logo
Luskin Orthopaedic Institute for Children (LuskinOIC) Hosts 'Christmas in July' to Spread Mid-Year Cheer and Deliver Back-to-School Supplies to Under-Resourced Children

Luskin Orthopaedic Institute for Children (LuskinOIC) Hosts 'Christmas in July' to Spread Mid-Year Cheer and Deliver Back-to-School Supplies to Under-Resourced Children

Business Wire5 days ago
LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The spirit of giving came early this year as Luskin Orthopaedic Institute for Children (LuskinOIC) hosted its first-ever Christmas in July celebration. The festive event brought patients, families, staff, and the broader community together for a joyful day of toys, music, crafts, food, and essential back-to-school supplies.
The spirit of giving came early this year as LuskinOIC hosted its first-ever Christmas in July celebration. The Santa-attended event was created to uplift pediatric patients, their siblings, and under-resourced children in the surrounding community.
Share
Children were welcomed by none other than Santa Claus himself, who traded in his sleigh for summer sunglasses to greet patients and distribute gifts. LuskinOIC Ambassadors Nayah Damasen (Monster High), Daire McLeod (Ghostwriter 3), Bella Blanding (9-1-1: Lone Star), and Patient Ambassador Alex Heenan, a member of the UCLA Men's Water Polo NCAA National Championship team, joined Santa to spread cheer and help give gifts and backpacks filled with school supplies.
Created to uplift pediatric patients, their siblings, and under-resourced children in the surrounding community, Christmas in July offered more than just fun—it provided vital support at a crucial time of year. 'The idea that people could come and grab a toy or school supplies and just have a celebration was needed in the community,' said Dr. Nicholas Bernthal, LuskinOIC Board Member, Attending Surgeon Professor, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Chair and Executive Medical Director of the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.
The event was made possible through the generous support of retired LAPD Officer Robert Deamer, Newton Street Lucky Thirteen, Red Sled Santa Foundation, SUPO Foundation, and Seasoned Tees by MCB.
The 114-year-old nonprofit serves as a lifeline for children facing musculoskeletal conditions, providing expert care regardless of a family's ability to pay. With more than 85% of its patients underinsured, LuskinOIC relies on the generosity of donors and sponsors to continue its mission of advancing health equity for every child in Los Angeles and beyond.
In alliance with UCLA Health, LuskinOIC stands as the largest provider of pediatric orthopaedic urgent care on the West Coast, receives 60,000 patient visits each year, and offers pro-bono treatment to patients in Calexico and Mexicali, among other cities worldwide through its International Children's Program.
As families begin preparing for the school year, LuskinOIC's Christmas in July served as a powerful reminder that compassion, care, and community support are timeless gifts—no matter the season.
For more information about the LuskinOIC, please visit luskinoic.org and follow us @LuskinOIC
About Luskin Orthopaedic Institute for Children (LuskinOIC)
Luskin Orthopaedic Institute for Children was founded in 1911 as Los Angeles Orthopaedic Hospital and today is the largest pediatric orthopaedic facility on the West Coast focused solely on musculoskeletal conditions in children. In alliance with UCLA Health and with the support of the LuskinOIC Foundation, we advance pediatric orthopaedics worldwide through outstanding patient care, medical education, and research. Our locations in downtown Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Westwood, and Calexico treat the full spectrum of pediatric orthopaedic disorders and injuries. For more information, please visit luskinoic.org.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘A continual assault.' How UCLA's research faculty is grappling with Trump funding freeze
‘A continual assault.' How UCLA's research faculty is grappling with Trump funding freeze

Los Angeles Times

time20 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

‘A continual assault.' How UCLA's research faculty is grappling with Trump funding freeze

