May 16, 2012

Transportation Department puts more accident info on-line

The Iowa Department of Transportation is now offering more on-line information on accidents in the state. DOT safety engineer Michael Pawlovich says the site has crash statistics in some 15 different categories.

He says there’s information and maps related to impaired drivers, distracted drivers, heavy truck and motorcycle crashes. The information is organized to let you see what’s happening on the roads you travel.

The maps are organized by counties, so you can go in and look at your individual road. Several years’ worth of information is available. He says the have information in five-year periods, so they have 2001 to 2005 information available. Pawlovich says they’re just finishing up the information for 2006.

According to Pawlovich, it’s easy to access the info. Pawlovich says you can do to the main DOT site at www.iowadot.gov and then put in a slash and type the words "crash analysis" and follow the prompts, you’ll get there. Pawlovich says they plan to add more topics on this site in the future.  

Health director says elder care biggest challenge

The director of the Iowa Department of Public Health says one of the biggest challenges facing Iowa’s health system is dealing with the increasing cost of elder care. Public Health director Tom Newton says his agency has several initiatives designed to try to reduce costs.

Newton says the state pays for "in home visits" from medical professionals to try to find ways to help the elderly live independently in their own home as long as possible. Newton says Iowans often retire to other states, but then move back to Iowa when they’re older to be closer to family when their health starts to fail.

On another topic, Newton says most of the people who work in the agency are white, so there is a new "office of multicultural health" in the department. Newton says it will help make sure the department’s public health messages "reach all Iowans." In addition, Newton says he’s looking for job applicants who can speak Spanish. Newton made his comments Thursday during an appearance on Iowa Public Radio. 

Iowa native writes book about his vet adventures

Book cover All My Patients have Tales An Iowa native is returning to his home state this weekend to promote his latest book about the humbling and humorous experiences he’s had as a veterinarian. Dr. Jeff Wells is a Fairfield native and an Iowa State University grad who now practices in Colorado. Wells’ book is called " All My Patients Have Tales , " and that’s  tales spelled T-A-L-E-S.

Wells says: "Most of the book is about my first couple of years of practice when you graduate and really don’t know anything. You think you do, but you don’t. So it’s kind of the funny things that occur in that situation." Wells has taken care of large livestock and small housepets. When he first started work as a vet in South Dakota, a farm couple called on Wells to cure their sick puppy.

Wells says, "It was constipated. We would X-ray it. We couldn’t find anything. Finally we had to break down and start doing enemas on this dog. This puppy had eaten so many grasshoppers, it was just packed full of grasshopper parts. That was not a fun thing to get out of a dog, let me tell you." He says he was also called out to a farm where a cow was in the process of giving birth and it was running around loose with the calf hanging half-way out.

Wells says: "I threw the rope out and the darn thing literally stuck its head in the rope, which seems good, but the bad part about that is, now you have an 18-hundred-pound cow on the end of a rope and no where to tie it up. So with each step I’d take, I’m taking three steps, just flying through the air and being 28 years old, there was no way I was going to let go of this cow."

The story has a happy ending, at least for the bovine. Wells will be signing copies of his book Saturday at 10:30 AM at University Bookstore in Ames, and at 6 P.M. at Barnes & Noble in West Des Moines.