The Wright Center Welcomes Therapy Dog to the Team

To promote employee wellness, The Wright Center for Community Health recently added a new member to the team: She works like a dog and gets rewarded mainly with handfuls of Cheerios.

Sadie Ann Finegan, 2, is a bona fide therapy dog. She has been certified by the Alliance of Therapy Dogs and earned the American Kennel Club’s Canine Good Citizen certificate, signifying she completed a 10-skill test on good manners.

Sadie and her handler, Olyphant resident Melissa “Missie” Finegan, routinely visit each of The Wright Center’s nine primary care practices in Northeast Pennsylvania to provide employees and resident and fellow physicians with a brief workday break. For many, it seems to lift their spirits, too.

“If you watch Sadie interact with the staff, you immediately see their body language soften, you see their faces soften, you see grown men on the floor talking baby talk to an animal,” says Finegan. “I don’t know how many times we’ve heard, ‘I really needed this today.’”

The Wright Center introduced the program in November 2023 and refers to it as “animal-enabled wellness services.”

Finegan and Sadie travel monthly to the nonprofit organization’s clinics in Lackawanna, Luzerne, and Wayne counties. During each hour-long visit, employees are invited to drop by a conference room or other non-public area for a few minutes of Sadie time, dispensing gentle pats, pets, scratches, and snuggles – but no ruff-housing!

“If people need a little reprieve or a happy boost, they can take a moment away from their desks and interact with Sadie,” says Allison LaRussa, associate vice president for health humanities, trauma-informed sanctuary frameworks, and justice, equity, diversity, inclusion, and belonging at The Wright Center. “It makes you instantly feel good.”

When Sadie struts into a clinic, she often draws a crowd of admirers, many of them snapping cellphone photos like paparazzi at a Taylor Swift sighting. Fans gawk and talk. Look at her long eyelashes. Is that a new bandana she’s wearing? Oh my gosh, she has a Wright Center ID badge with her name on it!

But beneath the fuss and fun – including the distribution of dog treats – lies a serious purpose for the pooch’s presence.

The health care industry is coping with workforce challenges, including employee burnout and high turnover. The troubles intensified in hospitals and other health care settings during the COVID-19 outbreak. But they reflect a malaise impacting many modern U.S. workplaces in which people wrestle with anxiety, depression, and other behavioral health issues that can contribute to physical illness as well as poor productivity and job dissatisfaction.

The Wright Center’s leadership team has introduced a range of long- and short-term initiatives, each demonstrating its commitment to promoting employee wellness.

These efforts include ongoing participation in the Sanctuary Institute’s model for organizational change, which gives workers the tools to improve their daily interactions with colleagues and others and to create a safer, trauma-informed workplace. Employees can also access a whole-person wellness blog, mindfulness sessions, art sessions, and other support, such as Sadie’s visits.

The intent is to foster good health and resiliency among The Wright Center’s staff and the many professionals who train within its clinics, including resident and fellow physicians, physician assistants, medical assistants, and others.

“If our clinicians are not well, how do we provide the best care for our patients? We simply cannot,” explains LaRussa. “So, allowing even a few minutes during a workday for some of these wellness initiatives to help people process – or to help them relax or whatever they might need – is really beneficial.”

‘Quick fix to a bad day’

As a stress-buster, Sadie might be just what the doctor ordered. Her handler describes her as “72 pounds of teddy bear.” The goldendoodle (a cross between a golden retriever and a poodle) has floppy ears, a huge button nose, and a molasses-sweet disposition, the combination of which puts smiles on the faces of almost everyone she meets.

During her visits at The Wright Center, efforts are made to not disturb patient care or infringe on employees who have pet allergies or don’t enjoy animal encounters for other reasons. For most people, she’s a dose of joy.

“Sadie is a quick fix to a bad day,” says Finegan. “She brings that tail-wagging, panting, unconditional love that just makes everything OK.”

Finegan, 48, is a longtime patient of Dr. Linda Thomas-Hemak, president and CEO of The Wright Centers for Community Health and Graduate Medical Education. Finegan initially asked to bring the dog to her doctor’s appointments at the Mid Valley Practice in Jermyn purely for her personal support. Later, the two women discussed possibly engaging Sadie in a bigger mission.

“It just kind of snowballed into Sadie doing staff support,” Finegan says.

