Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Please Aid Porcupine Clinic At Pine Ridge

Porcupine Clinic Needs Your Help

 by Sheila Totten

Once again my fellow NAJA journalist Steffi Schwartz has alerted me about a major problem at Pine Ridge that needs immediate attention; and takes  me away from reporting on rodeo and bullriding momentarily so for the ABA and PBR fans awaiting the reports please bear with me while I address this important issue. I hope in this season of giving many readers will read this and find it in their hearts to help the Lakota people and this wonderful clinic out.

Pine Ridge is the home of The Porcupine Clinic,named for the district it is in in S.D. It is the only independent Indian run clinic in the country and receives no aid or benefits from the  Federal Indian Health Services. As winter approaches ,the clinic  currently has no money for the needed propane deliveries for heat.This much needed clinic  has had to close its doors for lack of funds and this is a crime. So many elders and sick people  depend upon it but without propane  there is nothing else that can be done.

The clinic serves not only the reservation but the entire Porcupine district where it is located.Many people are treated free  especially elders and children while others are  treated on a sliding scale.Porcupine is 15 years old and has a Dialysis unit  that is 3 years old.Lives depend on this unit.We must do something to help.

Let me explain something about the size of Pine Ridge. It  is estimated at 2.7 million square acres or11,000 square  miles of territory.From the remote areas where Porcupine is located to the IHS  Hospital at Pine Ridge itself is  a 100 mile drive. patients needing dialysis three times /week just cannot  travel that distance.And what of emergencies? The IHS hospital can't treat all the patients needing dialysis;and the next closest hospital is in Rapid City which is 120 miles away. Walk a mile in the mocassins of the people affected here.Stop and think for a moment of what you would do if the help you need to stay alive was taken away from you. Basically  this is what has happened here. Even if its just $5, I ask you to help bring heat to the Porcupine Clinic. You would be saving lives.Many of the people who have no heat in their substandard homes come to the clinic daily to stay warm so it really serves a dual purpose.With the doors closed pneumonia  along with flu and other life threatening illnessescould run rampant there as winter sets in. Please read on and help bring heat to Porcupine. And if you are a rodeo or bull riding promoter maybe you could do a benefit for  the people this clinic serves.They are in need of all the help they can get.Thank you and please continue on to Stephi's article below.

Porcupine Clinic Out of Heat<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

By Stephanie M. Schwartz, Freelance Writer

Member, Native American Journalists Association

October 26, 2007  Firestone, Colorado

 

Porcupine Clinic, located in the small community of Porcupine, South Dakota on the Pine Ridge Oglala Lakota [Sioux] Reservation is out of heat.  According to Stella White Eyes, Administrative Assistant for the Clinic, the Clinic has closed its doors until it can find resources to fund their heating costs.

 

Porcupine Clinic is the only independent Indian community-controlled health clinic in the United States.  It is not connected with the Federal Indian Health Services (IHS) program and is funded primarily by grants and donations.  Unfortunately, those resources have become exceptionally rare this year.

 

Porcupine Clinic opened its doors in 1992 and serves the entire Reservation as well as the Porcupine District in which it is located.  Patients are billed according to their ability to pay and many patients, including low-income Elders and children, receive free health care there.

 

In 2004, the Porcupine Clinic opened its dialysis unit, saving countless lives of those diabetic patients who couldnot journey 120 miles away to Rapid City for needed dialysis treatment several times a week.  The only other dialysis treatment available on the 11,000 square mile (2.7 million acres) Reservation is located in the small IHS Hospital in the community of Pine Ridge.  But that facility hosts only a handful of dialysis beds, is up to 100 miles away from the more remote areas of the Reservation, and is completely unable to treat the vast need of the entire Reservation.

 

Recent statistics state that the diabetes rate on Pine Ridge is 800% that of the National average and the life expectancy rate is 52 to 58 years old.  It is said that 55% of the adults on Pine Ridge over the age of 40 have diabetes.

 

Ms. White Eyes states that the Clinic has been unable to pay their annual propane tank rental fees of $245 (for both the Clinic and dialysis unit tanks) or for the propane to fill them.  They have three tanks: a thousand gallon tank which services the main clinic and two five hundred gallon tanks servicing the dialysis unit.  The minimum propane delivery from their provider, Western Cooperative (WESTCO) out of Chadron and Hay Springs, Nebraska, is $360.

