Health Care Official Works Daily to Help Locals Feel Better
Posted on: Tuesday, 4 April 2006, 06:00 CDT
By Hubble Smith
By HUBBLE SMITH
REVIEW-JOURNAL
Paul Cohen has been working to improve Nevada's health care system for more than 30 years, first as chief of the Bureau of Alcohol and Drug Abuse rehabilitation division under Gov. Mike O'Callaghan and now as executive director of Comprehensive Cancer Centers of Nevada.
Cohen said he's been blessed by a career that benefited Nevada's children and working adults.
He moved to Reno from California in 1965 to work as a science teacher with the Washoe County School District. He worked in Carson City for Govs. O'Callaghan and Bob List before coming to Las Vegas in 1982 to revamp the Culinary union's health and benefits package.
For the past 14 months, he's been trying to make it as comfortable as possible for terminally ill patients who are living day to day.
"Cancer is a very nasty disease," Cohen said. "Everyone of us has a one-way ticket on the train. Some of us have a bumpy ride. Some of us have a short ride."
Cohen oversees six locations for Comprehensive Cancer Centers of Nevada, including the main 34,000-square-foot plant at 3730 S. Eastern Ave. He has 230 employees, including 22 doctors.
Question: What is your mission at Comprehensive Cancer Centers of Nevada?
Answer: Real simple: to provide comprehensive and quality care to our patients. It's on all of our advertisements and logos. That's our branding program. Not only providing that comprehensive care, but providing supportive care to the family. A lot of people forget about the family. Look at patients in the waiting room; the vast majority are not by themselves. That's what comprehensive means - what are all the options available out there for (improving) their quality of life.
Question: How has cancer treatment in Las Vegas evolved over the years?
Answer: It has changed with technology. We have pumps implanted to release drugs for pain management. One of them allowed one woman to travel for six months before she died. When you have someone who's terminally ill, you don't want them to just crawl up in the fetal position and die.
With pediatrics, it's even worse. Those kids react more violently to treatments; they're more sensitive and will often end up in the emergency room. It tears you up.
Question: Any other advances in cancer treatment here?
Answer: Technology and drugs. And physicians are becoming more proficient ... they are literally specializing in forms of cancer. Breast cancer is a good example. Before, we used invasive procedures. Years ago, you had a lump on your breast, (the treatment option would be) 'Let's go take it out.' You add technology, new drugs and training of physicians, couple that with the availability of resources and you're seeing a trend. It's true that preventive medicine is the best alternative; that's really the key. We're seeing from the self-insured (companies) more pap smears and wellness programs.
Question: What kind of technology is driving the changes?
Answer: I'm talking about the drugs that are available for chemotherapy and the equipment, the nuclear camera, the PET (positron emission tomography) scan, all the diagnostic equipment, the linear accelerator where they do the treatment. We're excited because our new building in the northwest (Las Vegas Tech Center) will have a combination PET-CAT scan. That's $1.5 million.
Question: Why has Las Vegas been depicted as a city of shortcomings in medical technology?
Answer: When you look at the history of this city and how it was developed, you look at the hospitals here in the 1960s, Desert Springs and Valley and North Las Vegas, they weren't built as hospitals. They were built as skilled nursing centers. Sunrise was really the first hospital. UMC was Southern Nevada Hospital. There wasn't an awful lot here.
Question: Comprehensive Cancer Centers of Nevada has participated in a number of clinical research trials. With whom do you work?
Answer: We've had a 10-year relationship with the University of California, Los Angeles and we're probably going on a similar time with U.S. Oncology in research. There's four phases of research. Phase one is when you basically are the guinea pig, the cutting edge of research. Phase two and three is what we do, where we identify certain patients with certain cancers, what are the protocols, certain procedures you follow.
You see ads in the paper where people, usually a pharmaceutical company, want to do research.
The patient has to have a specific kind of cancer to where they will be put on a specific drug regiment and there are outside monitors to track these patients and that becomes your database. Phase four research is what you find in your academic institutions, where they bring in young doctors to do research.
Question: How would you change the state of health care?
Answer: To me, to truly solve the problem, you need to get the patients, the providers and the facility owners together and develop a system that will maintain the quality of care and the cost. The cost will never be controlled but you can control the rate of increase in costs.
Get the consumer to buy in. It's consumer education. Doctors say, "Pee in the bottle," you pee in the bottle. Those days are over. The informed consumer says, "Is this the best option for me?"
One of our philosophies here is the only thing constant is change. There are new drugs coming out every day.
Source: Las Vegas Review - Journal
Related Articles
- International Health Leaders to Share Innovations in Patient-Centered Care at 2009 Planetree Annual Conference
- Health Integrated Hosts Industry Collaborative Focused on the Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH)
- Patient-centered Approach To Obtain Data From Cancer Patients Improves Care And Research
- Michigan Blues Launch Nation's Largest Program for Patient-Centered Medical Home
- National Quality Forum Endorses Guidelines to Reduce Disparities in Healthcare and Make Care Patient-Centered and Culturally Appropriate
- Victoria Premier Visits World-Leading Cancer Center to Research a Comprehensive Care Facility for Victoria
- Cancer Researchers at Manhattan-Based St. Vincent's Comprehensive Cancer Center Discover Genes That Can Determine How Patients Respond to Pre-Leukemia Drug
- Aetna Statement In Support Of Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative
- Patient-Centered Cancer Care Exemplified in New Approach Developed By Aptium Oncology and Trinitas Comprehensive Cancer Center
- Physmark Announces Cyber Patient Center
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds