Morton County Health Department

Morton County Health Department Morton County Health Department
--a proactive, not reactive, approach to community health in Morton County and the surrounding areas.

The Morton County Health Department is open to any and all ages, with or without insurance. We promote individual health and wellness to build a healthier, stronger community.

06/01/2026

Every day may not be good, but there’s something good in every day 🌤 Join us for Joyful June and discover actions to help you find and share the little joys in life https://actionforhappiness.org/joyful-june

05/28/2026

📢 Introducing HOPE on Wheels

Kansas Masons, in partnership with The University of Kansas Cancer Center and the Masonic Cancer Alliance, have officially unveiled a new 42-foot mobile cancer screening unit designed to bring lifesaving early detection services to communities across Kansas.

Funded by a nearly $1 million investment—including a $500,000 campaign for mammography equipment—this mobile clinic is equipped to provide breast, skin, and prostate cancer screenings, along with other preventive health services.

Learn more about the screening unit and see when it will be in your community! https://kansasmasonic.foundation/2026/04/02/kansas-masons-bring-hope-on-wheels-to-rural-kansas-communities/

Gazette Fifty 6 Thank you for using your platform to create something that truly matters. The space you created for peop...
05/28/2026

Gazette Fifty 6 Thank you for using your platform to create something that truly matters. The space you created for people impacted by cancer to share their stories was powerful, human, and deeply meaningful. You gave people a voice, honored their journeys, and helped turn difficult experiences into encouragement and awareness for others.

Projects like this do more than spread information, you helped people feel seen, less alone, and maybe brave enough to finally get screened or seek care. Thank you for approaching such a sensitive topic with compassion, dignity, and purpose. Your work has the potential to make a real difference in people’s lives.

