Monday, February 16, 2026
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Lettuce Eat Local: Spring is sprouting

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Amanda Miller
Columnist
Lettuce Eat Local

 

It’s there on the calendar, but it’s there everywhere I look outside as well: Spring is here this week. 

Green things are popping up all over the place, and colors sprout extra brightly in contrast to winter’s shades of brown. Daffodils started with their leaves pushing through the soil a while ago, and they’ve already exploded into gently enthusiastic yellow flowers. The tight buds on our row of lilacs are forming, soon to also burst into simultaneously pale yet strong shades of purple; close by, our two old stock-tanks established with mint and strawberries are getting their headstart on the growing season, too. 

Benson and I trenched in some asparagus crowns a few weeks ago (okay fine, we threw some dirt around — Brian did the actual work), and while they haven’t peeked up yet, the fruit tree nearby is fluffy with blossoms. I can’t remember if it’s a cherry or a pear, but Benson’s fairly certain each of the burgeoning lamb’s-quarters scattered around the area are going to grow oranges. He’s wrong…but I’m in love with the excitement brimming out of him at seeing plants and potential springing out of the ground. 

He’s even in love with the ground itself, apparently; the other day after our meander around the farm pointing out all the colors everywhere, he flopped down in the cushion of greening grass, “watching the clouds and the moon.” I so appreciate Benson’s vivacity for the Creator’s gift of Spring and new life sprouting. 

And with all this sprouting going on outside, it’s only appropriate for us to have some going on inside. We don’t often eat sprouts, but we recently got a couple boxes of alfalfa and clover sprouts. For some reason it’s a little odd to me if I think too much about eating so many teeny tiny baby plants at one time, but I love their flavor and nutrition. 

Sprouts always remind me of a certain comedian’s quip, originally about rice but so applicable here as well: “[It’s] great if you’re really hungry and want to eat two thousand of something.” And clean up two thousand of something, as it’s nearly impossible to pick up a clump of sprouts without dropping some. Benson would randomly decide to stuff handfuls in his mouth, so even though I definitely consumed the most, I’ll blame him for the little seeds I kept finding everywhere.

Sprouts also always remind me of my parents talking about peanut butter sprout sandwiches. They grew the alfalfa sprouts, made the whole-wheat oat bread, and sandwiched it together with a spread of crunchy peanut butter. It sounds so hippie — to be fair, it was the 70s. 

And to be fair, it does also sound exactly like something I would do. (Because I do.) And it is really a moreish combination: the nutty, fresh sprouts complement the nutty, rich peanut butter, particularly when sandwiched between hearty bread. I of course had to elaborate on the theme a bit for my version, but as much as I want to poke at my mom and dad’s hippiness, I can’t help but just enjoy the meal. 

Spring is here! Sprouts are everywhere, outside and inside, and we are happy. 

 

Groovy Sprouts Sandwich

Mom says peanut butter sprout sandwiches were a common thing, and I did find some proof to back her up; perhaps you can also attest their popularity in a certain era. I can only assume they’ll start to be in vogue again then anytime, so I might as well get ahead of the curve and get one of my versions out in the sphere. All the elements just play so well together. I don’t know how to describe the texture of sprouts (plant-y?), but whatever it is calls out for the smoothness of avocado, peanut butter, and cream cheese, and the crispness of toasted bread. 

Prep tips: you can get as “hippie” as you want and bake the bread (even grow and mill the wheat), sprout the sprouts, make the cream cheese, grind the peanut butter…or you can just put them all together. 

2 slices hearty bread, toasted

a schmear of whipped cream cheese

a spoon of peanut butter (I uncharacteristically prefer creamy for this)

½ an avocado, sliced

a good sprinkle of coarse salt

a handful of alfalfa/clover sprouts

optional: a drizzle of local honey

Layer all ingredients in the order given, of course beginning and ending with bread. Enjoy, preferably in the sunshine. 

 

Turkey sausage recall: Johnsonville recalls more than 35,000 pounds of meat after rubber found

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A Wisconsin-based meat manufacturer is recalling more than 35,000 pounds of kielbasa sausage after multiple reports said black rubber was found in some of its products.

Salm Partners, LLC, of Denmark, recalled some of its Johnsonville meat products after the foreign material was found in the ready-to-eat meat by at least two consumers, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service.

