TMAC Trivia Challenge: June

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Today, members of the Team Member Appreciation Committee (TMAC) visited the School Based Health Center (SBHC) at Schertz Elementary as part of the ongoing recruitment efforts for 2012 membership. The theme of the visit? Summer! Summer is here and what better way to celebrate than pulling out your favorite pair of sunglasses and cooling down over ice cream with your colleagues?!

This visit also marks the first in the series of the TMAC Trivia Challenge. The TMAC Trivia Challenge offers team members the opportunity to learn more about Methodist Healthcare Ministries and the important role TMAC plays within the organization. For the remainder of the year, on a monthly basis, TMAC members will visit various MHM facilities to personally issue the TMAC Trivia Challenge question of the month. On-site team members will have first exposure to the question of the month, however the challenge is open to all MHM team members.

We hope this is a fun and exciting way to test your MHM knowledge while discovering fun facts about the organization. As a committee, TMAC works hard to ensure team members are satisfied with life at MHM. We look forward to hearing your answers!

Without further ado, here is the June TMAC Trivia Challenge question: 

What is the name of the Mariachi and Cultural Arts program operated at the Wesley Health & Wellness Center?  

Please submit your answer to the June TMAC Trivia Challenge question by utilizing the commenting feature following this post. Answers can also be submitted to the MHM official Facebook page in the form of a wall post at http://www.facebook.com/mhmstx.

Submissions for answers will close five business days after posting date. Therefore, the last day to submit answers to this question is Thursday, July 7, 2011!

For more information about the MHM TMAC Trivia Challenge or TMAC in general, please contact our Membership Coordinator, Melanie Garcia or Current Chair, Lisa Rodriquez

TMAC at School Based Health Center

 TMAC June RecruitmentRULES

Team members will have up to five business days after the question of the month is announced to submit their answer. After five business days, all correct answers will be entered in a drawing for a prize. The winner will be notified by a TMAC representative.

  • Open to MHM team members only.
  • One winner per question.
  • Entries for submission will close 5 business days after TMAC Trivia Question is announced.
  • Answers will be accepted through the MHM Blog or the official MHM Facebook page only. Emails or verbal entries do not qualify for submission.

TMAC Announces the TMAC Trivia Challenge

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Beginning this month, the MHM Team Member Appreciation Committee (TMAC) will present the TMAC Trivia Challenge. In coordination with ongoing recruitment efforts for 2012 membership, TMAC is proud to announce the launch of the first-ever TMAC Trivia Challenge. The TMAC Trivia Challenge will offer team members the opportunity to learn more about Methodist Healthcare Ministries and the important role TMAC plays within the organization.

For the remainder of this year, on a monthly basis, TMAC members will visit various MHM facilities to personally issue the TMAC Trivia Challenge question of the month. On-site team members will have first exposure to the question of the month, however the challenge is open to all MHM team members.

Following on-site visits, the monthly trivia question will be made available online as an MHM Blog entry along with a post on the MHM official Facebook page. Answers to trivia challenge questions can be submitted through the commenting feature on the MHM Blog or through Facebook. Team members will have up to five business days after the question of the month is announced to submit their answer. After five business days, all correct answers will be entered in a drawing for a prize. The winner will be notified by a TMAC representative.

We hope this is a fun and exciting way to test your MHM knowledge while discovering fun facts about the organization. As a committee, TMAC works hard to ensure team members are satisfied with life at MHM. We look forward to launching this fun and stimulating challenge!

For more information about the MHM TMAC Trivia Challenge or TMAC in general, please contact our Membership Coordinator, Melanie Garcia or Current Chair, Lisa Rodriquez.

RULES

  • Open to MHM team members only.
  • One winner per question.
  • Entries for submission will close 5 business days after TMAC Trivia Question is announced.
  • Answers will be accepted through the MHM Blog or the official MHM Facebook page only. Emails or verbal entries do not qualify for submission.

Wesley Nurse Health Ministries: I am Excellence

In preparation for the Wesley Nurse Health Ministries™ (WNHM) May Quarterly Meeting, the WNHM administrative team met to discuss ideas on how to help ensure all remote team members felt a part of the 2011 I am Excellence campaign.  While a large majority of Wesley Nurses participated in the official Feedback for Excellence kick-off event via WebEx in April, we wanted to make sure all of the Wesley Nurses had the opportunity to experience the I am Excellence campaign in-person while convened for the May Quarterly Meeting in San Antonio.

 

To assist, we recruited the help of Judith Arrington, Wesley Nurse at Bethany UMC in San Antonio, who is especially skilled at creating eye-catching flyers and promotional items for her programs.  During a brainstorming session with Judith and the WNHM administrative team, we came up with the idea of incorporating the I am Excellence campaign into a table decorating exercise. Wesley Nurses were presented with the challenge to create a table display unique to their region, programs and community, drawing from the 2011 Feedback For Excellence campaign theme.

 

The instructions were simple: teams were provided with their table specifications, asked to create a short personal biography, and had an allowance of up to $10 to decorate with. The results, however, far exceeded all expectations.

