Photo Gallery |
Unity falls in epic gridiron battle to Althoff

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Unity's Grarret Richardson avoids a tackle by Althoff's Cordon Charleston on his way to the first of two touchdowns on Friday. The senior finished finished 140 all-purpose yards in the Rockets' 53-52 thriller at Hicks Field.


Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Brayden Henry hauls in an Althoff pass for a second-quarter interception on 30-yard line with 10:19 to play in the half. The catch stalled the Crusader drive while Unity trailed 21-14 on the scoreboard.


Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Rockets' Brayden Henry is pulled down from behind during early fourth-quarter action by the Crusaders.


Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

After going up 51-45 after his 52-yard fourth-quarter touchdown, Unity receiver Tre Hoggard celebrates the score with fans in the west end zone. Hoggard scored four of the Rockets' seven touchdowns, finishing with 266 yards on 12 catches.


Younger generation needed for future healthcare jobs in Illinois

surgery team
Photo: Akram Huseyn/Unsplash

The healthcare employee pool is shrinking. A new program for high school students has been created to help address the shortfall in skilled medical professionals.

by Terri Dee
Illinois News Connection

CHICAGO - The healthcare employee pool is shrinking - and as the medical profession faces increases in demand for mental health treatment, chronic illness management, and an aging population - a new program hopes high school students can step in.

Competition is tight between healthcare organizations and providers needing accredited and skilled talent.

Online educational provider MedCerts Vice President of Partnerships and Workforce Development, Jennifer Kolb, said the program is designed to generate students' interest in healthcare fields and get them trained.

"How do we build a pipeline of talent that is certified - a new generation of people interested in healthcare to go into these roles?" said Kolb. "And where do we get the talent from?"

Kolb said since 2019, the average hospital has spent or lost about $24 million - or about $7,000 to $9,000 a day - due to workforce turnover.

The MedCerts program has partnerships with local businesses and eLearning training providers.

Kolb said the goal is to have full-time, entry-level jobs ready for the students when they graduate from high school.

MedCerts partners with Madison County through the Medical Assistant Apprenticeships program with the Health Sisters Hospital System in Illinois.

There are more than 50 training offerings, including sterile processing technicians, surgical technologists, and pharmacy technicians.

Kolb said the certifications can be earned in three to six months, and the program offers a Pay to Career pipeline that allows the student to earn on-the-job college credit.

"Ninety-five percent of healthcare employers have a tuition reimbursement program as an employee benefit," said Kolb, "and they can use their employee benefit to go to college."

The college credit can be applied to a four-year institution for advanced medical careers, such as nursing.

State and federal dollars and employers fund the program, so the student has no financial obligations. According to the state, 13% of Illinois schools offer a health sciences and technology curriculum.


Read our latest health and medical news


More Sentinel Stories



Photo Galleries


2025 Illinois Marathon Photo Gallery
A couple of runners found themselves in the wrong race at this year's Illinois Marathon. Over 60 photos from the race that you should see.

Photos: Sentinel/Clark Brooks