March 4, 2020

New digs for Chadds Ford chiropractor

Jim Cesca has moved his chiropractic office into the Chadds Ford Business Campus in the same building as Premiere Orthopedics.

For almost 17 years, Dr. Jim Cesca, of Cesca Family Chiropractic, has been practicing out of the little strip mall just east of Painters Crossing Condominiums in Chadds Ford. This week he officially moved into another office in the Chadds Ford Business Campus. The new office is on the second floor — room 203 — at 1204 Baltimore Pike, the same building as Premier Orthopedics.

The move into that space was primarily a business move since 20 percent of his new patients have come from referrals from Premier. He thinks of the move as a “win-win-win” situation where his practice benefits, as does Premier’s, but the patient’s benefit as well.

“Moving here allows both businesses to practice more synergistically. And patients can just come upstairs.”

He added that the healthcare industry is moving into a new direction, one of complexes as opposed to just stand-alone offices. So, he said, “The move ties into what people are becoming used to.” He added that next to him on the second floor is an acupuncturist. “There’s a lot of synergy that can happen right in this building.”

While the move was based on a business decision, Cesca’s roots have remained what they were, but they have also grown.

“The fundamentals are still there, the fundamentals of spinal health,” he said, “but some of the approaches have changed… When I first started it was just chiropractic adjustments.”

The changes have come from the addition of incorporating traction — or decompression as he refers to it – and muscle work. He said those changes make his work more complete.

In talking about the muscle work, Cesca said it’s a matter of working with neuro-muscular-skeletal problems.

“Those three things are so intertwined you really can’t separate one from the others. Most people understand chiropractic adjustments deal with the skeletal system, the joints, but those joints are moved by the muscular system and that’s under control of the nervous system,” he said.

Cesca uses percussion massage and trigger point therapy in his muscle work. He likened the trigger point therapy to a form of acupressure. “You find the specific knot and apply sustained pressure.”

Traction, or decompression, comes in when dealing with certain types of problems. He said many people who sit for long periods of time wind up with lower backaches because the prolonged sitting compresses the lower spine. To relieve the discomfort, the spine needs to be decompressed.

For more information on Cesca Family Chiropractic, visit www.cescafamilychiro.com or phone 610-558-8992.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

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Concord planning eminent domain

Concord Township Council Tuesday night voted to take property through eminent domain to assure three other property owners can more easily hook up to the township sewer system. Whether or not the township actually condemns and takes the property remains to be seen, according to council Vice President John Gillespie.

At issue are three homes on Concord Meeting Road that back up to the Concord Woods development. The rear of the properties are lower than the front, Gillespie said, and the owners want to tie into sewer lines using gravity feed instead of installing pumps to push the waste to lines uphill. But, those pipes in the rear belong to the Concord Woods HOA, Gillespie said.

According to Gillespie, the township offered the HOA $5,000 for an easement but the HOA declined, saying the price would be $15,000. The township declined that, Gillespie said.

The resolution gives the township the legal authority to take the land, but Gillespie said there’s still some negotiating going on to prevent the taking. He wasn’t sure what, if any amount, would be paid should the township condemn the property.

“That’s a legal question and I can’t answer that,” he said.

The township solicitor, Hugh Donaghue, wasn’t at the meeting to answer the question.

Other business

Council voted to allow the Spring Hill Farm development in Chadds Ford T0wnship to tie into Concord’s sewer system

Concord Township will host an open house for The Garnet Valley Greenway (trail) Feasibility Study on Tuesday, March 10, from 7:15 to 8:30 p.m. at the Concord Township Building, 43 S. Thornton Road.

The Garnet Valley Greenway stretches 5.75 miles in a north to south direction. The trail would potentially connect to the Octoraro Trail, Concord Township Park and Delaware County’s Clayton Park.

There will be a voting machine demonstration at the municipal building on Monday, March 9 from 3-6 p.m. State Rep. Stephan Barrar will host the demonstration.

Council made four re-appointments during its March 3 meeting. Shawn Lawler was re-appointed to the Planning Commission, Denise Martin to Parks and Recreation, and Fred Glessner and Chip Price were re-appointed to the Zoning Hearing Board.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

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Police Log March 4: Crashes, DUIs, thefts

Pennsylvania State Police

Media Barracks

Dante Eby, 19, of Quarryville, was arrested on drug charges in Concord Township on Feb. 28, a police report said. According to police, troopers responded to a one-car crash on Baltimore Pike at Scott Road shortly before 11 a.m. and determined the operator was under the influence of a controlled substance.

Police said Austin T. Filippone, 18, of Garnet Valley was cited for following too closely following a rear-ender crash on Smithbridge Road near Temple Road in Concord Township on Feb. 23. Details of the accident were not released, but the report said no one was injured.