 

We are happy to share this table tour video featuring the imagination, creativity, and hard work of our entire WNHM team. Enjoy!

 

Taking control: Methodist church wellness program takes a proactive approach to health

Published on Friday, May 27, 2011

by Melony Overton – The Port Lavaca Wave 

‘It will be a double blessing if you give yourself up to the Great Physician, that He may heal soul and body together. And unquestionably this is His design. He wants to give you . . . both inward and outward health.’ – John Wesley in a letter to Alexander Knox written in 1778

Wellness within the United Methodist Church concentrates on the whole person and encompasses the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual well being of the faithful.

John Wesley, 1703-1791, was a Church of England cleric and Christian theologian who is largely credited, along with his brother, Charles Wesley, with founding the Methodist movement, which began when John took to open-air preaching.

Wesley was one of the earliest proponents of wellness. Methodism was a highly successful evangelical movement in the United Kingdom, which encouraged people to experience Jesus Christ personally.

The Rev. James Amerson, pastor of Point Comfort United Methodist Church, recently called to mind a famous John Wesley quote which reads, “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can as long as ever you can.”

“These instructions from John Wesley are superlative to our existence. It is so important for us to find time with God,” Amerson said. “The Sabbath is a day of holy rest. But in Western culture, we work nine hours a day with no vacation and no time to rest and be with family or to renew our body and mind.”

Amerson sees his personal ministry as one that promotes balance in the life of his congregation.

“We must claim our emotions. If you are out of balance, you must know why you are frustrated and how to get that frustration out of your life,” he said. “We must meditate, pray and not let our emotions get the best of us.”

One of Amerson’s favorite Bible verses is John 10:10, which reads, “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.”

“I want to convey that abundant life is the best life, the life Jesus Christ wants for us,” Amerson said. “If you feel better, you are more in tune to a higher spirit, or you become more spiritual. That gives you strength.”

The pastor said this is the message Wesley brought to peasants and wealthy alike in 18th-century England.

“John Wesley existed during an industrial age. A clash of cultures was taking place. The miners and the peasants were not wealthy. The upper middle class had it better. What Wesley promoted was an attitude change. He went to the people, to the taverns and the mines to say that life is about more than what you think it is,” Amerson said.

“People were on fire for John Wesley’s methods about taking control of their own life. It had to be a movement. This isn’t something you can legislate. I think every denomination has wellness as a fundamental objective, but the tenants have to be willing to take it on. Our culture is drifting away from it again – the attitude of giving your body a chance to rest,” he said.

Amerson said “no one is exempt” from this basic wellness guideline. A person has to embrace all aspects of wellness – the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual components – for total balance to occur.

“It’s about balancing the 24 hours in a day. A healthy body allows you to think and react better to your emotions. For example, after a good night’s sleep, you are not so grouchy,” the pastor said. “People are compromising a lot for the sake of money. You need time to spend with family and friends. You need to laugh. We have to go to people and remind them, like John Wesley did. We have to get people to start thinking, ‘Am I out of balance?'”

“Salvation is not just going to heaven, but a present deliverance from sin, a restoration of the soul to its primitive health.” – John Wesley

Methodist Healthcare Ministries of South Texas, Inc., is a private, faith-based, not-for-profit organization dedicated to providing medical and health-related human services to low-income families and the uninsured in South Texas. These services include primary care medical and dental clinics, support services like counseling, case management and social services, family wellness and parenting programs and church-based community nursing programs.

The mission statement of the organization is “Serving humanity to honor God” by improving the physical, mental and spiritual health of those least served in the Southwest Texas Conference area of the United Methodist Church.

Wesley Nurse Health Ministries is a faith-based program that serves church sites throughout South Texas by providing Wesley Nurses to minister to those in need. WNHM is geographically the largest outreach program of MHM of South Texas, Inc., growing from 13 Wesley Nurses to 80 within 12 years.

The professional practice of the Wesley Nurse is not limited to the physical dimension of medical needs; rather, it includes a mind, body and spirit holistic approach by offering education, health promotion and the facilitation of resources. The partnership of church, nurse and community is the core of this holistic program.

Amerson is appreciative of what the Wesley Nurses do.

“As a pastor, I do a lot of crisis intervention. I don’t get to be as proactive as a Wesley Nurse, but these nurses are ministers, too. They are able to help people with diet, stress and how pressure can make a person anxious,” he said.

Signy Sizer and Kassie Billings, both registered nurses, also are Wesley Nurses. Sizer is based at First United Methodist Church of Port Lavaca. Billings is based at the Point Comfort United Methodist Church.

“We are supposed to look after this temple we are given. So many of us forget to take care of what we have,” Sizer said in reference to the body. “We are here to serve the congregation and the community. The whole premise of the Wesley Nurse program is to improve the health and wellness of the community.”

Sizer became a Wesley Nurse in April 2009 after working as a nurse at Memorial Medical Center for close to 30 years.

“I think it was meant to be,” Sizer said of her choice to become a Wesley Nurse. “I came to know of the Wesley Nurses 10 years ago when at that time the former Wesley Nurse of the Port Lavaca First United Methodist Church said this is the job for you. Once I learned more about the job, I found out that I can have more of an impact in the community for wellness.”