According to Johnsonville, the affected product was shipped to retail distribution centers in the following states:

  • Michigan
  • Wisconsin
  • Ohio
  • Washington
  • California
  • Oregon
  • Idaho
  • North Carolina
  • Iowa
  • Kansas
  • Minnesota

    What turkey kielbasa is being recalled?

    The following products are subject to recall:

    • 12-ounce vacuum-packed packages containing a single piece of “Johnsonville Polish kielbasa turkey sausage with best by dates of May 17, 2024 and May 18, 2024 printed on the packaging.
    • The recalled product also has the establishment number “P-32009” on the packaging.
    • The sausages were produced from Oct. 30-31, 2023.

      What to do if I bought Johnsonville turkey kielbasa sausage?

      So far, no injuries have been reported to the FDA.

      Anyone who bought the affected products should throw them away.

      Consumers with food safety questions can call the toll-free USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline at 888-MPHotline (888-674-6854) or email [email protected]

Lovina and Family Prepare to Attend a Funeral

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Lovina’s Amish Kitchen
Lovina Eitcher,
Old Order Amish
Cook, Wife &
Mother of Eight 

This is Monday evening here at the Eicher homestead. Everyone is getting showered and ready for bed. Supper was easy tonight—son Joseph brought supper home. On the menu was pizza, wings, and subs. What a treat for daughter Lovina and me to not have to get supper.

Joe and I had left after he was home from work and showered. We attended the viewing/visitation of son-in-law Tim’s Aunt Sylvia, age 64. She passed away suddenly on Friday. Her husband found her lying down in the house—life had fled. Our sympathy to her husband and family left to mourn. Sylvia was in the same church district as we were for quite a few years. She always had a smile, and when I went to their general store and greenhouse she always asked how we were doing. She will be greatly missed! Her husband Mervin will have many lonely days ahead. Their four children are all married, and he lives alone now. 

I had to help take a dish in for supper tonight. I made a Cherry Delight. Tomorrow morning, I plan to attend the funeral, Lord willing, with sisters Verena and Emma.

Joe plans to go to work. He was off several days last week because of sickness. Now this week they won’t work a full week. It’s bad timing when building a new pole barn. We aren’t getting any younger, and the bills still have to be paid. We take one day at a time and trust in God. He knows the future, and we need to trust in him.

Church services will be held at daughter Susan and Ervin’s on Sunday, Lord willing. They have quite a lot to do yet. Those helping them with their work on Saturday were Joe and I, sons Benjamin, Joseph, and Kevin, daughter Lovina and her special friend Daniel, daughter Loretta, Dustin, and sons, daughter Elizabeth, Tim, and children. A lot was accomplished!

Ervin’s dad is still in the hospital and is showing some improvement. He will need to go to a rehab center after he’s dismissed from the hospital. He still can’t walk yet. Hopefully this will only be short-term. Susan was unable to go with Ervin on Sunday to visit him due to having several children sick with the flu. Ervin and sons Ryan and Curtis went to visit Perry. We are hoping and praying Perry will have a complete and full recovery!

Today was a nice but windy laundry day. The towels are so soft when blown dry in the wind. It was a little chilly hanging out the clothes.

Daughter Verena left tonight with her special friend Daniel Ray to also attend the viewing/visitation of Sylvia. Daniel Ray’s dad Alvin is a pallbearer at the funeral tomorrow. They were neighbors with Sylvia and Mervin for many years. Verena and Daniel Ray will also attend the funeral tomorrow and so will daughter Elizabeth and Tim. Sylvia has many brothers and sisters and lots of nieces and nephews as well, so I am sure it will be a big funeral. Sylvia will be buried in the graveyard just down the road from us. We have three loved ones buried there beside only one other person in this newer graveyard. How this brings back sad memories of losing our loved ones three years ago. God makes no mistakes, we know! God bless you all! 

I will share the coffee cake recipe that daughter Susan had made for Saturday. It was delicious!

Coffee Cake

4 eggs

1 cup vegetable oil

1 cup water

1 (13.25-ounce) box yellow cake mix

1 (3.4-ounce) box instant butterscotch pudding mix

1 (3.4-ounce) box instant vanilla pudding mix

Topping:

1 cup brown sugar

1 tablespoon cinnamon

Mix eggs, oil, and water together. Add dry pudding mix and cake mix and beat well. Pour half of the batter into a 9 x 13-inch pan. Sprinkle half of topping on top. Repeat. Bake at 325°F for about 1 hour. 