Elsewhere, therapy dogs have been used on college campuses and in schools to decrease students’ stress before pressure-filled exams. Similarly, the Lehigh Valley Health Network has enlisted therapy dogs at its COVID-19 vaccine clinic to ease the minds of worried children, and the Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia sometimes opens its campus doors to a therapy dog to spread positivity among staff and patients.

Beyond health care settings, therapy dogs have been spotted serving in airports. At the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton International Airport, for example, participants in the all-volunteer Therapy Animals Integrating Less Stress, or TAILS, program serve to decrease humans’ tensions while they wait for takeoff.

‘An amazing contributor’

Sadie might expand her scope of service to more places in the future, Finegan says. For now, however, the duo is focused on learning the ins and outs of The Wright Center’s primary and preventive care clinics, such as which employees will permit Sadie’s face-licking “kisses” and which prefer to keep their distance.

Sadie is one of three dogs in the Finegan home. Around family members, she can become playful and excited. But when Finegan pulls up to a Wright Center clinic with Sadie for their contracted duties and says the word “work,” the dog knows it’s time to be calm and extra attentive.

Sadie recognizes commands such as “leave it” – to disregard a pill or other item accidentally dropped on the floor, for instance – and “place” – to remain seated in a particular spot. However, this therapy dog seemingly needs no verbal prompt to do what she does best: radiate happiness.

“Sadie is an amazing contributor to our household,” says Finegan. “We’re just grateful that she can now do that out in the world.”

Wayne Bank Takes Part in Video Contest for Teens

Throughout the Fall of 2023, Wayne Bank partnered with the American Bankers Association Foundation for their Lights, Camera, Save contest. The contest is a national competition that encourages teens to use video to communicate the value of sound money management and set their peers on a sound financial path.

To participate, students ages 13-18, created a 30-second or less video on using money wisely. The contest was open to all filmmakers of all experience levels. They then submitted their entry forms and links to the videos to Wayne Bank’s promotional inbox.

Wayne Bank hosted the first round of judging and selected one winning video to compete in the next round.  Those winners were: Rebecca Dadig, Brenna Dahlgren, Rony Decker, Brooklyn Moody, and Zoie Hessling, all students from Honesdale High School. These students are part of the FBLA Club and had the guidance of their FBLA advisors Courtney Krajkovich, Lauren Cawley, and Laura Lockwood.

Wayne Bank’s Steven R. Daniels, Senior Vice President and Director of Consumer Banking, and Kristen E. Lancia, CFMP, Vice President and Marketing Manager, recently had the pleasure of gifting each winning student a $100 gift card as a token of appreciation and congratulations for their hard work and amazing talent. Wayne Bank wishes them the best of luck as they move forward in the next and final stages of the contest!

These winners will now compete on the national level for one of three cash prizes, including $5,000 for first place, $2,500 for second place, and $1,000 for third place.  National contestants will face off head-to-head in the first round of national judging on the ABA Instagram page, which will determine which videos advance to the second and then final rounds of judging.

Videos are judged on their quality, message, content, and the criteria set forth by the contest’s official rules.  To learn more about Lights, Camera, Save! visit lightscamerasave.com.

The Northeast Regional Cancer Institute Receives Donation

The 10th year of the Grouse Hill Gallop 5K run/walk event took place on Thanksgiving morning in Greenfield Township. This year, the grassroots group chose the Northeast Regional Cancer Institute (NRCI) as their benefiting organization. Community members joined together on Thanksgiving morning to compete in a 5K run in their neighborhood. The donations were collected at the event and online, and through their efforts, they earned $2,179. These funds will help ease the burden of cancer in northeast Pennsylvania. All funds will stay local and support NRCI’s community programming and services. Several Grouse Hill neighbors have been affected by cancer.  

Wright Center Pediatrician Receives Board Certification in Obesity Medicine

Dr. Manju Mary Thomas, a board-certified pediatrician at The Wright Center for Community Health Mid Valley Practice, recently earned board certification in obesity medicine to prepare her better to help patients manage obesity, its many comorbidities, and to lose weight.

Obesity is one of the nation’s most prevalent chronic diseases and is associated with many of the leading causes of preventable, premature death. The condition is linked to a higher risk of heart disease, stroke, diabetes, sleep apnea, arthritis, certain cancers, and many additional comorbidities. The certification from the American Board of Obesity Medicine gives physicians the insights and tools to help patients who are struggling with the complex issue of obesity.