Sizer does a significant amount of diabetic teaching for those who are not insured or on Medicare as well as obtaining diabetic meters and strips for them.

“Sometimes, people come looking for resources and there aren’t any. All we can do as a Wesley Nurse is listen, but that can go a long way,” Sizer said.

From First United Methodist Church, Sizer provides a “Walking and Sit Down & Tone Up” program on Mondays, Wednesday and Fridays, chair dancing on Tuesdays and Thursdays, “From Mourning to Dawn,” a grief support group, and a prayer shawl ministry on Wednesdays.

Once a month, guest speakers also offer health and wellness programs from the church, recently tackling the issue of skin cancer awareness. The next program is on Balance and Fall Prevention, at 2 p.m. June 7 at the church, at 814 San Antonio St.

“We are working toward total wellness where we look at the individual physically, emotionally and spiritually,” Sizer said. “As a hospital nurse for so many years, I concentrated on the physical signs of wellness. It has been a gradual process for me to look at the total person.”

What Sizer enjoys the most are the individual education sessions.

“When people come back, and you see that they have made a total improvement in their health, it is very rewarding,” she said. “Type II diabetes is rampant in our country. I see it as a personal challenge. We can show people that we can have control of our own personal health.”

Sizer said so many times optimal health occurs after people of faith take the first step, which is to relinquish control of their health to God.

“I think it comes down to hope and trust in the Lord. Faith helps in medical crises. It’s a work in progress, but some people can do it. We are going to do with what we have,” Sizer said. “That was John Wesley’s message.”

  • To view original article, click here.

Meld Growing Families Celebrates Mother’s Day

Meld Growing Families Celebrates Mother's Day

The Meld Support Group, coordinated by Lauri Revilla, met at the Wesley Health & Wellness Center last Wednesday to celebrate Mother's Day. As part of the celebration, fresh roses were distributed to program participants while they shared in their accomplishments and reflected on their experience as caregivers over lunch.   

 

Meld for Growing Families is part of the Meld program and is an extension of the Young Moms program, for mothers ages 26 and older as well as grandparents raising grandchildren. The curriculum focuses on age-appropriate child development techniques; managing outside influences on children's lives; living situations; violence; and balancing work and family life optimal health and well-being.

 

The core philosophy of the Meld program stems from the belief that parents can, and do: learn from each other; give one another support; need to be free to make informed decisions about their families; and can cooperate in groups while maintaining their individuality.

 

We are happy for the opportunity to celebrate in the successes of all our program participants on this special day of observance and look forward to many more celebrations to come! 

 

TMAC May Update

TMAC May Meeting

 

The Team Member Appreciation Committee (TMAC) convened Friday, May 6 to gear up for the upcoming MHM Family Day being hosted at Sea World of San Antonio on Saturday, May 14, 2011. MHM Family Day is our way of saying thank you to all of our team members and their families for supporting the important work we do for our community.

 

Our committee is hard at work to ensure the ease and success of this event. We are putting the final touches on the remaining details and look forward to a day of fun with the MHM team and family members.

 

Also covered in Friday's meeting, was reflection on the MHM Night with the Spurs event last month. On Saturday, April 9th, MHM'ers and family joined avid Spurs fans at the AT&T Center to support the home team in the victory against the Utah Jazz.  Those that took part in the event were able to enjoy Terrace Suite level seats, a food voucher good for 1 hot dog, chips and a soda. Along with the Spurs victory, TMAC is proud to announce that all of the tickets designated for this event sold out. Thanks to the diligent work of the members of TMAC, we were able to secure an exceptional discount ticket rate in sponsoring this event. We look forward to cheering on the Spurs at our next Night Out!

 

For more information about TMAC or how to get involved, please contact our Membership Coordinator Melanie Garcia or Officer Lisa Rodriguez.

 

Welcome!

Welcome to the new Methodist Healthcare Ministries website! As we systematically roll out the various capabilities and features of the new website this will become a valuable communication tool. You will find the website will eventually become the communication hub for both the MHM Team and the extended team to include clients, partners and friends of MHM.

Please take time to review the new website and help us make it better. Any and all comments are welcome! Please send your comments to info@mhm.org.

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Jaime Wesoloski

President & Chief Executive Officer

Jaime Wesolowski is the President and Chief Executive Officer at Methodist Healthcare Ministries. A healthcare executive with three decades of leadership experience, Jaime is responsible for the overall governance and direction of Methodist Healthcare Ministries. Jaime earned his Master’s Degree in Healthcare Administration from Xavier University, and his Bachelor’s of Science from Indiana University in Healthcare Administration. As a cancer survivor, Jaime is a staunch supporter of the American Cancer Society. He serves as Chair of the American Cancer Society’s South Texas Area board of directors and he was appointed as Chair to the recently created South Region Advisory Cabinet, covering eight states from Arizona through Alabama. Jaime believes his personal experience as a cancer survivor has given him more defined insight and compassion to the physical, emotional, and spiritual needs of patients and their families.