Variation: Pour batter onto a cookie sheet and sprinkle on topping. Bake at 325°F for about 30 minutes. Also, 2 boxes of vanilla pudding mix can be used if you don’t have butterscotch pudding mix.  

Lovina’s Amish Kitchen is written by Lovina Eicher, Old Order Amish writer, cook, wife, and mother of eight. Her two cookbooks, The Essential Amish Cookbook and Amish Family Recipes, are available wherever books are sold. Readers can write to Eicher at Lovina’s Amish Kitchen, PO Box 234, Sturgis, MI 49091 (please include a self-addressed stamped envelope for a reply); or email [email protected] and your message will be passed on to her to read. She does not personally respond to emails.

KU News: NSF CAREER Award winner and 3 Udall Scholarship nominees

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Headlines

 

Department of Physics & Astronomy professor receives NSF CAREER Award for work on zinc-ion batteries
A University of Kansas researcher from the Department of Physics & Astronomy has been chosen for a prestigious CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation for his innovative work with zinc-ion batteries. The five-year, $504,566 grant will be used to design stable cathode material for zinc-ion batteries, which will improve their performance and longevity through state-of-the-art computational modeling. Zinc-ion batteries are a sustainable alternative to the more widely used lithium-ion batteries, which currently are in everything from mobile phones to electric vehicles.

KU nominates three undergraduates for Udall Scholarships
Three undergraduates at the University of Kansas are nominees for Udall Scholarships, which recognize students who demonstrate leadership, public service and commitment in the fields of tribal public policy, Native health care or the environment.  All three of KU’s 2024 nominees are competing in the environmental category.

 

 

Full stories below.

 

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Contact: Ranjit Arab, [email protected]

Department of Physics & Astronomy professor receives NSF CAREER Award for work on zinc-ion batteries
LAWRENCE — A University of Kansas researcher from the Department of Physics & Astronomy has been chosen for a prestigious CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation for his innovative work with zinc-ion batteries.

 

Hartwin Peelaers, assistant professor of physics & astronomy, received a Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the NSF for “Computational Design of High-Performing V205 Cathodes for Zinc-ion Batteries.”

 

The five-year, $504,566 grant will be used to design stable cathode material for zinc-ion batteries, which will improve their performance and longevity through state-of-the-art computational modeling. Zinc-ion batteries are a sustainable alternative to the more widely used lithium-ion batteries, which currently are in everything from mobile phones to electric vehicles.

 

Peelaers said a major application of his research is that it will help promote green energy sources in a cost-efficient, reliable and safe manner.

 

“This award will allow me to develop a new research line on a topic that can beneficially impact society by performing the necessary basic materials research on new, safe and Earth-abundant zinc-ion batteries that can provide cheap and reliable grid-scale energy storage so that more intermittent energy resources like wind and solar can be included in the electricity grid,” Peelaers said.

 

Along with developing zinc-ion batteries, the project also plans to increase diversity within STEM fields through outreach, research opportunities for high school and undergraduate students and an increase of underrepresented students admitted to Ph.D. programs.

 

“We are delighted that the NSF has recognized Professor Peelaers for his outstanding work,” said Arash Mafi, executive dean of the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences. “His research will not only further scientific learning, but will also provide a safer, more Earth-friendly alternative for powering electronic devices.”

 

The NSF CAREER Award is the most prestigious award given to faculty members beginning their independent careers. The program intends to provide support to professionals to further outstanding research through commitment to teaching, learning and disseminating knowledge.

 

About the College

The College of Liberal Arts & Sciences (known as “The College”) is the heart of KU, educating the most students, producing the most research and collaborating with nearly every entity at KU. The College is home to more than 50 departments, programs and centers, as well as the School of the Arts and School of Public Affairs & Administration.

 

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The official university account for X (formerly Twitter) is @UnivOfKansas.

Follow @KUnews for KU News Servitwce stories, discoveries and experts.

 

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Contact: Erin Wolfram, [email protected]

KU nominates three undergraduates for Udall Scholarships
LAWRENCE — Three undergraduates at the University of Kansas are nominees for Udall Scholarships, which recognize students who demonstrate leadership, public service and commitment in the fields of tribal public policy, Native health care or the environment.  All three of KU’s 2024 nominees are competing in the environmental category.

