RN,” says Flores, who loves her work as an MA and is content to continue in that role. Young Dakotah feels the same way: “‘It’s more of a mom job you’re doing now,’” she recently told Flores. “’I can say I’m proud of you.’” That, along with the clinic’s family-friendly schedule, is as much of a reward as Flores could ever want.

In the same selfless way that they care for their patients, Flores and Liedtke encourage others to join them in considering an apprenticeship. “If you love the idea of patient care, it’s absolutely the way to go,” says Liedtke. And while program graduates agree to stay with KVH for at least one year, both women find the idea of working elsewhere amusing.

Says Liedtke, “I’m never leaving this place.” Flores nods and smiles gently, “I’d say we’re spoiled.”

Surely, these remarkable ladies’ shared passion for patient care somehow makes us all a little better.

Wendy Hinckle

HealthNews · October 2, 2018 ·

Wendy Hinckle

She’s got a spring in her step and a gleam in her eye. While that’s nearly always been true of Wendy Hinckle, there’s now an unmistakable air of gratitude behind her smile.

It’s the kind of expression that tells a story all on its own.

“I feel so lucky,” beams the retired elementary school teacher.

“I’ve had mammograms regularly since I was probably 40.” As the years passed, Hinckle’s friends began their private battles with breast cancer. “Statistically, I became a bit fearful of what the results of my own tests might be.”

Last year, at age 68, she received the news she’d been dreading.

“I got a call from KVH that something was spotted and they needed an ultrasound,” recalls Hinckle. “So I had my ultrasound the day before I went to Arizona for the winter.”

In November 2017, a little over a year after The Foundation at KVH began its focused campaign to bring digital mammography to Kittitas County, KVH Hospital went online with the service.

In January, Hinckle underwent a biopsy in Tucson. On February 6, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. “Grade 1, stage 1, level 1. Thank God.” The cancer had been caught in its early stages.

What she learned next was shocking.

According to the radiation oncologist, “I’d probably had the cancer for 5-8 years,” said Hinckle. What she heard from other Arizona providers supported that claim. “One doctor said it wouldn’t have been picked up on a traditional mammography unit because it was so small,” she remembers. “Another said because of where it was located, it might not have been picked up earlier.”

Two weeks after the diagnosis, Hinckle had a lumpectomy, followed by 20 days of radiation. Upon returning to Ellensburg, her oncology care resumed at Yakima’s North Star Lodge, with checkups every three months, and a mammogram just before the one-year mark.

“I’m not a super dynamo, I don’t have a huge amount of energy. I just have to manage my time,” says Hinckle, who stays active as a rule and even found a way to keep busy during her cancer treatments, focusing on training her shih tzu, Yumi, for novice and intermediate tricks certification. “The day after I was diagnosed, I went to the tricks class and we started training. It was great because it kept my mind off of what I was going through.”

Today, Hinckle stays active in the local SAIL program, and enjoys tai chi. “I also love to play games,” she admits, meeting each week for pinochle with a group that includes other retired teachers. And while she and her husband Kirk flee to warmer climes each winter, Hinckle maintains her deep roots in Kittitas County, where she’s served as a Gallery One board member for nearly two decades. A lifelong lover of the arts, her pride in the gallery’s current direction is evident: “We’re really getting involved with schools now and reaching out to the community.”

That’s the passion of a teacher with plans to give and grow, for many years to come. It’s also why she’s happy to share her cancer story – so that others can learn. “I strongly encourage women to get mammograms,” she says, recalling a friend who recently had her first mammogram after learning of Hinckle’s experience.

“I really want to express my gratitude to KVH – the hospital and the foundation – for raising the money for digital mammography,” says Hinckle. “For seeing that Ellensburg needed to catch up with the technology that’s out there, because it’s possible if I would have had another traditional scan, it would have been missed again.”

Grilled Fajita Medley

HealthNews · August 14, 2018 ·

Fajitas are a staple in our household for an easy week-night dinner. Grilled fajitas take on a whole new twist! Summer is great for throwing things on the grill and having your meal quickly without heating up your house. Try this recipe tonight!