Thomas is also the medical director of pediatrics and community and school-based medical home services, and serves as physician faculty for The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education’s Family Medicine Residency Pediatrics program.

She earned her medical degree from St. John’s Medical College, Bangalore, India, and completed her residency in pediatrics at Brookdale University Hospital, Brooklyn, New York. Thomas provides primary and preventive care for pediatric and adolescent patients at the primary care practice in Jermyn.

For more information about The Wright Center for Community Health and its network of primary and preventive care practices in Northeast Pennsylvania, go to TheWrightCenter.org or call 570-230-0019.

Woodloch Resort Employees Provide Gifts to Local Children

As the holiday season draws to a close and the New Year commences, Woodloch, a three-property resort in the Northern Poconos of Pennsylvania, embraces a tradition of giving that extends far beyond the holiday rush. For the past few years, the dedicated staff at Woodloch have championed their very own Angel Tree program, embodying the true spirit of the season by supporting those in need within the Woodloch community.

Amidst the chaos of holiday preparations, the housekeeping team at The Lodge at Woodloch, the adults-only destination spa, found a unique way to make a lasting impact. Housekeeping Manager Linda Angermann recalls, “Before Christmas of 2022, I had a meeting with my team and proposed the idea of each team member contributing a dollar from their daily tips to adopt a child for Christmas. They all agreed and were excited to do so. We raised $150 to give a nice holiday to a child.” 

Inspired by this success, the team decided to continue their efforts year-round. Through their dedication and perseverance, the housekeeping team raised over $2,000 by the end of 2023. With these funds, they were able to bring the magic of Christmas to over 15 children, ensuring smiles and happiness well beyond the holiday season.

Their efforts did not stop there. The team donated surplus funds to KidsPeace, an organization supporting behavioral and mental health needs in children, families, and communities. Across the Woodloch properties, 25 “angels” and numerous departments joined hands to brighten the holiday season for 50 local children.

Angermann expressed her gratitude, stating, “My team shines with generosity all year round, but their spirit truly sparkles during the holidays. We’re excited to surpass the $2,000 mark for 2024!”

The Woodloch Angel Tree program illuminates the true essence of the holiday season – a time for giving, spreading joy, and making a meaningful difference in the lives of others. It is a testament to the unwavering compassion of the Woodloch staff and comes as no surprise to C.E.O. and owner, Bradley Kiesendahl: “Our team is comprised of some of the most kind and caring individuals you will ever meet. Their heartfelt hospitality shines through in everything they do. They are heavily involved in the local community and very giving of their time and service, volunteering on community councils, in charitable organizations, schools and beyond. They never hesitate to support one another, particularly during times of adversity. We are immensely proud of and grateful for our exceptional team.”

Allied Services Receives $10,000 Donation for Pediatric Programs

Crothall Healthcare closed out 2023 with a gift of $10,000 in support of Allied Services Pediatric Programs. Crothall Healthcare is a multi-decade partner of Allied Services, providing support services across the non-profit healthcare system. With over 30 years of healthcare experience, Crothall Healthcare is a premier provider of resident and patient-centered support services (EVS, Facilities Management, Healthcare Technology Solutions, Food and Nutrition Services, Patient Transportation, Sterile Processing, and Patient Observation) offering end-to-end solutions for a variety of care, including Acute Care, Long-Term Care, and Ambulatory settings. 

The generous year-end gift will support the delivery of specialized pediatric therapies to children, infants to 18 years, at Allied Services’ main Scranton and Wilkes-Barre campuses.  

“Being a partner of Allied Services since 1991 and understanding the positive impact that they have in their community and beyond, Crothall Healthcare is humbled to play a part in helping to support these much-needed pediatric services that Allied Services provides.  It is a tremendous program that Allied Services is passionate about, and we are excited that we can participate with them in this endeavor!” said Tom Cuthbertson, Senior Regional Director of Operations at Crothall Healthcare. 

Annually, Allied Services delivers more than 24,000 therapy sessions to children in Northeastern and Central Pennsylvania. The Pediatric Programs provide comprehensive and specialized physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy for children from infant to 18 years with a variety of diagnoses.  

Marion Munley Honored With the 2023 “Mel Award”

Munley Law Personal Injury Attorneys announced that truck accident lawyer Marion Munley was awarded the 2023 “Mel Award” by the Melvin M. Belli Society.