 

KU’s 2024 nominees are:

 

Grant Misse, a junior in environmental studies and music composition
Ally Pruente, a sophomore in environmental studies and strategic communications
Sarah Reuben-Hallock, a sophomore in environmental studies

The Udall Undergraduate Scholarship is a federal scholarship that honors the legacies of Morris Udall and Stewart Udall, two former Arizona lawmakers whose careers influenced American Indian self-governance, health care and the stewardship of public lands and natural resources.

 

The Udall Foundation administers the program. This year, the foundation will award 60 students with scholarships of up to $7,000 each. Selected scholars will also receive access to the Udall Alumni Network and attend a four-day scholar orientation in Tucson, Arizona. Students must be nominated by their university to apply, and universities are limited in the total number of nominations they can make.

 

At KU, the nomination process is coordinated by the Office of Fellowships within Academic Success. Students interested in applying next year should email [email protected]. The next application cycle will begin in spring 2025. Sophomores and juniors may apply.

 

Biographical details of the candidates follow.

 

Grant Misse

Grant Misse, from Gardner, is the son of Brett Misse and Kourtney Misse and a graduate of Gardner-Edgerton High School. Misse is majoring in environmental studies and music composition. He aspires to earn a master’s degree in public and nonprofit management and return to northeast Kansas to start a nonprofit and eventually influence policy related to sustainable agriculture and food systems at the government level.

 

In summer 2023, he interned at the Mahwah Environmental Volunteers Organization. Currently, Misse works to promote environmental initiatives as the leadership/recruitment outreach lead for the Sunrise Movement KU and as the committee lead/founder of 2040 Vision KU. Additionally, he works at the Center for Community Outreach as the managing director. He continues to volunteer for the program Music Mentors, for which he previously served as a program coordinator, and is also the president of the New Music Guild and a member of the Glee Club.

 

Ally Pruente

Ally Pruente, from Lenexa, is a graduate of Shawnee Mission Northwest High School and the daughter of Mike Pruente and Jennifer Pruente. She is majoring in environmental studies and strategic communications. In her future career, Pruente hopes to address environmental education and representation in the media. She is the outreach officer for the Osage Chapter of the Association for Women Geoscientists and a proud member of the Xi Chapter of Sigma Kappa sorority where she serves as the sustainability chair. Pruente is also a student assistant for the Kansas Geological Survey and a garden volunteer through the Center for Community Outreach.

 

Sarah Reuben-Hallock

Sarah Reuben-Hallock, from Overland Park, is a graduate of Blue Valley High School and is the daughter of Alex and Karen Hallock. Reuben-Hallock is majoring in environmental studies. She plans to pursue a graduate degree in mycology and forest pathology and contribute to cutting-edge research. Reuben-Hallock is the grounds team lead for Sunrise Movement KU advocating for a more sustainable campus and the program coordinator for EARTH within the Center for Community Outreach leading a community garden for students facing food insecurity. She also serves as a volunteer for Bridging the Gap, a nonprofit organization in Kansas City.

 

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

KU News: Kansan Bill Kurtis to speak at KU in April, research in Kansas City region on adaptive exercise

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Dole Institute announces Bill Kurtis as 2024 Dole Lecture honoree
The Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas has announced that Bill Kurtis — KU alumnus, journalist, network news anchor, producer and rancher — will be featured at this spring’s annual Dole Lecture at 7 p.m. April 16. Kurtis will join Dole Institute Director Audrey Coleman for a discussion of his Kansas roots and the news that shaped the nation over the course of his seven decades in journalism.

KU research explores impact of adaptive exercise for people with disabilities in Kansas City region
KU Life Span Institute researcher Lyndsie Koon is leading three pilot projects assessing the effectiveness of HIFT to improve various health outcomes, including fall risk, metabolic health, strength, flexibility, quality of life, psychosocial health and more. “We have almost no empirical evidence on the effects of this type of exercise for people with disabilities, yet people with disabilities are actively engaging in HIFT in communities across the country and worldwide,” Koon said.

