Upgraded health care projected via continuing medical education The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, October 10, 1979-Page 5 Four more reasons to get your Hewlett-Packard calculator at Ulrich's: By LORENZO BENET Officials at the University's School of Public Health evidently believe it's not enough for students to get their degrees and pursue health careers without ever opening a book again. Last December, the Center of Con- tinuing Education for Public Health Professionals was established by the school so that health professionals and para-professionals across the state can keep up with the latest developments in their field. The center set up shop in March. FUNDED BY. A $559,000 grant from the Kellogg Foundation, the center is the only University-sponsored con- tinuing education program inthe coun- try that is practitioner-oriented. To determine what sort of continuing education projects it should conduct, center officials "try to determine what public health officials need to better their jobs," according to Assistant Prof. Peter Dual, who specializes in health behavior and health education at the public health school. "We then strive to find ways that the School of Public Health, or other sources, can provide that knowledge."% Local study groups, seminars, workshops, courses, and conferences are among the methods through which the center can deliver educational ac- tivities or technical assistance. And to assure that their programs are relevant, Dual said public health professionals from throughout the state will participate in planning curricula for the center. DUAL, WHO initially conceptualized the center, said once it becomes more established, representatives from the center will visit and even live in various parts of Michigan to organize and work with groups of public health workers. "These committees will form a vital two-way communications link between the center and public health workers," Dual stated. "We will make available the expertise of the school and will also furnish a channel by which the latest 'One of our primary fun- ctions is to provide an in- troduction/orientation to local health care systems.' -Helen Bielous, administrative associate for a public health professional group research innovations can reach the practitioner." Dual said participants in center programs will be eligible for educational credits. Public health professionals often are required to earn a specified number of credits annually. HELEN BIELOUS, the center's ad- ministrative associate, said her office primarily serves hospitals, community health centers, state and regional health departments, and other health organizations. "Many of these organizations don't provide an orientation program for their staff," said Bielous. "One of our primary functions is to provide an in- troduction/orientation to local health care systems." In addition to its orientation fun- ctions, the center also conducts ac- tivities related to communication and management skills, adolescent health care, environmental health, epidemiology, and other areas. "Our activities are tailored to our client's needs," Dual maintained. "This makes our project very unique." ACCORDING TO Bielous, the state will come out with a new Public Health Code in 1980 which will outline various services that present public health organizations should provide. "If the organization.is not providing a service mandated by the state, the cen- ter can assist the organization in ob- taining that particular service, be it of a technical, organizational, and/or theoretical nature," Bielous said. Richard Remington, dean of the School of Public Health, said, '"By decentralizing some of our educational functions in this way, we hope to apply the most up-to-date technical infor- mation to the sites where it will do-most good." Dual said the goal of the center is "to enhance the lifelong learning of public health workers in this state." Ultimately, he added, that will result in improved health care for Michigan residents. Buy one of the following calculators and receive free software valued before October 15, at up to $97.00. U HP-33E-Programmable Scientific FREE Choice of $5.00 Application Book HP-29C-Advanced Programmable with Continuous Memory FREE Choice of $7.50 Application Book t ' . z . } _ , ._ a. .. _ n _. . ;_: ADAPTED TO CITY, DEPARTMENTAL NEEDS: Officials laud Kr asny leadership HP-67-Fully Programmable' FREE HP-97-Fully Programmable Desk Top with Printer FREE One Application Pac- One Pkg. 40 Blank Cards- Two Solution Books - (Continued from Page 1). the main coordinators of a police force which at times numbered nearly 400 when trying to control potential street riots and violent demonstrations. ANN ARBOR POLICE Major Walter Hawkins, who assisted Krasny in con- trolling the protest, said the primary reason for less trouble than expected was Krasny's intelligent and .rational approach to quelling campus unrest. "He approached .the 60s with some degree of nervousness and trepidation ... and a large degree of common sn- se," Hawkins explained. "He kept a restraint on the use of violence in response to (student) violence, his reactions" were based on logic and projections on what would and might occur. .. a very highly controlled reaction. The key to controlling them is you don't let them know when your' troops are coming and going." HAWKINS, WHO HAS been on they city's police force for 25 years, said demonstrations were staged for the press and. "furthering ideologies." Protesters, he said, claimed police were creating the problem and that "Krasny couldn't control his own men." Hawkins conceded that "there were times when things got out of hand when not enough force was used or they (police) waited too long to act." He said police use a "large amount of finesse and a tremendous amount of restraint. They took an awful licking. They were the political football. They were the way you got publicity." Ann Arbor Police Captain Kenneth Klinge, who currently heads the University patrol, worked with Krasny during those troubled years, and had nothing but praise for him. "I DIDN'T SEE anything that wasn't reasonable. I think he was an excellent chief. The city was fortunate to have a police chief like him. He would analyze things and take the proper action." Klinge, too, said the chief's greatest attribute is the willingness to change with time and meet the city's needs. HAWKINS ADDED Krasny main- tained an open door policy towards the city. "It's one of his strongest points," he said. Someone could walk in off the street, ask to see the chief, and the chief would somehow see him." Hawkins said the other major issue Krasny had to deal with was the incep- tion and development of powerful police labor unions. "The previous ad- ministration didn't face that. Krasny had to learn how to deal with the 'alive and powerful' labor unions by ex- perience." Krasny has seen his department grow from a force of 35 with a budget of about $60,000 to one of more than 200 officers with a budget of $5 million. His force is now covering a town whose population has tripled and which is six times larger than it was in 1939, when Krasny joined the force. KRASNY SAID while modern police equipment and communications are much superior to that of the "old days," the present police system may have lost its most valuable asset. "We have better educated, better trained, better conditioned officers tlian ever before," the chief assertid. "But the very nature of their job today does not permit them time to cultivate personal community support of former years. "It was gonsidered part of our job to do what I guess you'd call public relations work. Today, officers don't have time to stop and chat. They have too much territory to cover. The whole system has become massive, imper- sonal. Now, the only time a citizen sees a policeman to talk to, its about trouble." James Stephenson, who was Ann Ar- bor's mayor from 1973-75, said he had "a great deal of personal confidence in Walt Krasny. He was' cognizant and sensitive to everybody's rights in the community. The police department and Krasny could anticipate events and handle them appropriately." STEPHENSON SAID in a recent in- terview that when he was mayor, he did receive some phone calls from citizens who complained about certain police practices, "but none of those ever had any substance," Stephenson claimed. Former Mayor Albert Wheeler, a long-time acquaintance of Krasny, recently recounted the story which oc- curred a few days after Wheeler became mayor. Wheeler said he received several requests from a variety of people to fire Krasny because "folks felt they just couldn't deal with him," Wheeler explained. But under the city charter, he added, he had no power to fire him. Wheeler, like other city ad- ministrators, saw Krasny as a police chief who was easy to sit down and talk with to straighten things out with. "You could always talk with Krasny and get reasonableness out of him." But Wheeler saw another side of Krasny that few people outside the city administration were aware of. "A number of cops didn't like Krasny," Wheeler said. Many believed he was just another part of the city's bureaucracy; "that Krasny didn't push as hard for this and that and wasn't tough enough on people. It was a small percentage, but it was there." Several younger officers, Wheeler continued, were discouraged from joining the city police force because "there really was no opportunity for advancement." 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