 

If all the tanks were filled, at $1.69 per gallon, it would cost well over $3,000.  Further, that will need to happen more than once this winter.  While the dialysis unit helps to fund at least part of its own propane use, the Clinic is out of funding now, just as winter is approaching fast.

 

Harvey Iron Boy, Porcupine District Vice President and Head Man, spoke of the vital role that the Clinic plays in the local district as well as the Reservation as a whole.  Not only are the health care services, bi-lingual assistance, diabetic education, anddialysis treatments all meeting critical needs on the Reservation but there are more basic needs met by the Clinic as well.  He pointed out that locals often come into the Clinic simply to get warm on days when they have no heat in their own homes.

 

Ms. White Eyes has contacted various non-profits and assistance organizations but has largely gone unanswered.  Link Center Foundation, a small all-volunteer non-profit organization out of Longmont, Colorado, was contacted this week and was also unable to help.  With their own heating assistance program for the elders and disabled on the Reservation struggling due to lack of donations, there simply was no funding available to help the Clinic.

 

However, Audrey Link, Founder/President of the Link Center Foundation (www.LinkCenterFoundation.org), personally paid the $245 out of her own pocket for the annual tank rental fees for the Porcupine Clinic and dialysis unit on Friday.  Largely retired and on limited income herself, Link stated that “She couldn’t go to sleep tonight if she thought the dialysis patients and Clinic were going to lose their propane tanks.  At least now, if they can raise any money at all elsewhere, they can use the money for propane to fill them.”

 

Anyone wishing to donate towards propane fuel for the Porcupine Clinic may do so directly to the propane company.  Please contact:

Loretta at Western Cooperative (WESTCO)

170 Bordeaux St – Chadron, NE 69337-2342

Call Toll Free 800-762-9906

Credit Card and Bank Card donations by phone will be accepted.  Small donations are also welcome and will accumulate until the minimum delivery has been reached and then the company will makea delivery of propane to the Clinic.  Please clearly mark any donation “For Porcupine Clinic.”

 

Donations may also be sent directly to the Clinic.  For more information, please contact:

Porcupine Clinic

Stella White Eyes, Administrative Assistant

P.O. Box 99 – Porcupine, SD 57772

Internet Information: http://www.lakotamall.com/porcupine/

Phone:  605-867-5655

Note:  Due to lack of heat, there may or may not be anyone available to answer the phone at the Clinic at this time.  Please leave a message.

 

Stephanie M. Schwartz may be reached at SilvrDrach@Gmail.com

Visit other writings of Stephanie M. Schwartz at  www.SilvrDrach.homestead.com

 

This article may be reprinted, reproduced, and/or re-distributed unedited with proper attribution and sourcing for non-profit, educational, news, or archival purposes.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I WISH THE PEOPLE WHO READ THIS ARTICLE WOULD LOOK INTO THEIR HEART AND SEND ANY DONATION TO HELP. IF WE ALL BE OF THE SAME MIND AND HEART WE COULD MOVE MOUNTAINS! MY HUSBAND AND I ARE MEETING WITH CHURCHES TODAY IN SARASOTA FLORIDA TO TRY TO ORGANIZE FUNDING TO HELP WITH THE HEATING PROBLEMS OF THE RESERVATION. I PRAY WE WILL BE SUCCESSFUL IN SOME WAY. THIS ARTICLE SPEAKS THE TRUTH ... EVEN $1 ADDS UP IF MANY WOULD JUST BELEIVE. I HAVE BEEN SENDING PACKAGES AND FUNDS THROUGH THE YEARS TO THE BEST OF OUR MEANS, BUT IT IS CERTAINLY NOT ENOUGH. BE BLESSED THIS DAY AND CONTRIBUTE AND KNOW SPIRIT IS SMILING ON YOU.            RESPECTFULLY,
                                     BRENDA HOSHAW

Anonymous said...

Thank you for your comment.I too am praying that people who read this will donate to help save the Clinic.Our people up there need all the help they can get.Thank you for your efforts to aid them.