Past Issues of the Putnam Town Crier

 
 
DKH nets
'0 adverse
events'
PUTNAM — A recently released report from the CT Department of Public Health (DPH) that provides information about adverse events at the state’s hospitals and outpatient surgical facilities shows that there were zero adverse events for patients at Day Kimball Hospital in 2015. Day Kimball is one of just two acute care hospitals in the state to have zero adverse events that year. This also marks the second consecutive year that Day Kimball Hospital has attained this achievement; it was the only hospital in the state with zero adverse events in 2014.
The report, DPH’s Adverse Event Reporting document, covers all adverse events reported in 2015. An adverse event is a reportable incident that caused harm to a patient, such as bed sores, falls, perforations or errors occurring during surgery, and other events. DPH releases this report annually.
Hospitals and outpatient surgical facilities are required to report adverse events to DPH using the National Quality Forum list of Serious Reportable Events in Healthcare, plus additional events as defined by DPH. According to DPH, items on the list are of concern to both the public and healthcare professionals, are clearly identifiable and measurable, and are often, though not always, preventable.
“Providing the best and safest care possible is of course the goal of every healthcare organization, and one that requires constant vigilance. We’re extremely proud of the exceptional teamwork and skill of our staff here at Day Kimball. This has allowed our hospital to be one of the very few to achieve zero adverse events for the last two years” said DKH Chief Medical Officer and VP, Medical Affairs and Quality Dr. John Graham.
Dr. Graham continued, “However, it’s important to note that reports such as this are just a snapshot of one particular point in time. Providing the highest quality, safest care possible is not a goal that has an end-point. This requires constant vigilance and even then sometimes things happen that are not preventable.  We don’t live in a perfect world but it’s our job to provide care that’s as close to perfect as it can be. We do that by constantly evaluating our quality performance and safety procedures, learning from what we find and using that knowledge for continual process and performance improvement.”
The Adverse Event Reporting document is one of several reports produced by DPH as part of the state’s Quality in Health Care program, which was developed to measure the clinical performance of health care facilities and to develop systems for those facilities to share best practices. To learn more about the Quality in Health Care program and the Adverse Event Reporting document, visit www.ct.gov/dph. To learn more about Day Kimball Hospital, visit www.daykimball.org.
 
 
More than 1200 kids descended on downtown Putnam for Trick or Treat Oct. 28. Clockwise from top left: Whitney Huth, 1, and Courtney Huth of Putnam;  Olivia Aldrich, 5, of Putnam and Jayden Robidoux, 5, of Putnam. Orin Thurlow, 4, and Hazel Thurlow, 6, of Pomfret;  Molley White, 18 months, of Thompson. Linda Lemmon photos.
 