 Grilled Fajita Medley

Grilled Fajita Medley


Ingredients:

•4 steaks of choice (we used porterhouse and bottom round steaks)
•3 green bell peppers
•4 jalapenos
•8-10 large carrots, cut in half
•2 small red onions
•1 lb of mushrooms
•2 tbs chili powder
•2 tsp cumin
•2 tsp smoked paprika
•2 tsp garlic powder
•1 tsp onion powder
•Salt and pepper to taste
•1 lime, juiced
•1 tbs olive or avocado oil


Directions:
In a small mixing bowl, combine together your seasonings, lime juice, and oil. Mix well! In a large mixing bowl or Ziploc bag, combine your veggies and pour your seasoning mixture into the bag and make sure to coat well. Set aside and prepare your steaks. If you like a lot of flavor, use the same seasonings as your veggies! Looking for something a bit more simple? Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Preheat your grill to medium heat. Once ready, place your veggies (it’s best to put the mushrooms on a skewer) and steaks onto the grill. Flip your vegetable after about 5 mins as well as your steaks. If more time is needed, flip again until you have grill marks on both side and your steak is cooked to desired doneness.
Enjoy for the week with burrito bowl lunches or serve this up for a big family dinner!

Coconut Flour Zucchini Bread

HealthNews · August 14, 2018 ·

Looking for a low carb, high-fiber and protein way to enjoy bread? Look no further! We combined coconut flour, farm fresh eggs, and backyard grown zucchini into this delicious bread. Bake this today for a healthy breakfast on-the-go for the morning.

Coconut Flour Zucchini Bread

Ingredients:
•6 large eggs
•1/2 cup oil (we used walnut oil!)
•1 tsp vanilla
•1/3 cup honey
•2 tsp cinnamon
•1 tsp baking powder
•½ tsp baking soda
•Dash of salt
•1 cup grated zucchini, squeezed to drain out the liquid.
•OPTIONAL: 3 tbs protein powder & chocolate chips!

Directions:
Preheat your oven to 375 degrees F. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together your eggs, oil, vanilla and honey until well combined. In a smaller, separate bowl, combine your flour, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon and salt and mix well. Combine your dry ingredients into the large mixing bowl with your egg mixture. Gently stir until well combined. Fold in your zucchini making sure that you have drained most of the moisture out so not to disturb the structure of the bread. Add in your optional ingredients at this point if you wish. Pour your batter into a well-oiled bread pan and bake for 34-45 minutes or until your bread is firm in the center. Top with honey and enjoy!

Stephanie Brown

HealthNews · August 1, 2018 ·

Stephanie Brown

She’s an active retiree who loves to travel, spend time with family, go RV camping and spend a month each year at Mariners spring training in Arizona. But when Stephanie Brown’s left knee kept going out and pain threatened to disrupt her step and her lifestyle, she knew she had to do something.

Brown, a Yakima resident, turned to Dr. Gary Bos of KVH Orthopedics in Ellensburg.

Bos may not have an organized fan club like the Mariners do, but if he did the 69-year-old Brown just might be at the helm. In 2015, Bos replaced her left knee. Duly impressed, two years later she had him do the other one.

That Brown turned to Bos was hardly accidental. After all, when her husband Ron needed knee replacement surgery in 2012, their oldest daughter – then a surgical tech in Yakima – insisted he have Bos do it. “She knew Dr. Bos. She’d watched him do surgery and she knew his reputation,” Brown says.

The rest is history.

With Ron readily sharing his experience, word spread. Ron’s best friend soon followed suit and had a knee replacement. Then came the best friend’s wife, who also happens to be Stephanie Brown’s best friend. Stephanie’s first surgery followed a week or so later.

“Another friend who’d had surgery done by someone else came up to see Dr. Bos and had some repairs done,” Brown says. “I have another girl friend who had her knee done six or eight weeks ago.”

