WCCC Still Cutting Ribbons!

Just when yours truly thought that the summer was a slower time for the Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC), I realized how wrong I was.

Since our last issue, there have been eight well-attended WCCC ribbon-cutting and other free events to keep the local businesses hosting these events happy, even in the 100° heat of late June and early July.

Here’s a listing of a few of the events you may have missed:

Señor T’s
16-16 Classified Ads Celeste 

 

 

 

 

LA Fitness Tampa Palms (6/25)

LAFitWEB

 

 

 

 

 

Seven Oaks Pet Depot & Hospital (also 6/25)

7OaksPet

 

 

 

 

 

Buttermilk Provisions (July 6)

buttermilk

 

 

 

 

 

Bay Dermatology (7/15)

BayDermatology2

 

 

 

 

Pasco Education Foundation (7/21)

PascoEDCribbon

 

 

 

 

 

Try 7 Layers Bakery!

If you haven’t yet tried the new 7 Layers Bakery (26306 Wesley Chapel Blvd., or S.R. 54) in the Grand Oaks Plaza in Lutz sin7 layersce we told you about it opening a few months ago, check out the picture and tell me you don’t want to try this true, New York-style bakery owned by Evelyn Barrero and William Moreno. Pictured are the new amaretto cupcake, my favorite peanut butter cup cupcake, a hand-piped cannoli, the new chocolate eclair, my new favorite creme brulée cupcake and the bakery’s signature 7-layer cookies. Call 388-2271 or see pg. 37 for info. 

New Tampa Pediatric & Adolescent Care’s Dr. Rita Dubey Promises Excellent Care

Dubey
Pediatrician Dr. Rita Dubey (center) and her assistants, Kendra Smith (left) and Jennifer Cabral, pride themselves on putting patients first at Dr. Dubey’s office, located in the Seven Oaks Prof. Park.

For Dr. Rita Dubey (pronounced “Doo-bay”), the best part of being a pediatrician is not just that she gets to care for sick children or advise families about how to help keep their kids healthy — although she says she loves that part of her job. The best part, she says, is watching them metamorphose from newborn infants to toddlers to teens and beyond.

“The best part of pediatrics is the evolution that we see,” says Dr. Dubey, who is the owner and sole physician at New Tampa Pediatrics and Adolescent Care located the Seven Oaks Professional Park (west of Sam’s Club), off S.R. 56. “It’s so interesting to see the patients blossom and grow, their development and growth.”

Dr. Dubey has practiced medicine for more than three decades. She received her Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS, equivalent to the MD) degree from Mumbai University in Mumbai, India, in 1982.

She completed her residency in pediatrics at the Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital in Nashville, TN, in 1991, and practiced at East Tennessee Children’s Hospital in Knoxville until she moved to Tampa in January 1999.

After moving here, she worked for the Health Point Pediatric Group in Tampa and the Pediatric Health Care Alliance in Riverview before deciding to set up her own practice.

With two young children who were then ages 4 and 7 and attending local schools, Dr. Dubey and her husband Rajiv (who is the chair of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of South Florida) settled in Tampa Palms. Taking measure of the rapid growth north of where they lived, Dr. Dubey decided to open her own practice in Wesley Chapel in October 2006.

Over the past decade, she has seen patients from newborns upwards —  “Once they leave home, they leave me!,” she says — and her services run the gamut of traditional pediatric care.

Dr. Dubey says she often “meets” a patient when they are still in utero and the parent comes by for a visit to see if this is the office they want for their family. Once the baby becomes a patient, Dr. Dubey carries out the gamut of periodic well care visits based on the timeline set by the American Association of Pediatrics. She checks growth and development, making sure the children meet their milestones, and offers counseling, behavior, safety and well-care visits.

Patients also can get sports physicals, as well as school and camp physicals.

Because Dr. Dubey is the only physician on staff, she sees all of the patients herself and knows all of their families and their concerns personally. She is almost always able to see patients the same day they call because the office keeps half the day open to see sick children and the other half for well care and physicals. Basic lab tests also are performed at the office.