The Stories We Don’t Talk About
Cancer, Early Detection, and What Small Towns Know Too Well
ELKHART — In a town this size, everyone knows everyone. They also know which stories are quietly carried from one generation to the next. Some of those stories involve cancer. Not the kind that makes headlines or inspires movies, but the kind that quietly changes families, steals years, and leaves survivors with one clear message: early detection matters more than most people realize until it is almost too late.
Five Elkhart residents recently shared their experiences. Their stories are different in detail but connected by the same hard truth. Cancer does not wait for convenient timing. It does not care about age, fitness level, or how busy life happens to be. What it does respect is early detection.
Ron Whinery: “Don’t Wait Until They Say There’s Nothing More They Can Do”
Ron Whinery, 55, woke up one night with blood and clots in his urine. He tried to brush it off. His wife Jamie insisted he go to the doctor. By the time he reached Morton County Hospital he was bent over in pain and could barely walk.
A CT scan found a mass the size of an egg on his left kidney. Surgeons in Amarillo removed the kidney. It was cancer. Ron was told he may have been carrying that tumor for up to ten years.
For a while he was cancer-free. Then it returned in his lymph nodes. After another round of treatment he was once again declared clear. The battle was far from over.
While working on his pickup truck in the driveway one day, Ron saw a flash of light and collapsed. He suffered a brain bleed and stroke. He was airlifted to Wichita, where doctors found five tumors in his frontal lobe. He was paralyzed for two weeks. Radiation in Amarillo shrank most of the brain tumors, but the cancer has continued spreading — now in his lymph nodes, eighth rib, right shoulder, and more.
Today Ron is battling stage 4 cancer. He receives monthly injections to protect his bones and continues regular scans and treatments. The disease has left him with anemia, extreme fatigue, dizziness, and radiation burns.
He has watched cancer claim multiple family members, including his mother, who passed just months after her own kidney cancer diagnosis.
Ron speaks plainly about what he wishes he had done differently:
“I was one who never went to the doctor unless something was wrong. I wish now that I had done more testing and screenings earlier. Don’t avoid it like I did. Don’t wait until the doctors look at you and say there’s really nothing more we can do. Get checked. Don’t gamble with your life.”
Debbie Dieker Bloesser-Pate: “Cancer Doesn’t Care How Old You Are”
Debbie Dieker Bloesser-Pate, 62, lost her first husband Randy to prostate cancer when he was only 44. He was extremely fit, taught wrestling, and lived a healthy lifestyle. A routine health fair PSA test — one he marked even though he was under the usual screening age — caught the cancer. It moved aggressively. Randy fought for a year and a half before passing away. He never met any of his grandchildren.
Years later cancer came for Debbie.
Because breast cancer ran in her family, she never skipped an annual mammogram. That vigilance saved her life. She was diagnosed with stage 1, grade 2 breast cancer. She underwent a double mastectomy in October and started chemotherapy in December. She powered through it for her daughters and future grandchildren.
Just recently, early detection helped her again — doctors found and removed squamous cell carcinoma from underneath her thumbnail.
Debbie’s message is direct, especially to younger people who think they are too young to worry:
“Cancer doesn’t care who you are. It doesn’t care how old you are. Get checked annually and stay alive for the people who love you.”
Wanda Khemraj: A Nurse Who Became the Patient
Wanda Khemraj spent 42 years as a nurse at Morton County Hospital. She administered chemotherapy when it was still mixed by hand under a laminar airflow hood, cared for the area’s first AIDS patient, and helped keep the hospital running during doctor shortages by painting hallways and IV rooms between patients.
At 76 she never expected to become one of the patients herself.
It had been six years since her last mammogram. The hospital’s old machine was outdated and getting screened meant traveling elsewhere. She kept putting it off — until her mother stepped in.
“One day my mom said, ‘You’re getting a mammogram,’” Wanda recalled. She made an appointment in Liberal. They found invasive breast cancer.
Wanda was sent to Harrington Breast Cancer Center in Amarillo for surgery and radiation. The experience was smoother than she expected after decades of watching others go through treatment.
Her mother’s story reinforced the same lesson. At age 80 her mother attended Elkhart’s annual health fair. Routine lab work showed dangerously low hemoglobin. A local doctor found a colon tumor. Sixteen years later she remains cancer-free.
Wanda’s simple conclusion after a lifetime in nursing:
“That’s why getting tested is so important. It saved her life. And it could save yours.”
Terra Orth: “Be Selfish… Insist That You’re Still Alive Tomorrow”
Terra Orth, 51, had gone 13 years without a Pap smear and had never had a mammogram until she was nearly 50. Life simply got busy. A routine conversation with her husband Shannon’s doctor — a family friend who had battled breast cancer — changed everything.
The doctor “gave her a little chewing out” and scheduled both tests. That decision set off a chain reaction. Terra was diagnosed with aggressive breast cancer on Valentine’s Day 2025. She opted for a double mastectomy and endured chemotherapy. She lost her hair, felt like “a blob sitting here,” and struggled with the fear of becoming a burden to her family.
Today she is in No Evidence of Disease (NED). Her message is practical and heartfelt:
“If it’s free, you’re not out anything. Do you have people you love? Then be a little selfish… insist that you’re still alive tomorrow. Get screened and stay healthy. Early detection gives you a good long life. Why not do what you can?”
Chris and Matti Amerin: Still Fighting, Still Showing Up
On March 3, 2025, Morton County Sheriff’s Deputy Chris Amerin, 39 — who worked full time at the local business Scott Power and part time at the sheriff’s office — came home for lunch, started warming food in the microwave, and collapsed — suffering a grand mal seizure that shook the entire house. His wife Matti, the county’s Head Court Clerk, found him unconscious on the floor. He was airlifted to Wichita.
Doctors discovered a brain tumor the size of a thumbnail that had ruptured a blood vessel. Further testing revealed stage 4 melanoma that had metastasized to his brain and spinal fluid. This was Chris’s second battle — he had been diagnosed with stage 2 melanoma in 2021 after Matti noticed a suspicious mole.
The fight has been brutal. Chris has endured fluid buildup that required draining nearly a gallon from his stomach at a time, swollen feet, extreme fatigue, and moments when he could barely get out of a recliner. At one low point the family gathered and Chris planned his own funeral.
“I’m not afraid to die,” Chris said. “I’m not sad for me. I’m sad for what I’m leaving behind — my wife, my daughter, my stepdaughter, my family.”
Matti has been by his side every step — working full-time, raising their daughters, and driving to treatments.
Their message is blunt:
Chris: “Do it for your family. Quit being selfish and go get checked out. It’s scary, but it’s better to know and face it head on.”
Matti: “Please go get your skin checked. Do your breast exams. Get your colonoscopy when it’s time. Don’t wait until you’re sitting in a hospital room planning a funeral.”
This Sunday in Elkhart
On Sunday, May 31, from 11:00 AM to 2:00 PM, the Morton County Medical Clinic at 411 Sunset Ave will offer free cancer and health screenings. No insurance or appointment is needed for most services.
Mammograms are also available. To schedule one, call Chavely at 913-945-7864. If you have insurance it will be billed to your plan. If you do not have insurance, the Masonic Cancer Alliance will cover the cost.
The stories above are not ancient history. They are happening right now in the same town where people still wave at each other on Main Street and kids ride bikes until dark. They show what can happen when screening is delayed — and what can be gained when it is not.
Early detection does not guarantee an easy road. But it gives people the chance to fight on their own terms, for the people they love, for as long as they possibly can.
That is the simple truth these five Elkhart residents want their neighbors to know.

