Staff and officials of Community Health Programs and the Adams Dental and Family Services cut the ribbon at the Depot Street offices on Wednesday.
Reception area.
Pantry in the Family Services offices.
One of the new operatories.
Clockwise from bottom left: Brian Drake, Mary Feuer, Bethany Kieley, Christine Hoyt, Jonathan Butler and Casey Pease, representing state Sen. Paul Mark.
CHP's Director of Dental Services Nicole Wilkinson speaks at the celebration of the practice's opening in Adams.
ADAMS, Mass. — Community Health Programs Inc. is expanding its reach into North County with the opening of a dental and family center in the former Adams Internists.
CHP celebrated the opening on Wednesday night with tours of the renovated portions of the building on Depot Street, speakers and the cutting of a ribbon.
"Human beings deserve the best dental treatment available, whether they have private insurance, Medicaid or no dental coverage at all," said Nicole Wilkinson, director of dental services. "With our dental expansion, we hope to bring that inclusion to all of Berkshire County starting here in Adams."
The opening of the dentistry, which will complement the North Adams Family Medical & Dental Center at North Adams Regional Hospital, will serve another 700 individuals in the area.
Brian Drake, president of the CHP board, said the organization will continue to fill the gaps in health care throughout the region.
"We're also of course driven by our mission to nurture and inspire healthy lives for people throughout the Berkshires by delivering exceptional and compassionate health care and family services," he said. "Adams is an example of these criteria."
CEO Bethany Kieley said these are the moments that they strive to become a reality. "Lots of years of hard work and we're just really delighted that it's come to fruition."
The dentistry consists of four "operatories" in light neutral colors and wide windows, including an accessible one to accommodate wheelchairs. The chairs also have built in monitors for displaying X-rays to patients, though Wilkinson said they've also been handy for showing cartoons to calm children.
There's cabinets and sterilization equipment and a $25,000 panoramic X-ray machine will allow for 360 degree radiographs once installed.
The renovation was about $847,000 and largely funded through donations and foundations.
"With my 30 years of experience in the dental sector, I saw a community here that deserved better access to dental care and to be treated with up-to-date, aesthetically pleasing facilities by a team as passionate as I am about the care of their patients," said Wilkinson. "We designed this office to be calming and bright and have state-of-the-art technology for more thorough and accurate diagnosis and treatment."
The practice will have two dentists with the potential for a third specialist who may rotate through and a hygienist. Plus with two dentists and three hygienists at the hospital, CHP is hoping to provide more access to care.
Wilkinson acknowledged the general shortage in not only dentists but hygienists and assistants as well.
"We have been lucky. We're really promoting our new offices. So we've been able to attract a lot of attention," she said. "And we've been lucky to find people that actually want to work in public health."
CHP is also working with McCann Technical School's dental assisting program and Wilkinson said enrollments are up at other dentistry schools.
The practice has a waiting list for regular appointments but Wilkinson thinks that the wait will drop once the second dentist starts within the month.
"We've already reduced our wait times a lot. It used to be six, eight months to get an appointment. We're now down to about three months to get an appointment," she said. "And then as these new people come on, we're going to shorten that to even like we should be able to get people in within a month for and that's a typical new patient. No problems, no pain. If somebody's in pain, we get them in within 24 hours. ...
"We really are truly open to everybody. It doesn't matter if you have insurance, don't have insurance. You don't have private insurance. MassHealth whatever you have, we have sliding fee schedules based on income levels."
There's still a number of vacant medical exam rooms in the building. Adams Internists and North Adams Family Medicine had joined CHP in 2015 and later moved its offices to the hospital.
"We focused everything on bringing Family Services, and bringing dental back and now we're looking to assess this area, find out what we can use this for what the community needs and what's going to be best," Wilkinson said.
The Family Services portion offers help in connecting to social service agencies, medical and dental referrals, insurance enrollment and other needs. It has a pantry and clothing and diaper exchange. The Food for All program offers fresh local food from farmers on the first and third Tuesdays of the month.
Mary Feuer, director of family services, said the connection with Adams goes back six or eight years when the Council on Aging had asked about the Mobile Food Bank at CHP's headquarters in Great Barrington and expressed how great the need for food was.
It took some time but now the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts has a regular schedule and the Family Services office is open.
"We are we are taking our time to learn the families here, learn the individuals and as we get to know them we will understand what their needs are and that's how we will create our expansion of Family Services," said Feuer.
Local officials welcomed the opening of center, with 1Berkshire's President and CEO Jonathan Butler saying it was a welcome investment.
"It makes us a more viable place for families to live. It makes it a more viable place for us to continue to plan into our future and invest in this region," he said, adding that as a resident, it was also a great resource.
Selectmen Chair Christine Hoyt said, "it will have a positive impact here on our community and particularly on the health of our residents," adding the downtown location will make it even more accessible.
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Anahata Schoolhouse is Offering a New Program for the Community
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
Howard Rosenberg opened the yoga studio in 2018 in the old school house at 201 North Summer St.
ADAMS, Mass. — The Anahata Schoolhouse on North Summer Street is offer a new service to its yoga patrons — ayurveda.
"Ayurveda means the science of life or longevity and it's a 5,000-year-old traditional system of medicine originating in India. It's a universal system of medicine that applies to anybody, anywhere," said certified ayurveda practitioner Hilary Garivaltis.
"It's based on nature, natural laws, and rhythms and principles of nature and understanding that we're all a part of it so learning how we fit into the world around us is so important in ayurveda."
Garivaltis has been a leader in ayurveda for 25 years and taught for 12 years at Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health in Strockbridge.
She continues to give workshops and courses, and helps set up programs, including now at the Anahata yoga and healing arts center. This includes offering personal consultations to create customized recommendations on diet, lifestyle and habits.
"Ayurveda is really body care, yoga is taking care of the mind, ayurveda is taking care of the body," said Aly Sprague, Anahata's director of ayurveda and yoga programs.
"It's extremely individualized, so no one that comes in is going to walk away with the same recommendations, not one person, because we are all made up of varying degrees."
The three candidates for two seats on the Board of Selectmen — Joseph Nowak, Jay Meczywor and Jerome Socolof — answered questions during the 90-minute forum at the former Firehouse Cafe.
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The Zoning Board of Appeals on Tuesday granted Kathryn Foley and Christian Rowe a special permit to operate the campsites with conditions.
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The deteriorating conditions of the 65-year-old firehouse on Columbia Street was presented during an information session Tuesday night that included discussion of organizational changes in the upcoming election.
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