Northern Berkshire Pediatric Opens Williamstown Satellite Office

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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Northern Berkshire Pediatrics to open Williamstown office.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — It is not quite a house call, but it may be a good call for families in Williamstown and Bennington County, Vt., who take their children to Northern Berkshire Pediatrics.
 
The North Adams-based practice on Tuesday will open its second satellite office, this time moving into 181 Main St. (Route 2), across from the Colonial Plaza shopping center.
 
For more than a decade, the practice has seen patients afternoons at 19 Depot St. in Adams. The new office in Williamstown will be open starting Tuesday, Sept. 2, on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
 
"It's been great because in the communities of Adams and Savoy and the surrounding areas, there's a fair amount of patients for whom it's easier," Dr. Jennifer S. DeGrenier said this week.
 
"I have a huge draw of patients from Adams and Windsor when I'm in Adams. It saves those families a lot of time not having to come up to North Adams."
 
The satellite offices are available for regularly scheduled checkups and same-day, "sick day" appointments, DeGrenier said.
 
Williamstown was a natural direction for Northern Berkshire Pediatric's latest expansion. In 2011, the practice welcomed physicians from Williamstown Medical Associates when that practice decided to focus on adult care.
 
The changing of face of health care in the region is another reason why it makes sense to expand, DeGrenier said.
 
"Bennington and Southern Vermont have seen a loss of pediatricians and family doctors," she said. "We had already seen an influx from Bennington and Southern Vermont."
 
To help meet the rising demand for pediatric care, Northern Berkshire Pediatrics recently added its first nurse practitioner, Kris Savitsky, and a new physician, Dr. Marie Madsen.
 
The practice's six physicians will rotate to cover the Williamstown office, similar to the way they rotate through the Adams satellite office.
 
One medical assistant will work in the Williamstown office four days per week with at least one physician and one nurse visiting when the facility is open.
 
Like its counterpart in Adams, the Williamstown office is outfitted with three examination rooms, which DeGrenier explained should allow the staff on duty to maintain patient flow.
 
"If you think about medicine and the way you try to see people — you always have someone you're preparing for an exam, someone you're treating and occasionally someone who needs to stay there a little longer," she said. "In order for one doctor to work very smoothly, three is a nice number. It allows you to maintain people's appointments.
 
"Even in our [main] office with 10 exam rooms, my day goes very smoothly if I have three of them."

Tags: childrens health,   doctors practice,   pediatrics,   

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'Swatting' Incident at Mount Greylock Regional School

Staff Reports iBerkshires
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Williamstown Police on Wednesday morning responded to an apparent 'swatting' incident at Mount Greylock Regional School.
 
At 10:17 a.m., police were notified by the middle-high school that a threat was phoned in to the school, police reported in a news release.
 
Mount Greylock implemented its security protocols, and the police responded to the Cold Spring Road campus with assistance from the North Adams and Lanesborough Police Departments and State Police, according to the release.
 
Law enforcement officers conducted a search of the school and surrounding areas. The search uncovered no evidence to support the threat and the school returned to normal operations at 11:03 a.m., police said. Additional public safety resources were to remain on scene for the remainder of the school day.
 
The investigation is continuing, and persons with information are requested to notify the Williamstown Police Department at 413-458-5733.
 
Swatting is a dangerous, illegal hoax where perpetrators make false emergency reports — such as bomb threats or active shooters — to provoke a heavily armed law enforcement (SWAT) response to a target's address, police said. It is a criminal act of harassment or retaliation that puts victims, officers, and the public in immediate physical danger.
 
The Williamstown Fire Department and Northern Berkshire Emergency Medical Services also provided assets to assist in the police response.
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