But Brown is nothing but serious when she talks about Bos and her experience at KVH. Besides his professionalism, Bos was warm, personable and a good communicator who not only listened to her concerns – but heard them. “One of the nice things was that he did a local anesthesia so I didn’t have to recover from general anesthesia,” she says. “That was one of my big fears.”

And it isn’t just Bos who makes the KVH experience memorable, she says. It’s the atmosphere of warmth and caring she says permeates the KVH environment. “I don’t know who is responsible,” she says. “My husband raved about it when he had his surgery done. You see it everywhere in the hospital. The girls at the front desk are very friendly and helpful as are all the other people you meet in pre-op, radiology, everywhere. I absolutely cannot complain about anyone. Everyone takes great care of you.”

They also go above and beyond when they see a need, she says. Case in point: When her best friend’s husband began to feel badly while waiting for his wife during a pre-op appointment in Bos’s office. “He was not feeling good, not looking good,” Brown says. “One of Dr. Bos’s receptionists saw that and said, ‘I’m taking him over to the hospital’ and put him in a wheelchair and took him over to the Emergency Department,” Brown says. “They immediately got him in. Because it was a heart problem he was transferred to a hospital in Yakima.”

On the day the man’s wife had her knee surgery, he stopped by Bos’s office to personally deliver a bouquet of flowers and an appreciative “thank you” to the staff member who helped him. “He says she saved his life,” Brown says.

“If I could come here for everything I needed to go to a hospital for I would be here in a flash,” she adds with a smile. “ It’s that good.”

Alaric Hathaway

HealthNews · April 27, 2018 ·

Alaric Hathaway

Summer Hathaway was panicked.

Standing on the shoulder of Kittitas Highway holding her unconscious baby in one arm, she tossed things out of her van with the other in a desperate bid to attract attention.

Cars flew by, drivers seemingly unfazed by the scene unfolding on the side of the road. Then a stranger pulled over and uttered words Hathaway will never forget: “What can I do?”

The stranger was Kittitas Valley Healthcare’s Sarah Martin, patient service representative by occupation, Good Samaritan by inclination.

It happened late on the afternoon of March 3.

Hathaway, who lives in Kittitas, was driving her then 15-month-old son Alaric to the emergency room at KVH Hospital. That day Alaric had come down with a rash and fever, the same symptoms he’d had before suffering a seizure that shut down his airway during a visit to California six months earlier. Hathaway’s 19-year-old son, Triston McCowin, who has Down Syndrome, was riding in the back with Alaric when he told their mother Alaric was “sleeping.”

“I heard the baby gasping for breath,” Hathaway recalls. “I pulled over. I called 911.”

Enter Martin.

“As I drove by I saw Summer just throw the stroller out,” she recalls. “She was moving really fast. I just knew something was wrong. It was a gut feeling. My mom has always told us, since we were little, trust your gut – it’s usually right.

“I knew there was no way I could drive by and keep going and be OK with it. It would have haunted me if I could have helped and didn’t.”

Alaric Hathaway

So Martin turned around at the No. 6 Road and came back around. Neither a nurse nor a doctor, Martin didn’t know what she could do. So she did what for her comes naturally: She opened her arms and her heart.

Standing on the side of that road as vehicles rushed by, she held Alaric and talked to him.

When the paramedics arrived to transport Alaric to KVH Hospital, she offered to drive Hathaway’s van, an offer a grateful Hathaway declined. “Once I handed him off to the paramedics I was calmer,” says Hathaway, who continued on to the hospital with Triston.

And Martin?

Calm and determined to do whatever was needed when she stopped, emotion overwhelmed her when she went back to her car. “I just broke down in tears. I just wanted to hug my boys,” says Martin, the mother of two young sons.

As for Alaric, he was treated in the KVH Emergency Department, then airlifted a couple of hours later to Children’s Hospital in Seattle.

“The KVH emergency department was amazing,” Hathaway says. “The staff communicated with us and really showed they cared. They were taking care of us as well as Alaric.”

