2021 -- H 6116 | |
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LC002372 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2021 | |
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H O U S E R E S O L U T I O N | |
THANKING DR. BEATA NELKEN FOR HER TIRELESS EFFORTS TO ASSIST THE | |
COMMUNITY OF CENTRAL FALLS AS IT CONFRONTS THE NEGATIVE EFFECTS OF | |
THE COVID-19 VIRUS, AND CONGRATULATING HER ON BEING HONORED BY THE | |
CITY OF CENTRAL FALLS ON MARCH 11 AS PART OF INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S | |
DAY 2021 | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Giraldo, McLaughlin, Barros, Filippi, Blazejewski, and | |
Date Introduced: March 09, 2021 | |
Referred To: House read and passed | |
1 | WHEREAS, When the COVID-19 pandemic hit Rhode Island and the Northeast in the |
2 | winter of 2020, it quickly became apparent that Central Falls was going to be Rhode Island’s |
3 | pandemic hot spot. More than ever, the community needed the services of a devoted public |
4 | servant such as Dr. Beata Nelken; and |
5 | WHEREAS, Dr. Nelken was born in California, the granddaughter of a woman who |
6 | immigrated to the United States from Mexico. She graduated from Wesleyan University and the |
7 | University of Connecticut School of Medicine. She completed her medical residency at Brown |
8 | University, and did her training at Hasbro Children’s Hospital. She also took part in medical |
9 | brigades in Honduras, Guatemala and Mexico; and |
10 | WHEREAS, Dr. Nelken then proceeded to practice at the Thundermist Health Center for |
11 | ten years and at the Blackstone Valley Community Health Center for four years before she |
12 | decided to form her own pediatric practice in Central Falls last year. She was motivated to make |
13 | this decision after her work in Central Falls High School where she saw many families, including |
14 | recent immigrants, who were unable to afford prescription medication; and |
15 | WHEREAS, When Dr. Nelken opened her practice in Central Falls, she provided free |
16 | health care to uninsured children. Unfortunately, shortly thereafter, the pandemic hit our nation, |
17 | and Central Falls quickly became a COVID-19 hot spot. Dr. Nelken quicky sprang into action. |
18 | With an Abbott machine provided by the Rhode Island Department of Health, and a second |
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1 | Abbott machine and a one-hour PCR machine, Dr. Nelken and her staff literally spent time |
2 | standing on the sidewalk, offering people free COVID-19 tests; and |
3 | WHEREAS, During the early period of state testing held at the Twin River Casino in |
4 | Lincoln, many Central Falls residents struggled due to language barriers, lack of referrals from |
5 | primary care doctors, or were unable to get to Lincoln. As a result, her office quickly became a |
6 | trusted and convenient source of testing within Central Falls. Within a year, her staff had grown |
7 | to fifteen, all able to speak Spanish, and hundreds of tests were conducted; and |
8 | WHEREAS, As Dr. Nelken observed the immense suffering that has taken place over the |
9 | last year in Central Falls, she says that she has felt a “call to duty to respond to the dire need of |
10 | the situation.” Thanks to Dr. Nelken’s tireless work ethic and enormous reservoir of compassion |
11 | for the people of Central Falls, many Central Falls residents have received much-needed and vital |
12 | medical services they would have otherwise been unable to attain; now, therefore be it |
13 | RESOLVED, That this House of Representatives of the State of Rhode Island hereby |
14 | thanks Dr. Beata Nelken for her tireless efforts to assist the community of Central Falls as it |
15 | confronts the negative effects of the COVID-19 virus, and furthermore, congratulates her on |
16 | being honored by the City of Central Falls on March 11 as part of International Women’s Day |
17 | 2021; and be it further |
18 | RESOLVED, That the Secretary of state be and hereby is authorized and directed to |
19 | transmit a duly certified copy of this resolution to Dr. Beata Nelken. |
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LC002372 | |
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