Football Wrap-up
Lightning 
delays Friday
high school 
football 
games
By Ron P. Coderre
In an unusual occurrence, Friday night high school football games were postponed due to severe lightning that struck northeastern Connecticut shortly following the start of two games.
The Killingly High School and the Windham Whippets game as well as The Quinebaug Valley Pride and Thames River contest were stopped by officials as a precautionary safety measure.  The QVP contest was rescheduled for Saturday evening.  The new date didn’t change the Pride’s luck as it lost for the sixth straight time this season.
Killingly’s game was moved to a Sunday night time.  The Redmen needed more than 40 minutes to adjust to playing a game on the Sabbath Day but rallied late for a win.
In Saturday games that went off on schedule, Woodstock Academy continued its offensive assault on the scoreboard as the Centaurs outlasted Vinal Tech/East Hampton/Goodwin Tech.  The win gave Woodstock something it hasn’t had since 2009, its third win of the season.
Plainfield continued its winning ways as the Panthers snuck by Bacon Academy.
Pomfret School, which plays in the unique 8-on-8 league, rolled to its third win of the season.  The Golden Griffin shutout visiting Forman School.  
Woodstock Academy Thrills Home
 Crowd
Woodstock Academy rode the strong legs of runningback Kameron Janice to a 48-30 win over Vinal Tech/East Hampton/Goodwin Tech in front of an enthusiastic home crowd.  Janice ran wild, racking up 268 yards on 20 carries, resulting in four touchdowns.  The difficult to tackle runningback has 1155 yards in six games this season.
The Centaurs took a 28-8 lead to the locker room at intermission as Janice opened the scoring with a 6-yard run followed by a 1-yard bolt.  Woodstock’s talented quarterback Jared Bouten, who had a great all around game, scored the Acads second TD on an 82-yard naked bootleg.  Bouten was 4-10-102 on the day with one touchdown through the air to go with his long run.  He had 98 rushing yards.  Bouten is the area’s top quarterback with 833 yards through the air this year.
Woodstock’s final points of the first half came on a Bouten to Eric Preston 31-yard aerial hook-up.  Preston had three receptions for 61 yards on his afternoon’s work.  He now has 270 reception yards in six games.
The visiting tri-op team came to life in the second half, scoring 22 points but Woodstock kept pace tallying 16 points of its own.  Janice broke from scrimmage for TD scampers of 41 and 72 yards.  Kyle Strandson closed out the Woodstock scoring with 2-yard dash to the end zone.
The win raised Woodstock’s record to 3-3 on the season.  On Saturday the Centaurs travel across the state for a noon showdown with another tri-op, Wolcott Tech/Gilbert/Northwestern Regional.
Plainfield Holds on for Win Over Bacon Academy
The Plainfield Panthers raised their record to 4-2 on the season with a 24-12 win over Bacon Academy in a game played in Colchester.  The Panthers scored eight points in each of the first three quarters against Bacon and staved off a determined Bobcat team that hasn’t won a game this season.
The Panthers led 16-0 at halftime thanks to a 3-yard touchdown run by Kyle Holt and a 1-yard sneak by quarterback Marcus Robinson.  Holt became Plainfield’s second runningback to crack the century mark in a game this season, as he registered 108 yards on 23 carries.
Plainfield went up 24-0 in the third stanza before allowing Bacon 12 second half points.  The Panthers opened the scoring following intermission with a Robinson to Nick Burlingame 3-yard touchdown pass.  Robinson was 7-9-81 on the afternoon.  Burlingame was Robinson’s favorite target with three receptions for 31 yards.
The Panthers next game is a key matchup against the Killingly Redmen in a 6:30 p.m. Friday kickoff in Danielson.
Killingly Posts Last-second Victory
Killingly passed one of its biggest tests of the season when the Redmen posted a last second 14-12 victory over a stubborn Windham Whippets team.  Killingly overcame a 12-0 deficit in posting the victory.  The win gave Killingly a 5-1 overall record and a 2-0 log in the Eastern Connecticut Conference Division III.
The winning touchdown came as time was running out in the game when quarterback Kyle Derosier (12-30-122) found sophomore receiver Josh Montpelier on a 5-yard touchdown hookup.  Montpelier was in the hero’s role due to the fact that Luke Desaulnier was forced to sit out the contest because of the concussion protocol.
Derosier was also part of the other Killingly score when he tallied on a 1-yard quarterback sneak with 3:23 remaining in the final stanza.  The Redmen proved they could win despite the fact that star runningback Spencer Lockwood being held to 57 yards by the determined Windham defense.  
The scoring difference in the contest was a two-point conversion on Derosier’s touchdown.  It came when the quarterback found Jake Gauthier on a pass play conversion.
The Redmen now prepare for their next test of the 2016 season.  On Friday they host 4-2 Plainfield in a 6:30 p.m. contest.  
QVP Loses to CSC Foe Thames River
The Quinebaug Valley Pride failed to pick up its first win of the season when it was beaten at home by Constitution State Conference opponent Thames River 30-16.  The loss drops the Pride to 0-6 on the season.  The Pride is 0-5 in the CSC.
Will McGlyn, who has been QVP’s top threat all season was the lone bright spot for coach Joe Asermelly.  McGlyn ran for 200 yards on 23 carries and a touchdown.
The next contest for the Pride is a road encounter at noon with Vinal Tech/East Hampton/Goodwin Tech on Saturday.
Pomfret Rolls 54-0
The Pomfret School offense rolled up 481 yards in an eight-man contest against visiting Forman School.  The offensive output resulted in a 54-0 shutout verdict for the 3-1 Golden Griffins.
The primary culprit in the victory was Beny Huckaby who had 237 yards and four touchdowns on only 14 carries.  Toby Ketcham added a pair of touchdowns for the victors.  He cracked the century mark with 112 yards.  Quarterback Jack Paulson also tallied a touchdown.
 