Their medical research focuses on potentially lifesaving breakthroughs in cancer treatment, and developing tools to more easily diagnose debilitating diseases. Their studies in mathematics could make online systems more robust and secure. But as the academic year opens, the work of UCLA's professors in these and many other fields has been imperiled by the Trump administration's suspension of $584 million in grant funding, which University of California President James B. Milliken called a 'death knell' to its transformative research. The freeze came after a July 29 U.S. Department of Justice finding that the university had violated the civil rights of Jewish and Israeli students by providing an inadequate response to alleged antisemitism they faced after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack. The fight over the funding stoppage intensified Friday after the Trump administration demanded that UCLA pay a $1-billion fine, among other concessions, to resolve the accusations — and California Gov. Gavin Newsom said the state will sue, calling the proposal 'extortion.' Amid heightened tensions in Westwood, thousands of university academics are in limbo. In total, at least 800 grants, mostly from the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health, have been frozen. UCLA scholars described days of confusion as they struggle to understand how the loss of grants would affect their work and scramble to uncover new funding sources — or roles that would ensure their continued pay, or that of their colleagues. While professors still have jobs and paychecks to draw on, many others, including graduate students, rely on grant funding for their salaries, tuition and healthcare. At least for the moment, though, several academics told The Times that their work had not yet be interrupted. So far, no layoffs have been announced. Sydney Campbell, a pancreatic cancer researcher and postdoctoral scholar at UCLA's David Geffen School of Medicine, said her work — which aims to understand how diet affects the disease — is continuing for now. She has an independent fellowship that 'hopefully will protect the majority of my salary.' But others, she said, don't have that luxury. 'It is absolutely going to affect people's livelihoods. I already know of people ... with families who are having to take pay cuts almost immediately,' said Campbell, who works for a lab that has lost two National Institutes of Health grants, including one that funds her research. Pancreatic cancer is among the most deadly of cancers, but Campbell's work could lead to a better understanding of it, paving the way for more robust prophylactic programs — and treatment plans — that may ultimately help tame the scourge. 'Understanding how diet can impact cancer development could lead to preventive strategies that we can recommend to patients in the future,' she said. 'Right now we can't effectively do that because we don't have the information about the underlying biology. Our studies will help us actually be able to make recommendations based on science.' Campbell's work — and that of many others at UCLA — is potentially groundbreaking. But it could soon be put on hold. 'We have people who don't know if they're going to be able to purchase experimental materials for the rest of the month,' she said. For some, the cuts have triggered something close to an existential crisis. After professor Dino Di Carlo, chair of the UCLA Samueli Bioengineering Department, learned about 20 grants were suspended there — including four in his lab worth about $1 million — he felt a profound sadness. He said he doesn't know why his grants were frozen, and there may not be money to pay his six researchers. So Di Carlo, who is researching diagnostics for Lyme and other tick-borne diseases, took to LinkedIn, where he penned a post invoking the Franz Kafka novel 'The Trial.' The unsettling tale is about a man named Josef K. who wakes up and finds himself under arrest and then on trial — with no understanding of the situation. 'Like Josef K., the people actually affected — the public, young scientists, patients waiting for better treatments and diagnostic tools — are left asking: What crime did we commit?' wrote Di Carlo. 'They are being judged by a system that no longer explains itself.' The LinkedIn post quickly attracted dozens of comments and more than 1,000 other responses. Di Carlo, who has been working to find jobs for researchers who depend on paychecks that come from now-suspended grants, said he appreciated the support. But, goodwill has its limits. 'It doesn't pay the rent for a student this month,' he said. Di Carlo's research is partly focused on developing an at-home test that would detect Lyme and other tick-borne diseases, which are on the rise. Because no such product is currently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, he said, people who've experienced a tick bite have to wait for lab results to confirm their infection. 'This delay in diagnosis prevents timely treatment, allowing the disease to progress and potentially lead to long-term health issues,' he said. 'A rapid, point-of-care test would allow individuals to receive immediate results, enabling early treatment with antibiotics when the disease is most easily addressed, significantly reducing the risk of chronic symptoms and improving health outcomes.' Di Carlo lamented what he called 'a continual assault on the scientific community' by the Trump administration, which has canceled billions of dollars in National Institutes of Health funding for universities across the country. It 'just ... hasn't let up,' Di Carlo said. Some professors who've lost grants have spent long hours scrambling to secure new sources of funding. Di Carlo said he was in meetings all week to identity which researchers are affected by the cuts, and to try to figure out, 'Can we support those students?' He has also sought to determine whether some could be moved to other projects that still have funding, or be given teaching assistant positions, among other options. He's not alone in those efforts. Mathematics professor Terence Tao also has lost a grant worth about $750,000. But Tao said that he was more distressed by the freezing of a $25-million grant for UCLA's Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics. The funding loss for the institute, where Tao is director of special projects, is 'actually quite existential,' he said, because the grant is 'needed to fund operations' there. Tao, who is the James and Carol Collins chair in the College of Letters and Sciences, said the pain goes beyond the loss of funds. 'The abruptness — and basically the lack of due process in general — just compounds the damage,' said Tao. 'We got no notice.' A luminary in his field, Tao conducts research that examines, in part, whether a group of numbers are random or structured. His work could lead to advances in cryptography that may eventually make online systems — such as those used for financial transactions — more secure. 'It is important to do this kind of research — if we don't, it's possible that an adversary, for example, could actually discover these weaknesses that we are not looking for at all,' Tao said. 'So you do need this extra theoretical confirmation that things that you think are working actually do work as intended, [and you need to] also explore the negative space of what doesn't work.' Tao said he's been heartened by donations that the mathematics institute has received from private donors in recent days — about $100,000 so far. 'We are scrambling for short-term funding because we need to just keep the lights on for the next few months,' said Tao. Rafael Jaime, president of United Auto Workers Local 4811, which represents 48,000 academic workers within the University of California — including about 8,000 at UCLA — said he was not aware of any workers who haven't been paid so far, but that the issue could come to a head at the end of August. He said that the UC system 'should do everything that it can to ensure that workers aren't left without pay.' A major stressor for academics: the uncertainty. Some researchers whose grants were suspended said they have not received much guidance from UCLA on a path forward. Some of that anxiety was vented on Zoom calls last week, including a UCLA-wide call attended by about 3,000 faculty members. UCLA administrators said they are exploring stopgap options, including potential emergency 'bridge' funding to grantees to pay researchers or keep up labs such as those that use rodents as subjects. Some UCLA academics worried about a brain drain. Di Carlo said that undergraduate students he advises have begun asking for his advice on relocating to universities abroad for graduate school. 'This has been the first time that I've seen undergraduate students that have asked about foreign universities for their graduate studies,' he said. 'I hear, 'What about Switzerland? ... What about University of Tokyo?' This assault on science is making the students think that this is not the place for them.' But arguably researchers' most pressing concern is continuing their work. Campbell explained that she has personally been affected by pancreatic cancer — she lost someone close to her to it. She and her peers do the research 'for the families' who've also been touched by the disease. 'That the work that's already in progress has the chance of being stopped in some way is really disappointing,' she said. 'Not just for me, but for all those patients I could potentially help.'