Since that day Alaric, whose parents call him the “miracle baby” they were told they would never have, has been in and out of Children’s.

Diagnosed with Chiari malformation, a condition in which the brain tissue extends into the spinal column, he may be headed for surgery. He’s also been diagnosed with epilepsy after another seizure in early April while in Seattle.

In the midst of dealing with the challenges Alaric faces, Hathaway says she will never forget Martin’s kindness. “I had a half-naked, unconscious baby in my arms and everybody was just going by,” she says, her voice emotional. “I think I would have been out of my mind if Sarah hadn’t stopped.”

Connie Dunnington

HealthNews · April 1, 2018 ·

Connie Dunnington

When her husband Bob died in a motorcycle accident sixteen years ago, Connie Dunnington understood that life as she knew it had changed.

The couple, married 13 years, were parents of two daughters, then 12 and 10.

Connie knew she needed to redefine her family’s life, creating some new traditions while preserving others. So she resumed an old love – horseback riding, sold the building that had housed Bob’s orthodontic practice and built an arena, and introduced her children to the Stirrups and Irons 4-H group, the same club she’d belonged to as a child. She went on to become the club leader, a position she still holds.

She also embraced one of Bob’s traditions – and made it her own. A dedicated community volunteer, he’d signed on early as a member of the board of The Foundation at KVH, a non-profit that works to improve community health care.

Two years after Bob’s death, Connie got a call. Bob’s seat on the board was still vacant, the caller said. Would she be interested in filling it? The answer was yes.

It was a way of continuing his legacy and adding to her own. The board was trying to raise $1 million for an endowment fund but some were questioning whether the effort should continue. She knew Bob had been determined to reach the goal.

“Being on the board maintained some continuation, some kind of a sense of tradition,” she says, noting that she and Bob both served terms as president. And after all, she was no stranger to the nuts and bolts of board service. She’d been there helping Bob from the beginning.

“Back in the early days there was no hired director. The board basically worked out of the trunks of their cars,” says Connie, who recalls putting together the organization’s annual mailing on her kitchen table while her children napped.

Eventually the hospital helped the foundation hire a director. “At that point everything changed,” she says. “Everything got easier. We reached the goal. We came up with a plan for how to use the income off the million dollars.”

Since 2005, The Foundation has donated over $1.5 million to KVH, including income from the endowment along with other fundraising, to support a variety of projects. Currently, the foundation is running a campaign to help fund the purchase of the first digital mammography machine at KVH.

Foundation director Michele Wurl calls Connie an enthusiastic volunteer who helps with “virtually every foundation activity.” That includes helping organize the annual Magical Evening, the foundation’s primary fundraising activity as well as leading the annual Tough Enough to Wear Pink campaign during the rodeo. Last year, proceeds funded a free mammogram day.

“We sell beads, t-shirt, bandannas, anything that isn’t tied down. One year we sold a pink bucket because someone wanted it,” Connie says, laughing.

Her laughter – warm and engaging  – is also energizing. That’s classic Connie, Wurl says. “She’s always willing to do whatever it takes to get the job done. She’s smart, funny and truly dedicated to improving health care in this community.”

That the foundation has been as effective as it has been is no accident, says Connie who lauds the relationship between the foundation and KVH administration. “You have to have a good relationship and work together,” she says. “In the past, it wasn’t always that close.”

What makes her proudest she says is “just to hear the positive attitudes of people working here. Every time this hospital gets named in the Top 100 you know people are doing things right.”

How long will she remain on the board? Connie, now 60, flashes a smile. “It’s the same thing I say about 4-H,” she says. “I will do it until I don’t enjoy it – and right now, I enjoy it.”

Bryce Hutton

HealthNews · March 19, 2018 ·

Bryce Hutton

He’s a 28-year-old single dad with a three-year-old daughter to raise and bills to pay.

But when pain in his right hip became so excruciating that even pulling on a sock was an agonizing exercise in pain tolerance, Bryce Hutton knew he had to do something.