An unidentified suspect was caught on a home video surveillance taking a package from a home on Cross Creek Lane in Concord Township on Feb. 25. The suspect fled in a dark-colored SUV. The incident happened at 1:53 p.m.

 A Wilmington woman, 21-year-old Garanay N. Hairston, was injured in a one-vehicle crash on Beaver Valley Road in Concord Township on Feb. 18, according to a police report. The report said Hairston was westbound on Beaver Valley Road when the 2005 Ford Fusion she was driving went off the road and struck a utility pole. She was transported to Wilmington Hospital for treatment. Hairston was also cited, the report said. Three passengers in the car were not injured.

Police are investigating the reported theft of items taken from vehicles parked on Martins Court in Concord Township during the overnight hours of Feb. 24-25.

 A 20-year-old Philadelphia woman, not named in the report, was arrested for shoplifting after allegedly stealing $66 worth of merchandise from Target in Concord Township on Feb. 6.

Avondale Barracks

 Police arrested a 51-year-old West Chester man in Pocopson Township on charges of DUI on Feb. 6. According to police, the driver — not named in the report — was stopped on Route 52 at Clarks Lane for vehicle code violations. Police said they observed signs of impairment, which continued during a field sobriety test.

Someone entered an unlocked car parked on Washington Lane in Pocopson Township and took amoxicillin and oxycodone. The vehicle was parked in the victim’s driveway.

 Police arrested a 35-year-old man from Coatesville for DUI on Feb. 18 in West Marlborough Township. The driver, not named in the report, was observed running a stop sign on Doe Run Road at Wilson Road at 2:06 a.m.

 A 30-year-old woman from Exton and a 25-year-old man from Pottstown were arrested on various charges on Feb. 10 in Pennsbury Township. The pair were not named in the report. The driver was arrested for DUI and the passenger arrested on an outstanding warrant.

 Police said they arrested Daniel Megill, 22, of West Chester, on drug charges in Pennsbury Township on Feb. 29. According to the report, troopers responded to a call to assist Longwood EMS regarding an unresponsive male in his vehicle at Pocopson and McMullan Farm Lane at 1:20 a.m. It was determined he was DUI and taken into custody, the report said.

 Police said Sarah Rymalowicz, 40, of Kennett Square, was arrested for DUI following a two-vehicle crash on E. Baltimore Pike in East Marlborough Township, on Feb. 8. Details of the accident were not released.

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

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New A-fib procedure for strokes at Crozer

New A-fib procedure for strokes at Crozer

In the coming weeks, Crozer-Keystone Health System will begin performing WATCHMAN device implantation. It’s intended for patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation, or A-fib, which is an irregular heart rhythm that increases your risk of a stroke. Crozer-Keystone is the first to offer WATCHMAN in Delaware County.

You may benefit from the procedure if you are a candidate for, but cannot take, blood thinners for the long term for various reasons, including previous bleeding, a future risk of bleeding, a higher risk of falls because of imbalance, or you have a lifestyle that puts you at a higher risk of bleeding.

“People with atrial fibrillation are prone to blood clots that form in the heart and travel to the brain, causing a stroke,” said Dr. Sandeep K. Sharma, the director of Interventional Electrophysiology at Crozer-Keystone. “In 95 percent of these strokes, the clots originate in a small pouch of the top left chamber of the heart called the left atrial appendage.”

WATCHMAN is an FDA-approved implant that closes off the left atrial appendage from the rest of the heart.

In clinical trials, WATCHMAN was as effective as warfarin in preventing stroke and systemic embolism and more effective than warfarin in preventing death.

“It takes a few months for a covering to form naturally over the device. While that’s happening, patients need to take blood thinners for the first 45 days after the procedure and then aspirin and Clopidogrel for six months,” Sharma said. “But after that, they’ll only need to take an aspirin.”

WATCHMAN is implanted through a minimally invasive procedure via a small incision in the groin. Generally, it takes less than an hour. Patients are typically free to return home after an overnight hospital stay.

“At Crozer-Keystone, we have both an experienced team of doctors and the facilities to perform complex procedures like WATCHMAN,” Sharma said. “Patients appreciate that they can stay close to home and get the best care locally.”

 

About Crozer Keystone Staff

Crozer-Keystone Health System’s physicians, specialists and advanced practitioners are committed to improving the health of our community through patient-centered, quality care across a full continuum of health services. Crozer Brinton Lake is Crozer-Keystone’s comprehensive outpatient care facility in western Delaware County, offering primary care, specialty services, outpatient surgery and advanced cancer treatment. Contact us: 300 Evergreen Drive, Glen Mills, PA 19342 http://www.crozerkeystone.org/Brinton-Lake 1-855-254-7425

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