LOCAL Wallowa.com Wednesday, February 24, 2021 A3 Safeway receives COVID-19 vaccine through federal program way pharmacy staff worked with Wallowa Memorial Hos- pital to coordinate distribu- tion of the vaccine to those individuals on the local wait- list. Currently, senior citizens are on the list to get a shot in Wallowa County. “We talked to the hospi- tal — both Brooke Pace and Ruthie Mann — and are coop- erating with them to get as many people covered as pos- sible,” said Nancy Stangel, pharmacy manager at Enter- prise’s Safeway. “They have a long list. We’re trying to work together to get people covered as quickly as possible.” Stangel said the Safeway When the letters fall off of the page Catherine Matthias helps people conquer the visual chaos of Irlen Syndrome By ELLEN MORRIS BISHOP For the Wallowa County Chieftain JOSEPH — In 2018, Joseph children’s writer Cath- erine Matthias suffered a fall. She hit her head, hard, and had a brain concussion. “After that,” she said, “I couldn’t stand, and I couldn’t handle glare or bright lights.” But Matthias, whose grandson suffers from Irlen Syndrome, recognized these effects as symptoms of the same little-known brain disorder. “Irlen Syndrome is not a vision problem, it’s a brain processing problem,” Mat- thias said. “It’s a perceptual disorder caused by the brain’s inability to process specifi c wavelengths of light.” “People who have this syndrome get headaches. They get nauseous, or dizzy,” she said. “They may look at a page and what looks like an orderly column of numbers or letters to you, may appear to them as random fi gures spread all across the page.” Irlen Syndrome sufferers often have trouble reading conventional text — black type on white paper. Instead of nice, orderly text, they see swirls of sentences, or letters that move, appear in columns, vibrate or literally fall off the page. Matthias is now a certifi ed Irlen Syndrome screener. But her personal experience made her acutely aware of the dev- astating effects that this rarely recognized condition, found in an estimated 16% of peo- ple across the globe, can have. Her book, Word Gob- blers, about recognizing and helping children (and adults) with Irlen Syndrome will be published in mid-March. It is illustrated by local artist Joan Gilbert. “It’s different for every- body, and it can be very sub- tle,” Matthias said. “For about 50% of people who have it, it’s genetic. For the other 50% it’s usually brain injuries. It can also be triggered by high fevers or certain viruses.” Ellen Morris Bishop/For the Wallowa County Chieftain Catherine Matthias is a children’s writer who has Irlen Syndrome and also is an Irlen screener. Her book about the condition, Word Gobblers, is due out in mid-March 2021. The cause of Irlen Syn- drome, Matthias noted, is that the brain is not process- ing certain light waves. And those lightwaves (colors) are different for different people. As the brain starts building a picture of a written page or other subject, it’s not making any sense because some of the wavelengths (colors) are missing. Consequently, peo- ple with Irlen Syndrome have brains that are sort of hyper- active, trying to make sense of incomplete pictures. The solutions for Matthias and others with Irlen Syn- drome include placing col- ored fi lters on top of pages of text or printing text out on colored paper. But the best thing, Matthias said, is wear- ing a pair of glasses or con- tact lenses with multiple color fi lters that are specifi cally designed for the individual’s needs. Matthias now wears a pair of specially prescribed glasses with fi ve different color fi lters. The glasses also are designed to cut down on glare from the sides and top. She wouldn’t go anywhere without them. “The glasses are not a cure, Matthias said. “You cannot cure this. All you can do is ameliorate it. The glasses aren’t really colored to the observer, and they don’t change colors you are see- ing. But they do they make what you see more true to life because your brain is not try- ing to make sense of chaos.” As a certifi ed Irlen Syn- drome screener, Matthias uses 10 different colored fi lters to determine which colored fi l- ters work. There are several hundred combinations. Diag- nosticians who can actually prescribe the color combina- tions for glasses have more than 100,000 options to meet the needs of each individual. “I had a friend from Port- land, who’s a successful photographer, painter and writer, coming to visit and I explained that I needed some- one without Irlen Syndrome to test,” Matthias said. “We went through the test and I don’t remember which color it was, but we were going through colors and I put a color over her page, and she burst into sobs. And I’m thinking ‘What have I done to my friend?’ And she fi nally looked at me and said, ‘My entire childhood makes sense now.’” For more information about Irlen Syndrome and the Irlen Institute, visit https:// irlen.com. To contact Catherine Mat- thias for questions about a screening or diagnosis, visit her website: CatherineMat- thias.com. DON’T FORGET TO RECYCLE THIS PAPER! This week’s featured book Keep Sharp: Build a Better Brain at Any Age by Sanjay Gupta, MD 107 E. Main St. Enterprise OR 541-426-3351 bookloftoregon.com • manager@bookloft.org WINTER HOURS DINE I K N E OR TA T OU Taking Wed. & Thur. 10 Fri. & Sat. 10 am am - 7 pm - 8 pm Sun. 10 am - 7 pm Now s Reservation TAKE OUT ORDERS • CALL 541-569-2285 AR ertson’s pharmacies except for a couple are part of the federal partnership that started (two weeks ago) with the shipment from the federal government to the pharmacies,” said Jill McGinnis, director of com- munication and public affairs for Safeway. McGinnis said the Safe- STAY WARM YE Ellen Morris Bishop/For the Wallowa County Chieftain On Monday, Feb. 22, 2021, a Safeway pharmacist administers the fi rst shot of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine to a person referred to Safeway by Wallowa Memorial Hospital. W ENTERPRISE — Wal- lowa County residents have another outlet where they will be able to get COVID- 19 vaccinations as they are distributed. Safeway in Enterprise, as well as many other retail phar- macies, have begun receiv- ing doses of the COVID-19 vaccine through the Federal Retail Pharmacy Program. According to the Oregon Health Authority website, “The partnership is a collab- oration between the Centers for Disease Control and Pre- vention (CDC), states and territories, and 21 national pharmacy partners and inde- pendent pharmacy networks. Shipments arrived on Feb. 10 at 127 retail pharmacies in Oregon.” Enterprise’s Safeway store received 100 doses two weeks ago, and was slated to receive another 100 last week before nationwide inclem- ent weather issues delayed the shipment. More doses are expected to arrive this week. “All of our Safeway/Alb- nership with Safeway to work (through) the waitlist that we have.” Stangel praised the efforts put forth by the hospital staff, and said the staff has played a key role in helping coordi- nate people for immunization at Safeway. “They’ve been doing a great job. They have a great team set up,” she said. “I appreciate all they have been doing, and appreciate them working with us to try and help out.” As of Monday afternoon, Feb. 22, there have been 1,183 fi rst doses administered in the county, and 670 individuals have received both doses of the Moderna COVID-19 vac- cine. There are 594 people on the county waitlist. Overall, there have been 142 cases of COVID-19 in the county since the start of the pandemic last year, including 40 this month. To signup online for a vac- cine through Safeway (when it’s available) visit www. safeway.com/covid-19, or call WMH at 541-426-5437, if you’re 65 or older, to be added to the waitlist. pharmacy having the avail- ability to vaccinate gives resi- dents another option of where they can get inoculated. “In talking with the hos- pital they have been doing an awesome job to help vaccinate our community and county, but there are always a few people who can’t make it,” on the hospital vaccination clinic days, Stangel said. Those vac- cination clinics have been on Tuesdays and Fridays when the vaccine is available. “We were able to call 50 people at the top of our wait- list and instruct them to call Safeway,” Brooke Pace, communications director at WMH, said of how the col- laboration worked from the hospital’s end. Having an additional loca- tion that can immunize will help speed up the process of getting shots to those who want them, Pace said. “This is a great way for us to work through the list at a faster pace, especially if we get to a situation where both Safeway and the hospital are receiving shipments,” she said. “We’re hoping that we will continue to work in part- NE By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain HA Y PP with 201 E. Hwy 82 • Enterprise 541-426-0320 Sales & Service Hours: Mon-Fri 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Serving Wallowa County • Convenient Delivery • Residential • • Commercial • Industrial • www.main-street-motors.com sales@main-street-motors.com IN NEED OF RELIABLE TOWING? YOUR VEHICLE LOOKING BLAH? DAILY DRIVER DOWN? RENTALS AVAILABLE! CALL 503-426-2100 TREAT YOUR RIDE TO A FULL DETAIL! LOW RATES! SEE OUR AD ON PAGE A18 Old Fashioned Values Sales & Services 541-426-2100 311 West Main St. • Enterprise