Medicaid’s impact on inmate health and recidivism rates explored in new research
A new paper by David Slusky, a professor of economics at the University of Kansas, estimates the causal impact of access to Medicaid on health outcomes and recidivism for those recently released from incarceration. The research finds that reducing barriers in access to Medicaid for vulnerable populations increases enrollment and utilization of health care services, but it does not reduce 1-year or 3-year recidivism. This suggests the effectiveness of such policies is context-dependent.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Maria Fisher, 785-864-4900, [email protected]

Dole Institute announces Bill Kurtis as 2024 Dole Lecture honoree
LAWRENCE — The Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas has announced that Bill Kurtis — KU alumnus, journalist, network news anchor, producer and rancher — will be featured at this spring’s annual Dole Lecture at 7 p.m. April 16. Kurtis will join Dole Institute Director Audrey Coleman for a discussion of his Kansas roots and the news that shaped the nation over the course of his seven decades in journalism.

“Before it was history, it was news,” Kurtis said.

The program will take place in-person at the Dole Institute, 2350 Petefish Drive, and be livestreamed on the institute’s website and YouTube channel. Detailed information on the program can be found at doleinstitute.org.

Kurtis began his journalism career at WIBW-TV in Topeka. After his 24-hour coverage of a devastating tornado in 1966, Kurtis was hired by Chicago’s WBBM-TV, where he was a field reporter and later anchor of The Channel Two News.

In 1978, Kurtis’ investigative unit was one of the first to report on the dangerous effects of the Agent Orange chemical on American forces in Vietnam. While covering the story, he returned to Vietnam in 1980 to find the children of American servicemen living in the streets of Saigon with their mothers, who were unable to find work.

Kurtis’ reporting became a cover story in the New York Times Magazine and resulted in legislation that allowed these children immediate access to the United States. Additionally, his reporting launched massive studies into the post-war lives of American servicemen to make exposure to Agent Orange treatable and establishing a new standard of care for veterans that continues today.

In 1982, Kurtis joined the CBS Morning News as a co-anchor alongside Diane Sawyer, later returning to WBBM-TV in 1985 as anchorman through 1996 and from 2010 to 2013 alongside Walter Jacobson.

After a 30-year run with CBS, he established Kurtis Productions, which produces nonfiction programs and documentaries. Additionally, he serves as the official judge and scorekeeper on National Public Radio’s news quiz show “Wait Wait … Don’t Tell Me!” and has narrated multiple motion pictures, including the “Anchorman” films starring Will Ferrell.

Kurtis was born in Florida and raised in Independence after his father retired from the U.S. Marine Corps. He graduated from KU with a Bachelor of Science degree in journalism and from Washburn University School of Law with a Juris Doctor.

In addition to his work in journalism, Kurtis is an active conservationist in Kansas. Kurtis has placed land in the Red Buffalo Ranch, originally 8,000 acres of prairie in Chautauqua County, in conservation easements and has sold much of the land to cattle ranchers and the Delaware Tribe of Indians. His daughter, Mary Kristin Kurtis, now owns the remainder of the ranch and the Red Buffalo Gift Shop in Sedan.

Each spring, the Dole Lecture commemorates the date on which Sen. Bob Dole was critically wounded while serving in Italy during World War II. To honor Dole’s courageous recovery and commitment to serve the nation, the Dole Institute welcomes a guest who embodies the commitments that Dole held throughout his career in public service.

About the Dole Institute

The Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics, a vibrant forum for civil discourse, civic engagement, and idea exchange across the political spectrum, features historical archives, exhibits, and public programs for all ages. Inspired by the public service of native Kansan, veteran, legislator and statesman Sen. Bob Dole and his wife Sen. Elizabeth Dole, visitor galleries feature changing exhibits, the Kansas Veterans Virtual Memory Wall, architectural-scale stained glass American flag and Sept. 11 memorial.

 

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The official university account for X (formerly Twitter) is @UnivOfKansas.

Follow @KUnews for KU News Servitwce stories, discoveries and experts.

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Contact: Christina Knott, [email protected]

KU research explores impact of adaptive exercise for people with disabilities in Kansas City region
LAWRENCE — Brian McMillan, 65, attends fitness classes four times a week in the Adaptive Athletes in Motion program, which was developed for people with mobility disabilities.

 

“You need strength to get through life,” he said.

 

McMillan and each of the other “adaptive athletes,” as they are known, ages 14 to 73, participating in the class have a physical condition that challenges their mobility, from ataxia to multiple sclerosis to spinal cord damage.