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Football Wrap-up
Tricks and 
treats on
ghoulish 
weekend 
of football
By Ron P. Coderre
All local schools were in action over the Halloween weekend as the 2016 season winds its way quickly to Thanksgiving Day and the postseason for at least one hopeful.
Killingly kept its postseason dream of a CIAC playoff spot alive by surviving a ghoulish scare by the Plainfield Panthers.  The visitors were not fazed by Killingly’s reputation and threw a scare into the Redmen’s psyche before succumbing by one point.
The Quinebaug Valley Pride received an unusual treat by posting its first win of the season.  Although it took the Pride seven weeks to register win #1 it was rewarding for the young team.
The Woodstock Academy defense played a trick on coach Darryl Daleen when it held Wolcott Tech/Gilbert/Northwestern Regional to a mere six points.  Rather than a trick, it was probably a treat because every other game has been a high-scoring affair.  To make Halloween even nicer for coach Daleen, the offense piled up 56 points in picking up the team’s fourth win of the season.
Pomfret School, which had a three-game winning streak, was beaten for the second time this season by visiting Gunnery School.  Hyde School-Woodstock, which will close its doors this June, is experiencing a long football season.  The Wolfpack lost it fourth game, a defeat at the hands of New Hampton School.    
      Plainfield Throws Halloween Scare 
      into Killingly
Underdog Plainfield marched into Killingly on Friday night and almost pulled off a trick on the Redmen on “trick or treat” night.  After surviving the previous week on a last play touchdown to beat Windham, Killingly held on by a thread and survived a 21-20 victory over the Panthers.
Killingly looked like it was in for a big offensive evening when it jumped out to a 14-0 first quarter advantage.  The Redmen scored on a Zach Caffrey 1-yard run followed by a Kyle Derosier to Spencer Lockwood 54-yard pass-run hookup.  When Luke Desaulnier caught a Derosier pass in the end zone for the two-point conversion, coach Chad Neal’s boys looked like they were in for an easy win.
A determined Plainfield Eleven however had other ideas.  The Panthers struck back in the second stanza when signal caller Marcus Robinson tallied what would be the first of three touchdowns he would score in the game.  Robinson ran the pigskin over from 14 yards out and when the conversion pass failed the teams went to the locker room at intermission with Killingly on top 14-6.
The second half started with a bang for Killingly as runningback sensation Lockwood broke loose on a 43-yard TD scamper.  A Desaulnier point-after kick put the Redmen comfortably on top 21-6 at this juncture.
In the final period the Plainfield defense, which was stubborn all game really tightened the screws on the Killingly offense.  Meanwhile, the starring Robinson went to work on the Killingly D.  He started the fourth quarter scoring on a nifty 31-yard touchdown run.  A Brendan Ogden to Cam Gonzales two-point aerial conversion pulled the Panther to within seven points, 21-14.
The crucial point in the game was yet to unfold.  With 3:36 showing on the clock, Robinson scored once again on another 31-yard run to pull his team to within one point of tying the hosts.  Plainfield coach Pat Smith decided at this point to go for the one-point kick on the PAT play.  Killingly’s Bret Long, who’s known for his receiving then took on the hero’s cape as he broke through to block the extra point try, giving Killing the victory by the slimmest of margins.
The win raised Killingly’s record to 6-1 overall and a perfect 3-0 in the Eastern Connecticut Conference Division III, clinching the 2016 crown.  Lockwood got back over the 100-yard mark on the game when he ran for 112 yards on 24 carries.  Derosier was 4-4-94 from the quarterback slot.