The Mel Award, named after famed litigator Melvin M. Belli, is given to an attorney “who made a significant contribution to the practice of trial law in America.” The Melvin M. Belli Society is an international group of trial lawyers dedicated to preserving and enhancing the Belli legal legacy of
promoting courtroom excellence. Marion is the past president of the Society.

Widely recognized as one of Pennsylvania’s most prominent and widely respected truck accident lawyers, Marion is Triple Board Certified by the National Board of Trial Advocacy in Civil Trial, Civil Practice, and Truck Law. Marion has earned an AV-Preeminent designation from Martindale-
Hubbell, the industry’s highest ethical and client satisfaction rating.

A leader in the legal community, Marion is an active member of the American Association for Justice (AAJ) and currently serves as its Treasurer. Marion was the first woman to become Chair of the AAJ Trucking Litigation Group in 2018 and is a past chair of the AAJ Women Trial Lawyers Caucus.

Marion is the second woman in Pennsylvania to become Board Certified as a Civil Trial Advocate by the National Board of Trial Advocacy. Among her other professional affiliations are the American Board of Trial Advocates, the International Society of Barristers, and the Summit Council, an
exclusive group of today’s top civil justice attorneys committed to the highest levels of trial advocacy, to obtaining justice for individuals and families who have been hurt by corporate wrongdoing, and to the protection of the civil justice system.

During her career, Marion has received some of the highest honors a lawyer can receive. Listed in The Best Lawyers in America® since 2012, Marion has been named the 2023 “Lawyer of the Year” for Medical Malpractice Law – Plaintiffs in Northeastern Pennsylvania. She has also been recognized as Best Lawyers® 2022 and 2024 “Lawyer of the Year” for Product Liability Litigation – Plaintiffs in Northeastern Pennsylvania and 2021 “Lawyer of the Year” for Personal Injury-Plaintiffs for the Allentown metro area. Marion has also been selected to the list of Pennsylvania Super Lawyers for the last 18 years and was recently named to the 2023 “Top 10” Pennsylvania Super Lawyers List. A graduate of Temple University School of Law (J.D., 1986), Marion received her undergraduate degree from Scranton University in 1983.

Keystone College Receives Funding for Veteran Program

Keystone College has received funding from a local charitable foundation to improve the lives of the men and women who have served their country through military service.

Keystone has received a $5,000 grant from the Robert H. Spitz Foundation to help implement the Keystone College Veterans Success Program. The program will provide targeted information and guidance on emerging educational opportunities and customize services for veterans, including financial aid, scholarships, and vocational training programs. The goal of the initiative is to empower veterans with the knowledge, resources, and educational training they need to enhance their careers and improve their lives.

Administered by the Scranton Area Foundation, the Robert H. Spitz Foundation primarily awards grants to registered nonprofit organizations that support initiatives and programs serving the residents of Lackawanna County and Northeastern Pennsylvania.

“We are very grateful to the Robert H. Spitz Foundation and the Scranton Area Foundation for helping Keystone in this important initiative to assist our nation’s military veterans,” said Keystone College President John F. Pullo, Sr. “Keystone has a long and proud history of serving those who have given so much to defend and support our nation’s freedom. This focused initiative continues that tradition.”

For the second consecutive year, Keystone has been listed as a school which is “Best for Vets” by Military Times Magazine, a national publication which serves veterans and active military members. 

Keystone’s selection was compiled through the magazine’s extensive research, including data from the federal Department of Education and Department of Veterans Affairs, to determine those schools which best serve veterans through educational opportunities, financial assistance, and services.

In previous years, Keystone has also been listed as a top school for veterans by other national military and veterans publications. Founded in 1868, with a commitment to providing an education to Civil War veterans and their families, Keystone is home to the Elmer Hawk ’48 Veterans Center, which serves as the headquarters for the Keystone Armed Services Club.

The Veterans Center offers a comfortable and convenient meeting place for this special group of Keystone students who have given so much to their country. Students can meet with each other, complete their school assignments, or simply relax, read, visit with friends and family members, or watch television while waiting for their next class.

Recognized as one of the best educational values in Northeastern Pennsylvania, Keystone offers more than 50 undergraduate and graduate degree options in liberal arts and science-based programs in business, communications, education, natural science, environmental science, and social sciences. Located on a beautiful 276-acre campus 15 minutes from Scranton, Pa. and two hours from New York City and Philadelphia, Keystone is known for small class sizes and individual attention focused on student success through internships, research, and community involvement.