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Stories
My Heart is Diabetes
Ms. Florene Linnen
Did you ever get a call that changed
your life? Ms. Florene
Linnen did in 1997.
She got called and asked to attend a Diabetes Today workshop. Ms. Linnen says, “I
learned more at that workshop than I had learned in 16 years of living with
diabetes.”
As Proverbs 15:7 says, ‘The lips of the wise disperse knowledge:
but the heart of the foolish doeth not so.’ With wisdom and new knowledge,
Ms. Linnen shared what she learned with people in her church. But she didn’t
stop there. She rallied others to help educate people about diabetes by founding
and leading the Georgetown County Diabetes CORE Group, a grass-root community
organization that is now a powerful force of active volunteers. Working as a
lay community health advisor with the REACH 2010 Charleston and Georgetown Diabetes
Coalition and as a leader in the Georgetown County Diabetes CORE Group, she’s
helping her community
get healthy.
About 20 years ago, Ms. Linnen was sick. She had no energy, blurry eyes, numbing
in the hands, upset stomach, drank lots of water, and was sleepy. She knew
something was wrong. The doctors back then couldn’t find anything and
said it might be a kidney infection. A local doctor decided to send her to
MUSC for some tests.
There they found it was diabetes.
“I thought I had kidney problems so I saw a kidney specialist in
Georgetown. Back then I didn’t realize that diabetes causes kidney
disease. After getting the education I received, I was able to talk to other
people and other doctors. For instance, when my mother was told that her
sugar was just a little high, I wanted to know, how high? With a blood sugar
of 371, I knew that was too high. The nurse said to me, ‘I guess
I better get the doctor,’ and I said, ‘I guess you better.’ When
we were leaving my mother said, ‘I never had an examination like that.’ My
thought to that is that knowledge is power. Had I thought that 371 was just
a little high, who knows what would have happened to my mother, an 83 year
old woman living by herself.”
For 30 years, Ms. Linnen worked at Waccamaw EOC doing community outreach, community
resource referrals, and programs on housing, parenting, youth, energy, and employment.
It was very rewarding, but, along the way, she came to know her own calling deep
from within her soul. As she puts it,
“My heart is diabetes.”
Now she works full time in diabetes education as a REACH 2010 community health
advisor. She helps people learn how to manage their diabetes -- how to control
it, how to live with it, and what kind of education to get. Ms. Linnen gets
called to speak at local, regional, and national events about diabetes and community
activities.
At just about every community function in Georgetown, diabetes is there,
but so are Ms. Linnen, her family, friends, Diabetes CORE Group volunteers,
REACH 2010, and the health ministry of the Georgetown District of the AME Church.
Her husband of over forty years, six children, ten grandchildren, five great
grandchildren, and all who know her are proud
of Ms. Linnen.
The Georgetown County Diabetes CORE Group started and is sustained by the vision,
passion, and the hard work of Ms. Linnen, its leaders, and many volunteers. She
says,
“We
can call on anyone and everyone.”
She’s quick to credit the more than 50 Diabetes CORE Group volunteers with
the Group’s success. From its first meeting when 80 people from the community
organized CORE (Community Outreach Referrals Education) and appointed 7 co-leaders,
the Georgetown community understood the importance of getting people educated
about diabetes. Each CORE person was to go back to his or her own community to
find out needs and make community members aware of diabetes through education.
In March 1998, a diabetes educational banquet drew 200 people to Browns Ferry
Elementary School and raised money to support diabetes community education. Ms.
Linnen
recalls,
“We started going where the people were—churches, basketball games,
football games, even the nightclubs! The media got a hold of what we were
doing--TV and radio stations, newspapers, church announcements. We got the word
out big time!”
The
annual diabetes banquet has become a celebration of community success. Real
success is a new health center. With support from the Diabetes CORE Group,
Representative
Ted Brown, Councilman Johnny Morant, Mr. Ronald Ravenell (former director of
the St. James–Santee Family Health Center), and over 300 community members,
the Choppee Health Center opened October 1, 2002 in the former Choppee High School
building. The facility serves as a ‘one-stop shop’ for primary
health care services, Diabetes CORE Group, and services, such as mental health
services provided by other
agencies.
Ms. Linnen has received many awards for her community work and service. She serves
on several organizations' boards and citizen advisory councils, and is a nationally
recognized community health advocate.
“My
work with REACH is constantly on my mind for things
I can do to make things better.”
Ms. Linnen teaches by example. Her A1c
test used to run over 8%, when below 6.9% is recommended. But her
A1c is now below 6.7%. She's an A1c champion! She shows people how
to control their blood sugar, blood pressure, and cholesterol, and
warns of the dangers of not controlling them. She walks the talk
of preventing serious complications. Her positive spirit motivates
us all to take better care
of ourselves.
"Your
diabetes doesn’t mean that your life is over. You
are in control of your
health -- that’s the important thing.”

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