05/28/2026

Amerin, thank you

05/28/2026

Orth, thank you

05/28/2026

Debbie Dieker Bloesser-Pate, thank you

05/28/2026

Ron Whinery, thank you

05/28/2026

Khemraj, thank you

Nature already figured out food coloring long before the food industry did!The bright reds, oranges, greens, yellows, an...
05/27/2026

Nature already figured out food coloring long before the food industry did!

The bright reds, oranges, greens, yellows, and purples in fruits and vegetables come from natural plant compounds called phytonutrients and many of them do more than just look pretty on your plate. They help support your immune system, reduce inflammation, and may even help lower the risk of certain cancers.

🍅 Red foods like tomatoes, watermelon and peppers contain lycopene that helps protect your cells from damage. It’s linked to heart health and may help lower the risk of some cancers, especially prostate cancer

🥕 Orange foods like carrots sweet potatoes and orange peppers are rich in beta-carotene which your body turns into Vitamin A, that helps with healthy vision, skin, and immune function

🫑 Green vegetables like peppers, broccoli and spinach provide folate, a B vitamin that helps your body make new healthy cells and DNA (very important in early pregnancy!)

🍋 Yellow foods like lemons, corn, bananas, and pineapple are packed with flavonoids, a plant compounds with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects

🫐 Purple foods like berries, purple cabbage, eggplant, dark grapes produce contains powerful antioxidants to help protect your body from damage caused by “free radicals,” which can contribute to aging and disease. They also have anthocyanins, compounds that are thought to help support brain, heart, and overall cell health.

Research consistently shows that diets rich in colorful fruits and vegetables are linked to better overall health and lower cancer risks. The American Cancer Society recommends filling at least ⅔ of your plate with plant foods whenever possible.

Next time you see a rainbow of produce, remember: color can be a sign of nutrition, not something to fear.

So, skip the skittles and eat the nutritional rainbow, your body was made for it!

Eating fruits and vegetables: https://www.heartfoundation.org.au/healthy-living/healthy-eating/fruit-vegetables-and-heart-health

Address

625 Colorado Street
Elkhart, KS
67950

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 4pm
Tuesday 7am - 4pm
Wednesday 7am - 4pm
Thursday 7am - 4pm
Friday 7am - 12pm

Telephone

(620) 697-2612

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