Pain that had been off-and-on for several years had become a gnawing presence in his life. Hutton, who works as a fence builder and enjoys an active outdoor lifestyle, was desperate for help.

An image – a reminder of how much he battled pain – is etched in memory: His daughter Piper, then just two and a half, struggling to help him get his boots and socks off after a day at work.

“My work days were getting shorter because of it. I was working hurt and sore all the time,” he says. “I couldn’t bend over past a 45-degree angle. I couldn’t lay on my right side. I couldn’t play with my daughter. I was getting to the point where I couldn’t even pick her up for a hug.

“I felt like I was 65. I was miserable.”

Last fall, Hutton turned to Dr. Gary Bos of KVH Orthopedics.

X-rays revealed congenital hip dysplasia, a condition in which the hip has not formed properly, and something else. Somewhere along the line Hutton also had broken his hip.

“I didn’t realize that until I saw the X-rays,” says Hutton, who acknowledges that his body saw more than a little wear and tear in his younger years.  “It could have been anything – riding bulls, breaking horses, wrecking dirt bikes. I was kind of a wild child,” he says with an easy grin.

In November, Hutton underwent total hip replacement surgery at KVH Hospital. The results were life changing. “As soon as I woke up in recovery all that old pain that I’d lived with for years was gone,” he says. “It was amazing.”

After one night in the hospital he headed home the following afternoon. “It was all super easy,” says Hutton. “I went home with a walker and a cane. I went back one week after surgery and carried the walker into his office.”

Two weeks after surgery he began six weeks of physical therapy through KVH. “I was up and moving without a walker or a cane by my second physical therapy visit,” he says. “By the fourth week I felt like nothing had happened. Now I’m pretty much 100 percent. It’s like I never had a problem. I feel wonderful.”

Hutton says he’s been told his new hip should last 20 to 30 years though his “wild child” days are definitely over. “The new hip won’t stand up to that,” he says.

Now back to an active outdoor lifestyle that often includes Piper at his side, Hutton knows firsthand that joint replacement surgery, as common as it is, can seem daunting.

His advice? If you’re in pain and considering joint replacement find a surgeon you trust and feel comfortable with because it makes the whole experience “ten times better,” he says.

“That’s what I did. I can’t say enough good things about Dr. Bos. He was friendly, matter-of-fact with a good bedside manner. He made sure I was fully informed and totally comfortable.

“I couldn’t have asked for a better experience. He was phenomenal.”

Jim & Pam Daly

HealthNews · February 1, 2018 ·

Jim & Pam Daly

Jim and Pam Daly know a good investment when they see one.

Case in point: Kittitas Valley Healthcare (KVH), where they’ve been investing time, talent and money for years.

Blame selfishness. They do.

Unabashed Cougar fans, the Dalys’ road to Ellensburg began at WSU. She was 19 and majoring in elementary education when they met; he, 20, and a marketing major. They married 45 years ago this coming September, just before the start of their senior year. Jim landed a banking job in Enterprise, OR, after graduation, then moved on to a job with Pacific Bank in Ellensburg in 1975. They considered it just a stop along his career path until an unexpectedly early promotion to bank manager changed their plans.

Over time, they found plenty of reasons to turn to KVH. There was the night their son Curt landed in the hospital Emergency Department with croup, the C-section Pam had when their daughter Megan was born, the nine arthroscopic surgeries, two knee replacements and shoulder surgery that are part of Jim’s medical history. In the early 1980s, Pam began volunteering with KVH. In 1986, she signed on as a regular volunteer with the hospital’s Imaging Department. That same year, then serving as president of the KVH Auxiliary, she was one of eleven founding members of The Foundation at KVH.

Nearly three decades later, the Dalys decline to specify exactly how much they’ve contributed to the foundation. Suffice it to say, they’re major donors. Pam, now auxiliary treasurer, continues to volunteer in Imaging. Jim, who left banking to become an investment counselor and stockbroker, has served 20-plus years as a member of the foundation board, his expertise instrumental in guiding the foundation’s conservative and successful investment approach.

