Berkshire Health Expanding Wound Care Services

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Health Systems is expanding its wound care services. Berkshire Medical Center will redesign and relocate its Center for Wound Care and Hyperbaric Medicine and Fairview Hospital will open a new center in Great Barrington to better serve South Berkshire patients.

The center, currently located on the third floor of the BMC Medical Arts Complex, is being relocated to the site of the former Crane Center for Day Surgery, at the corner of Wahconah and Charles streets. Fairview Hospital is renovating the former Condor Chevrolet building in Great Barrington, which will be the home of the Center for Wound Care & Hyperbaric Medicine at Fairview. The renovation work is under way at both locations, expected to be completed in October.

The new Pittsfield center will feature a much larger waiting area, making it more convenient for patients who use wheelchairs, and six treatment rooms, which will all be larger than the current five in the existing center, allowing for access by stretchers and Hoyer lifts in three of the rooms. The ground floor space of the new center also will be more convenient for wound-care patients, who often have mobility challenges. Easier parking will be provided through a dedicated Wound Center parking lot, to be located directly across the street on Charles Street.

The Fairview Center, which will have comprehensive wound-care services and two hyperbaric oxygen chambers, will provide better access for many South Berkshire patients, particularly those who have had difficulty in traveling to Pittsfield for care. The expansion in Pittsfield and the new Fairview Center will also help to alleviate wait times for patients in need of wound services. In all, with the two hyperbaric chambers in Pittsfield and two in Great Barrington, Berkshire Health Systems will be able to provide access to four chambers for patients who require hyperbaric oxygen therapy.

The Center for Wound Care & Hyperbaric Medicine at BMC cares for more than 700 patients a year, with nearly 7,400 patient encounters, and has a 96 percent heal rate. The center provides more than 1,600 hyperbaric oxygen treatments a year to nearly 150 patients.

Services are provided by physicians and nurses with advanced training in wound management and technicians specially trained in hyperbaric treatment, all led by Dr. Richard Basile, the only physician in Berkshire County who is board certified in wound care. The staff provides care for a wide variety of conditions that lead to non-healing wounds and offers individual treatment plans that include dressings, debridement, contact casting, compression therapy, non-invasive vascular assessment and more. Wound care physicians who provide services at the center include general, vascular, plastic and orthopaedic surgeons, infectious disease and emergency medicine specialists.

The Center for Wound Care & Hyperbaric Medicine at BMC has been honored as a Center of the Year by Diversified Clinical Services, citing its heal rates, days to heal, medical leadership, and overall clinical accomplishments. For more information, call the center at 413-496-6870.
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BRPC Submits Grants for Berkshire County

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Berkshire Regional Planning Commission recently submitted grant applications on behalf of the county's municipalities. 

On March 5, the BRPC agreed to submit four grants to the Executive Office of Environmental Affairs Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness Grant Program.

One was for the Clarksburg Bank Stabilization Project in partnership with the town. This will address the aggressive bank erosion where the former Briggsville Dam was removed, mitigating property loss for residents in the Carson Avenue area of Clarksburg. The area was graded and naturalized on the removal of the old dam but was scoured out by Tropical Storm Irene in 2011. 

Another is for "Ghost Dams Inventory Mapping." This will help address numerous unmapped nonjurisdictional dams throughout the county, many of which are not maintained and no longer serve a purpose. "Ghost dams" can often be an unknown safety hazard and are a barrier to fish and wildlife. 

The Housatonic Road Stream Crossing Management Plans grant will help to complete a fully mapped and assessed inventory of culverts in the towns of Lee, Cheshire, Hinsdale, Dalton and possibly Lanesborough. Berkshire Environmental Action Team, Greenagers, Housatonic Valley Association and Mass Audubon will also work with the towns to identify priority culvert replacements based on culvert condition, environmental priority, and climate risk. 

The Berkshire Climate Career Lab in partnership with Ethos Pathways, a climate readiness coach, to create a High School career program to prepare students interested in climate careers, explore opportunities, and build skills. 

Also submitted were two applications to the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center's EmPower Implementation Grant Program.

A $150,000 Housing Energy Efficiency Rehabilitation grant would create a more cohesive pipeline for residents within the Community Development Block Grant housing rehabilitation program to receive funding and support through the MassSave Program, which supports energy efficiency, and Berkshire Community Action Council.

A $150,000 Air Quality Monitoring grant would fund the rest of the current U.S. Environmental Protection Agency air quality monitoring grant. It will help to ensure that the indoor and outdoor air quality sensors will provide valuable data not seen before in Berkshire County.

The BRPC board also accepted $25,000 from The Nature Conservancy, which will be used to help support culvert replacements for municipalities in the county.

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