 

Known as high-intensity functional training, or HIFT, the community-based program is akin to CrossFit. It also is the focus of studies undertaken by University of Kansas researcher Lyndsie Koon, associate director of the Research and Training Center on Independent Living at the KU Life Span Institute.

 

McMillan took a break from using the ski ergometer machine at Brave Enough CrossFit in North Kansas City, Mo., and explained how he depends on exercising his arms and torso to get his heart rate up and stay physically engaged, even without the use of his legs.

 

“Sitting in this chair for 21 years … we lose our stomach muscles,” he said. “So, if you’re not burning extra calories, you’re just eating.”

 

People with mobility disabilities are 66% more likely to be overweight or obese than their nondisabled peers, and they are at higher risk of cardiovascular diseases, depression and anxiety. Fewer than half of adults with a mobility disability are physically active, despite evidence that exercise improves health and well-being.

 

Koon said that community-based exercise programs for health interventions are both understudied and overlooked by physicians, who are more likely to suggest surgery or pharmacological treatment than exercise for people with disabilities.

 

“We have almost no empirical evidence on the effects of this type of exercise (HIFT) for people with disabilities, yet people with disabilities are actively engaging in HIFT in communities across the country and worldwide,” Koon said.

 

Koon is leading three pilot projects assessing the effectiveness of HIFT to improve various health outcomes, including fall risk, metabolic health, strength, flexibility, quality of life, psychosocial health and more. Her work has been supported internally through a KU Research GO award that concludes in April. Additionally, she has been awarded support through the Kansas Center for Metabolism and Obesity Research, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence, and the Landon Center on Aging, both at the KU Medical Center.

 

“Maintaining functional independence for people with mobility disability, including those aging with long-term disability, is extremely important to me and the entire goal of my work,” she said. “I care that people can get up off the ground if they fall, get down on the ground to play with their children or grandchildren, or carry their groceries into the house independently, and have a community of people supporting them in their health endeavors,”

 

Despite the benefits of exercise on brain health, helping manage weight, reducing the risk of disease, strengthening bones and muscles and improving the ability to do everyday activities, most community-based facilities are not accessible, or even inclusive, to people with physical disabilities, Koon said.

 

Moreover, while outpatient physical and occupational therapy can provide temporary benefits for people with disabilities these services are typically prescribed after an injury and are often short-term with limitations on the total number of visits. They are not a long-term strategy for activity engagement.

 

Developed by Josh Snyder, the HIFT program in KC, known as Adaptive Athletes in Motion (AAIM), offers opportunities to individuals at several area locations, including the Mission Barbell Club in Mission, the Kansas Athletic Club in Overland Park, FITNKC in Kansas City, Mo., and Kaw Valley CrossFit in Lawrence.

 

“Josh has a knack for this stuff,” Koon said. “He can take any disability type and build a program based on their capabilities and personal goals.”

 

Trainers work individually with new athletes in onboarding sessions after reviewing health concerns, movement limitations and health goals, Koon said.

 

After McMillan lost mobility of his legs in a motorcycle accident, he worked with a therapist to learn how to get dressed, move around and take care of himself.

 

“But that only lasts for so long, and then, after that, you’re just kind of on your own,” McMillan said.

 

In the AAIM program, he said every day they do something different to keep their muscles, and mind, engaged.

 

Daniel Bufford, 53, of Merriam, said he gained about 50 pounds after he lost his leg in 2022. Originally from the Dallas area, he moved to get fresh start after a Kansas City-area nonprofit, Steps of Faith, offered to pay a prosthetic limb.

 

He started with AAIM last spring and now attends several classes a week, sometimes even filling in as volunteer coach. He said if he doesn’t work out, he gets depressed.

 

“This really changed me,” Bufford said. “Now I’m competitive. I’ve done CrossFit competitions — I’ve done one so far, but I’m signed up to do a bunch right now.”

 

The added benefit of the fitness class is the community support and connections they make. For Bufford, this has helped give him a sense of purpose as well.

 

“One of my friends I work out with, he’s a triple amputee,” Bufford said. “He’s just got one arm, and we throw jokes back and forth a lot. And you’ll find that a lot (of us) are like that. Because if we can’t make fun of ourselves, then we’re never going be able to handle it with other people.”

 

Koon said that HIFT incorporates functional movement to support daily activities such as picking up objects from seated positions, transferring, reaching overhead, getting off the floor, or ambulating without supports. But another benefit of HIFT classes for people with disabilities is that such programs are widespread throughout the country, and internationally, making them within reach of many people who have disabilities.