Dear Abby: My co-workers hate me and I don't know why
Dear Abby: My co-workers hate me and I don't know why

New York Post

timea day ago

  • New York Post

Dear Abby: My co-workers hate me and I don't know why

DEAR ABBY: I have been a registered nurse for 11 years. I am experienced in hospital floor nursing and clinic nursing, and I have always been well regarded in my field. I have never had a problem forming positive relationships with my co-workers. I recently moved to a new unit. Although the workflow is slightly different than what I was used to, I have caught on quickly and feel confident in my ability to do the job well. My problem is, none of the nurses seems to like or respect me. They take every opportunity to point out insignificant differences in the way I do things as opposed to how they do them. What it really comes down to is their preference vs. actual protocol. I try daily to engage in conversation, get to know them better and form a supportive and respectful working relationship with each of them. My efforts are met with little or no reciprocation. I love the type of work I'm doing. The hours are great, and I have the time to provide great nursing care and serve as an advocate for my patients. However, I have always said I could have the worst job in the world but if I had great relationships with my co-workers, it would make the job much more enjoyable. I now feel I have the best job with the worst co-workers. I have gone home and cried multiple times from feeling frustrated that I'm not accepted. Should I quit and move on? If not, how can I make this better? Advertisement –– DISAPPOINTED IN ARKANSAS DEAR DISAPPOINTED: Change can be difficult for everyone involved, including your co-workers. Because you are new, give it a little more time before deciding whether to move on. If things don't improve, discuss your feelings of isolation with your supervisor to ensure that the frosty reception you have received doesn't negatively affect your performance. Then look for another job. DEAR ABBY: I am one of three adult siblings. My brother and sister both have children; I do not. I love my nieces and nephews and have always provided birthday and Christmas gifts, as well as sent them money for graduations or other special events. Advertisement My siblings say they no longer want to exchange gifts between the three of us, and just to focus on the kids. I spend several hundred dollars a year on gifts for them and receive no gifts in return. I know that when a gift is given, there should be no expectation of getting one in return, but I think a token gift for my birthday and Christmas wouldn't be unreasonable. I would be thrilled to receive a $20 gift card to a restaurant. Am I being unreasonable? — LOVING UNCLE IN THE MIDWEST DEAR UNCLE: Perhaps. From what you have written, I don't think you would get anything without 'prompting.' Instead of dwelling on what you don't receive, try to concentrate on the attention and affection they do give you, and you may feel less deprived. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Nationwide Children's buys former Catholic church site, plans to create affordable housing
Nationwide Children's buys former Catholic church site, plans to create affordable housing