Supporting KVH is a no-brainer, the Dalys say. The seed for their involvement was planted in the soil of pragmatic self-interest.

“We did it for selfish reasons,” Jim insists. “When you have children you know there are going to be times when they’re going to need medical care and you want them to have good medical care. Our philosophy has always been that we wanted a good place for our family to turn to – and we knew as we got older we’d need a good place, too. It’s putting our money where our mouth is.”

Good investments pay good dividends.The Dalys are pleased with the return they’ve seen on both their time and money.

In the past five years alone, the foundation has raised more than $1.1 million through special events, major and estate gifts, an annual donation appeal and investment earning. In recent years that money has helped fund a new entrance to the Emergency Department, a security system for the Family Birthing Center, state-of-the-art orthopedic surgical equipment and renovation of the Medical Surgical Unit. The auxiliary, which operates the hospital gift shop, helps in various ways, from awarding scholarships to students studying medicine to providing teddy bears for the Emergency Department to knitting caps for newborns to providing flat screen TVs for patient rooms after the hospital was remodeled.

“We’ve seen some really great things happen that we’ve been able to be part of,” Pam says. Jim says he’s “proud of the quality of care and the people who give it – and I’m not just talking doctors. The whole staff really cares about you.”

While there are many good causes, Pam prefers to give locally which makes KVH a slam-dunk. “We believe in this hospital and its focus on community,” she says.

Jim nods agreement, smiling broadly. “Giving back,” he says, “is what we do.”

Benny Wenz

HealthNews · January 8, 2018 ·

Benny Wenz

Eight-year-old Benny Wenz knows a good thing when he sees it – and he’s not shy about saying as much.

So when his 18-month-old sister Stella ended up at Kittitas Valley Healthcare’s Urgent Care clinic in Cle Elum this past October with an ear infection, Benny made a point of telling staff just how good he thinks they are.

“You always cure us. You always cure me. I’ve never been here without being cured,” he said as they waited for Stella’s medicine.

His point made, the staff beamed. Benny, after all, is no stranger to Urgent Care.

For the Wenz family – Benny, Stella and their parents Matthew and Jennifer Wenz – the convenience and competency of KVH Urgent Care has been a lifesaver, figuratively if not necessarily literally, on more than one occasion. And the reassurance of having Urgent Care close by is priceless.

“It seems like my kids always get sick after hours,” Jennifer says.

“Usually it’s Saturday,” her husband offers.

There was the time Benny got diaper rash as an infant. “We were young parents. What did we know?” Matthew says, shrugging his shoulders and smiling.

There was the day Benny, then about Stella’s age now, came down with a high fever. “He was lethargic,” says Jennifer, who picked him up from day care and took him to Urgent Care where the medical staff checked him out, advised her to give him Tylenol and push fluids and told her she could take him home.

What happened later caught Jennifer, a psychiatric nurse who works in Yakima, by surprise. Before their shift ended and they headed home, clinic staff called to check up on Benny. “It really impressed me,” Jennifer says.

Once, Benny fell and hit his head on a hard surface while kicking his soccer ball outside. “I puked,” Benny says. “So they took me to Urgent Care to see if I had a concussion.” Jennifer says the medical staff, aware that Benny is a Star Wars enthusiast, determined that he didn’t have a concussion by “asking him things only a true Star Wars fan would know.”

When a fall while running an obstacle course in gym class landed him in the nurse’s office, his parents once again turned to Urgent Care. “I had a really bad headache. At Urgent Care, they said maybe I had a minor concussion,” he says. “Four days later I was better.”

Recently there was the day Benny woke up to find his arm swollen. At Urgent Care, staff diagnosed him with an infected spider bite and prescribed antibiotics.

“They’re very nice. They’re always helpful,” Benny says, with the air of someone who has seen a thing or two over his young life. “Like I said, I’ve never gone there without being cured.”

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