Greensboro Restoration
Greensboro Restoration
Greensboro restoration has a long and diverse history. Not all of the city’s notable citizens have degrees from Ivy League schools and squeaky-clean records, but they all possess the grit and gumption to claim their place in history.
Among the more interesting stories are those that involve restoration. Greensboro restoration professionals have restored homes and buildings throughout the area.
Stream Restoration
With its numerous lakes and constant humidity, Greensboro is a great place to live, but it can cause problems with the crawl spaces beneath your home. It’s important to address these issues before they get worse. Otherwise, they can lead to mold and mildew growth that affects the entire house.
Stream restoration involves the re-establishment of natural channel form, function, and processes that existed prior to watershed perturbation. It requires a holistic approach to determine the site’s potential functional uplift and to establish realistic goals and objectives.
This project will restore 13.5 acres of riparian buffers along tributaries to Falls Lake and Little Lick Creek. This will reduce sediment loss, nutrient pollution, and dissolved oxygen levels. As the buffers mature, they will provide a habitat for wildlife and increase carbon sequestration within the streams and their floodplains. The project was primarily funded through grant funding.
Historic Preservation
Rather than tearing down and replacing, historic preservation is a movement to conserve old buildings and areas in an effort to tie the community’s history together. It can also be an effective strategy for promoting a local business because of the unique nature of historic structures that set them apart from homogeneous skyscrapers that dominate many cities.
Neighborhood groups can seek historic status for their districts or individual houses if they have historic significance. They may also be interested in the economic benefits that come with the designation – tax credits, tourism, and development.
Students studying architecture, archeology, and engineering can offer their professional skills to help with research, writing applications, and other work that is critical for successful historic preservation projects. Other professionals may donate their time because of a desire to support a cause that they believe in. Examples of these efforts include the Aycock and Dunleith neighborhood master plans, the 223 South Elm Street makeover, and the redevelopment of War Memorial Stadium.
Pain Management
Pain management is a multidisciplinary approach for easing the suffering of anyone who has pain, whether acute or chronic. It involves a team of practitioners that includes physicians, pharmacists, nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and clinical psychologists as well as physiotherapists, occupational therapists, and recreational therapists.
A good pain specialist will evaluate your symptoms and how they affect your life and work with you to create a plan. This plan may include medications, interventional techniques (nerve blocks, spinal cord stimulation) physical therapy, and alternative medicine. It also may include psychiatry to treat the emotional problems that can accompany pain, including depression and anxiety.
The expert staff at Restoration of Greensboro works diligently to first and foremost treat the underlying medical issue causing pain. This responsible approach makes it possible for patients to find relief from treatment-resistant pain and live the lives they deserve. Their clinic is also dedicated to treating opioid use disorder through a combination of counseling and Suboxone.
Opioid Use Disorder
A person with opioid use disorder (OUD) has an uncontrollable urge to take opioid drugs. Their use affects their work, family, and social life. People with OUD can get help.
Several medicines can help people stop using opioids, such as buprenorphine and naloxone prescribed under medical supervision, or methadone. These drugs reduce cravings and block the pleasant feelings that make people want to keep using opioids. They also ease withdrawal symptoms and block pain signals in the brain.
Yale Medicine is a leader in treating OUD with behavioral therapy and FDA-approved medicines, including buprenorphine and naloxone, within routine healthcare settings such as primary care, OB/GYN offices, and infectious disease clinics. This helps reduce the stigma many people experience about getting treatment for their addiction and makes it easier to access. It’s important for all healthcare professionals to understand how to screen and treat OUD. Treatment is most effective when it includes counseling and medications.