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Nationwide Children's buys former Catholic church site, plans to create affordable housing

The property that has been home to a now-shuttered Catholic church on Columbus' South Side is set to get new life as affordable housing. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Columbus closed Corpus Christi Catholic Church on East Stewart Avenue in 2023, as part of a broad reorganization and closure of churches. But, on July 24, the nonprofit Healthy Homes purchased if for about $1.2 million from St. Mary, Mother of God Catholic Church in German Village. Healthy Homes plans to demolish the church building and construct housing on the five-acre property. "We're excited to look forward to what the options are in terms of what we can bring online and I think hopefully in 2027 be breaking ground on something really amazing," said Gretchen West, executive director of Healthy Homes. Healthy Homes, founded in 2008, works to create more affordable housing in Columbus, primarily on the South Side and in Linden. It is a collaboration between Nationwide Children's Hospital and Community Development for All People and offers rental properties and home ownership at below-market rates; builds homes on existing lots; and gives grants for residents to make home repairs. Why did Corpus Christi Catholic Church close? Built in 1951, the church building at 1111 E. Stewart Ave. housed the parish until it was closed in July 2023, with parishioners from Corpus Christi and St. Ladislas Church sent to St. Mary Catholic Church in German Village. At the time, the Diocese noted fewer parishioners, less attendance at Mass and a shortage of priests among reasons for the closure. The diocese sold the church to Healthy Homes due to its belief in the virtue of charity to love God and neighbor, said Jason Mays, diocese spokesman. "The Catholic Church has viewed housing as a basic human right," Mays said. "This is shown in our belief of the human person and the responsibility of society to protect the life and dignity of every person by providing conditions where human life and dignity are enhanced." The diocese and St. Mary's believe the property should be used to improve community health, especially for those who live nearby, Mays said. "St. Mary's is thrilled with the continued partnership with Nationwide Children's Hospital and believes that, like the former Corpus Christi Church, the property will continue to impact families positively of the South end of Columbus for many years to come," Mays said. Still, the church closure was painful for local residents, said Ted Welch, president of the Edgewood Civic Organization, which covers the area near the church. "It's a scar right now," Welch said, of the church land. It was more than a church to residents, as it also hosted Easter Egg hunts, community meetings, National Night Out, Christmas concerts and more, he said. Columbus Bishop Rev. Earl Fernandes said in the sales contract that not a brick of the original footprint could remain, Welch said, which caused pain for community members hoping to establish parts of it as a community center. The diocese said the level of asbestos in the church building means it needs to be demolished. But, residents still have hope for the space and are happy that Healthy Homes purchased it, Welch said. 'A healing time for the community' Demolition of the original buildings will likely take place this year, West said, with hopes for construction of housing to begin in 2027. Healthy Homes plans to work with community members as it develops plans for the site, and Welch said residents are keeping an open mind. "We're willing and interested and hopeful in working with them that this can be a healing time for the community," he said. "I'm looking for a way to begin healing where the former church property can become kind of a shining light on the hill." While the project is in the early planning phase, the vision for redevelopment of the site includes affordable multi-family rental units and homeownership opportunities to help keep area residents from being priced out of their community, West said. The project is important because it relates back to Nationwide Children's mission to help children be healthier, West said. "We know that housing, especially safe, quality, affordable housing, plays a vital role in children's health," she said. As for the new land purchased, West said: "It's just a really exciting opportunity." Underserved Communities Reporter Danae King can be reached at dking@ or on X at @DanaeKing. This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Shuttered Catholic church site soon to be home to affordable housing Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store