Year: 2011 (Page 1 of 10)

Happy Holidays from Ride Lawrence

We’re ready for winter and hope you are too!  We’ve got some exiting things planned for 2012 and always remember if you have an event or Lawrence or Douglass County bicycling news or event please contact us so we can get it posted.

Keep Warm!

From All of us at RideLawrence.

Ride Lawrence Wants to Help You!

It’s getting colder, I was out the other day riding and between the wind and the cold I had a few second thoughts, but kept going.. that’s what we do right!

Ride Lawrence will be ramping up here into the fall and during the winter to reach out and meet all the Lawrence and Douglass County Kansas bike groups.  We want to make Ride Lawrence a clearinghouse of local biking info with links to all the local groups and a comprehensive calendar of upcoming local and regional biking events.

It doesn’t matter if you are a race, mountain bike, cruise, or even play polo – we want to know about it so people know there is a place to explore all the local biking possibilities.

RideLawrence is a service of the Lawrence Central Rotary, we’re not trying to make any money on this, there’s no hidden agendas, we’re local people just like you who enjoy bike riding and developed this idea as one of the service initiatives for our club.

Please look over the links in the Lawrence Bike Clubs and other Kansas Bicycling Clubs pages. If it needs to be changed or updated email me at [email protected]

Local Groups helping in this weekends Octoginta

Team GP Velotek youth will be staffing the 2nd SAG on the Octoginta site. say hi to the young racers!

Team GP VeloTek and Boy Scout Cycling Venturing Crew to help Lawrence Bicycle Club with an Octoginta SAG Saturday October 9th. Noland Goldberg and Rob Wilsusen are the adult leaders that will be guiding the youth in their community service. LBC expects over 800 cyclists to ride the 40, or 80 mile loop through rural Douglas County on that Sunday. The youth team and ventures will be providing mechanical assistance, food and water for the cyclists. We always need volunteers!

Lawrence doctor to ride bicycle 100 miles to raise funds for kidney patients in need

This is a reprint of a post from WellCommons…  it’s just an inspiring story.

Bill James, 39, of Lawrence, has a dialysis treatment Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2011, at a Kansas Dialysis Services unit in Lawrence Memorial Hospital. James is among 146 people who have received financial assistance through a special patient fund that was started by his doctor, Scott Solcher, and Kansas Dialysis Services CEO Stan Langhofer. James, who can no longer work because of his medical condition, said he received $500 which he used for a housing payment. "It took a lot of pressure off," he said.

Bill James, 39, of Lawrence, has a dialysis treatment Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2011, at a Kansas Dialysis Services unit in Lawrence Memorial Hospital. James is among 146 people who have received financial assistance through a special patient fund that was started by his doctor, Scott Solcher, and Kansas Dialysis Services CEO Stan Langhofer. James, who can no longer work because of his medical condition, said he received $500 which he used for a housing payment. "It took a lot of pressure off," he said. Photo by Mike Yoder

http://wellcommons.com/groups/wellness/2011/sep/22/lawrence-doctor-to-ride-bicycle-100-mile/

Lawrence resident Bill James, 39, is hooked up to a machine three times a week for about four hours. He sits in a recliner while the machine filters his blood.

He bides time by watching television, reading a book, listening to music or visiting with staff and other patients. He said those relationships have been invaluable during a difficult time.

“Some days you feel better than others. Mentally, it has been tough,” he said.

On Feb. 11, his life changed overnight.

He went to sleep feeling fine and then his wife, Teddi, found him on the floor the next morning.

“I just woke up in the emergency room and was pretty sick,” he said.

Doctors told him that his kidneys were failing because of diabetes and high blood pressure; he had only 25 percent kidney function. The illness left him so weak that he couldn’t pick up his 3-year-old daughter, Leatha, and so he had to quit his full-time job at a goat dairy farm. For the first time in 20 years, he wasn’t working.

“I felt kind of useless,” he said.

Within three months, he began dialysis at the Kansas Dialysis Services unit in Lawrence Memorial Hospital, and he’s slowly gaining his strength. He hopes to get his first disability check in October and he’s filling out paperwork to have a kidney-pancreas transplant.

James said the bills began to stack up this summer, and he and his wife were having trouble making house and car payments. He was grateful to receive $500 from the Kansas Dialysis Patient Assistance Fund that was started three years ago by his doctor, Scott Solcher, and Stan Langhofer, CEO of Topeka-based Kansas Dialysis Services (KDS).

“It took a lot of pressure off,” James said. “It just helped to know that we were safe another month.”

Solcher, medical director of KDS Home Dialysis and the Lawrence unit, and Langhofer decided to do a 100-mile bicycle ride called “Tour de Dialysis” to help patients in need like James.

Dr. Scott Solcher, left, and Stan Langhofer, both of Kansas Dialysis Services, will ride 100 miles on Sept. 30 to raise funds for patients with basic needs like transportation, medicine and rent. Solcher, chief of staff at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, is medical director of KDS Home Dialysis and the Lawrence unit, and Langhofer is CEO.

Dr. Scott Solcher, left, and Stan Langhofer, both of Kansas Dialysis Services, will ride 100 miles on Sept. 30 to raise funds for patients with basic needs like transportation, medicine and rent. Solcher, chief of staff at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, is medical director of KDS Home Dialysis and the Lawrence unit, and Langhofer is CEO.

“Life really is more difficult for people on dialysis. They have more hurdles than the rest of us, and there are not always safety nets and programs that will help accommodate their needs,” Solcher said.

He has patients who are having trouble paying for food, vehicle repairs so they can get dialysis, and prescription medicines.

“It’s heart-breaking,” he said.

So far, the bicycle ride has raised $52,775 and has helped 146 people.

The third annual ride is slated for Sept. 30. Solcher and Langhofer will start at Ransom Memorial Hospital in Ottawa, stop at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and then finish in Topeka at Stormont-Vail Healthcare and St. Francis Health Center.

“As long as it’s not hailing or there’s two inches of snow, we are going to go,” Solcher said.

James described Solcher as a doctor who “genuinely cares” about his patients.

“For him to put himself out there and do it is just awesome. It’s just cool.”


TOUR DE DIALYSIS

Dr. Scott Solcher and Stan Langhofer, of Kansas Dialysis Services, will ride their bicycles 100 miles on Sept. 30 to raise money to help low-income patients with basic needs like transportation, food, clothing, medicine and rent.

The annual ride is called Tour de Dialysis and this year it will go from Ottawa to Topeka with a stop in Lawrence.

If you would like to pledge support by donating for each of the 100 miles they pedal, contact Langhofer at 785-234-2277 or Stormont-Vail Foundation at 785-354-6851 or visit the KDS website.

Kansas Dialysis Services is co-owned by divisions of Stormont-Vail HealthCare and St. Francis Health Center in Topeka. It provides dialysis care for more than 350 patients, including about 70 in Lawrence.

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