The loss broke a Plainfield three-game winning streak, putting them at 4-3 on the season and 0-2 in Division III.  Robinson was Plainfield’s top runner with 149 yards on 19 carries and a remarkable three touchdowns.  The versatile signal caller was 12-28-161 in the air.  Overall Robinson accounted for 310-yards of Plainfield offense.  Nick Burlingame was on the receiving end of four Robinson tosses for 75 yards.
On Friday, Killingly travels to winless East Lyme for a 6:30 p.m. encounter under the arcs.  Plainfield has an unusual 11 a.m. encounter at CREC Co-op in Hartford on Saturday.
QVP Receives a Treat in the Form of a WIN
It took the Quinebaug Valley Pride until Halloween weekend to treat itself to a victory this football season.  Following six consecutive losses the Pride broke into the win column with a 20-14 win over Vinal Tech/East Hampton/Goodwin Tech in a Constitution State Conference game played at legendary Palmer Field in Middletown.
Will McGlyn, who’s been a bright spot all season for the Pride, enjoyed another good afternoon on the gridiron.  He opened the scoring with a 14-yard touchdown scamper in the first quarter.  On the day McGlyn eclipsed the century mark on the ground with 101 yards on 27 carries.
Meanwhile, McGlyn’s teammate, quarterback Josh Dodd took to the air against the tri-op opponent.  Dodd enjoyed his best day of the season completing 15 of 23 passes good for 202 yards of offense and two touchdowns.
Dodd connected on a 7-yard score with Jeff Reed and a 72-yard pass-run hookup with Jamie Talbot for the second and third Pride touchdowns of the day.  Reed was Dodd’s favorite target with six receptions for 82 yards.
The win puts coach Joe Asermelly’s charges at 1-6 on the season.  On Friday, the Pride travel to Cheney Tech for a 6 p.m. game under the lights.
Centaurs Offense Runs Wild
Woodstock Academy continues to improve each week, as this week the Centaurs put on a strong offensive showing combined with a stingy defense.  The Acads behind the running of Kameron Janice, who had five touchdowns, ran past an outmanned Wolcott tech/East Hampton/Goodwin Tech 56- to 6.  The win puts Woodstock a game above .500 at 4-3.
      Gunnery Guns Down Pomfret for Second Time This Season
For the second time this season the Gunnery School prevailed over Pomfret School in an 8-on-8 football contest.  The Golden Griffins were shutout by the visitors from Washington, Connecticut 34-0.  In the two games this year, Gunnery has outscored Pomfret 74-6.
The game dropped Pomfret to 3-2 on the season but more importantly was physically damaging for the Griffs as they lost two of their runningbacks to injury.
Hyde Falls to New Hampton
Hyde School-Woodstock, which was hoping to play its final season in Woodstock with a flourish, lost its fourth consecutive game, dropping to 2-4 on the year.  The Wolfpack was beaten by New Hampton School 35-14.
 
..
 
 
Takes part
WORCESTER —Nikolay P. Ionkin of Pomfret, a junior at Clark University, and a fellow physics major from Rumford, worked with Physics Professor Arshad Kudrolli to fine-tune a mathematical model that captures the development of erosion underground. Their research, which was funded by Clark’s Liberal Education and Effective Practice (LEEP) initiative, could eventually could help scientists better understand the effects of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, and other cases where fluids carve out channels and destabilize the earth.
Both students used a device and applied the theories of physics – and engineering – to a hands-on experiment.  Their research may be included in a publication in a scientific journal.
Ionkin will graduate with Clark’s Class of 2018; he hopes to pursue Clark’s 3/2 Engineering Program with Columbia University. Ionkin is a 2014 graduate of Woodstock Academy.
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