 

“The best part is that our research is that participants have the option to stay in the program after the conclusion of the intervention,” she said.

 

So far, about 60%-70% of the participants opt to stay engaged in the AAIM program.

 

Koon said research is still in its early stages. However, her work is helping gather empirical evidence on program effects, grow the program in the greater Kansas City and Lawrence areas and increase its reach to new people in the community, as well as increase exposure to other HIFT programs that may be interested in starting their own adaptive classes.

 

“That’s been incredibly rewarding to see,” she said.

 

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Contact: Jon Niccum, 785-864-7633, [email protected]

Medicaid’s impact on inmate health and recidivism rates explored in new research
LAWRENCE — Inmates face numerous difficulties upon reentry into society. Public health care services are not always easily accessible to them while making this transition.

 

“Recidivism is an expensive and tragic societal problem,” said David Slusky, a professor of economics at the University of Kansas. “In addition to designing new policies to help reduce it, policymakers also want to understand what existing policies and programs could help.”

 

His new paper titled “Accessing the Safety Net: How Medicaid Affects Health and Recidivism” addresses this by estimating the causal impact of access to means-tested public health insurance coverage on health outcomes and recidivism for those recently released from incarceration. It finds that reducing barriers in access to Medicaid for vulnerable populations increases enrollment and utilization of health care services, but it does not reduce 1-year or 3-year recidivism. This suggests the effectiveness of such policies is context-dependent.

 

The findings appear as a working paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research.

 

“The U.S. makes it very difficult for those released from prison to rejoin the formal economy,” said Slusky, who co-wrote the article with Analisa Packham of Vanderbilt University.

 

“Many mundane tasks for the general population are extremely difficult, if not impossible, including housing, employment and voting. Many individuals see continued criminal activity as their best economic option.”

 

The U.S. boasts an incarcerated percentage of its population that is much higher than other countries, which also leads to a much higher incidence of recidivism. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, nearly half of those returning to the community are rearrested within one year, and 77% are rearrested within five years.

 

As noted in “Accessing the Safety Net,” a large proportion of inmates have high rates of chronic medical conditions such as diabetes and hypertension, as well as severe mental health disorders and substance use issues, which can lead to a higher likelihood of recidivism. But despite the need for timely and continuous access to care, many offenders do not receive necessary medical treatment.

 

To study these issues, Slusky focused on South Carolina, a non-Medicaid expansion state that implemented a 2016 policy to more easily re-enroll previously incarcerated individuals in the Medicaid program.

 

“The South Carolina program we studied was relatively limited in its scale and resources,” Slusky said. “Other states. such as Wisconsin, introduced far more expansive pre-release enrollment assistance. And many other states also changed their laws to allow those beginning incarceration who were on Medicaid to suspend their benefits instead of being terminated so they could much more easily and quickly be reactivated upon release.”

 

In terms of a strategy to combat this issue, some states are now exploring enrolling inmates on Medicaid while they are incarcerated, in the hopes that it will deliver better and more efficient care then and increase continuity of care before and after release.

 

However, Slusky found no evidence that people with easier access to Medicaid are less likely to commit future violent or property crimes.

 

So what exactly is the benefit for the community if this doesn’t curb crime?

 

“Medicaid has been shown in many other cases to improve economic and financial outcomes and make individuals less likely to skip necessary medical care due to cost,” he said. “We also do see increased overall healthcare utilization from the policy change, which is evidence individuals are getting more care — which is the outcome most directly affected by increased insurance rates.”

 

A KU faculty member since 2015, Slusky specializes in health economics and labor economics. He has conducted research on a wide variety of topics, including the Flint water crisis, COVID-19 restrictions, abortion care and physician birth outcomes. He is currently interim chair of KU’s Department of Speech-Language-Hearing. In 2022, he was named executive director of the American Society of Health Economics.

 

“There are limits to what can be done in non-Medicaid expansion states as enrollment assistance programs can only help those who are eligible,” Slusky said.

 

“It’s very difficult to scale up a program like the one in South Carolina. Despite all of the effort and expense, we just don’t see that large an increase in the share of released individuals who end up on Medicaid. There is just only so much that non-expansion states can do to help those in need.”

 

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http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

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