For Wesley Chapel resident Liz Crew, New Tampa Pediatric & Adolescent Care was worth the drive from Brooksville, where she lived at the time when her older daughter, now 10, was born.

That daughter was Dr. Dubey’s third Crew family patient. She says he two younger daughters (now ages 4 and 7) have been Dr. Dubey’s patients all along.

Crew also has referred other friends and family members to the practice.

“We really love the practice,” says Crew. “We love Dr. Dubey. The staff is always courteous and on top of things. There’s never been a time that I’ve made an after-hour call and not received a call back. Dr. Dubey is very personable and likes to know what’s going on in life, in school and with extra-curricular activities. She recognizes if kids are apprehensive and has a good bedside manner.”

Dr. Dubey says she believes medicine was a natural fit for her after she became interested in the sciences as a teen. Once she started medical school, she says she was drawn to pediatrics because of the positive impacts she could have on young lives.

She says she also loves the fact that the follow-through is so much better with children than with adults, noting that while grownups will frequently disregard doctors’ advice about health and habits, when it comes to their children, they are so careful and will go the extra mile for their health.

Keeping Up With Trends

Having been in practice so long, Dr. Dubey is ideally positioned to observe trends in children’s health. One is the issue of childhood obesity, the rise of which she has certainly noted.

“With every other child, we have to talk about weight management,” she says.

So many children suffer from being anywhere from mildly overweight to obese that a regular part of Dr. Dubey’s practice has become to find resources to get children back into good health with healthy food and proper exercise.

She says that moving away from a sedentary lifestyle and eating so many processed foods are the keys to curbing the increase in early onset diabetes and high cholesterol in so many children.

“Another disturbing trend is the practice of questioning immunizations,” says Dr. Dubey. Over the past decade, she has had an increase of parents coming to her concerned about information they have gathered from the internet about the dangers of immunization, Widely publicized — and yet, thoroughly discredited studies — linking vaccinations to autism are one reason for parents refusing vaccinations. Other reasons include a belief that vaccination schedules are the result of drug companies pushing for profits, or fear mongering from the medical community.

Dr. Dubey tells parents that the vaccinations prevent illnesses that have caused devastation in the past, and she is worried about pockets of illnesses now breaking out when people refuse to vaccinate their kids.

Anxiety amongst teens is another issue commonly in the news, and Dr. Dubey says it has always been there, but parents are acknowledging and addressing it more nowadays. She says parents also are more aware, informed and wary about overmedicating children. The overuse of antibiotics and resulting resistance is an issue with which many parents have become familiar. She adds that today’s parents are more amenable to suggestions to observe their children and give nature a chance. If problems persists, they are encouraged to bring the child back.

New Tampa Pediatric & Adolescent Care is open Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., but Dr. Dubey also takes after-hours calls. The office accepts most private insurance plans, as well as Medicaid.

“We strive to provide competent and compassionate care,” says Dr. Dubey. “Our staff knows that our patients come first.”

New Tampa Pediatric & Adolescent Care is located at 2236 Ashley Oaks Cir. in Wesley Chapel. For more information, see the ad on page 42 of our current issue or, to make an appointment, call 973-2500.

Fast Track Urgent Care — Bridging The Gap Between Your Doctor & The ER

fasttrackWEBIf you’re sick or injured and can’t be seen by your primary care doctor right away, urgent care facilities offer a convenient alternative. Much less expensive than a visit to the emergency room, and with expanded hours when compared with a typical doctor’s office, it’s no wonder urgent care facilities are popular with people in need of medical care all over the U.S.

One urgent care facility in Wesley Chapel takes its role in helping meet the healthcare needs of the community to the next level.

Fast Track Urgent Care Center, located just off of S.R. 54 west of I-75, calls itself a “boutique” urgent care facility, because it offers not only a personal touch, but also expanded services that can make the inconvenience of a sudden illness or an unexpected injury a little easier to deal with.

For example, the center offers what it calls “Fast Pass,” an online check-in system. Although appointments are not required, patients can fill out their paperwork in advance and skip the line when they arrive at the urgent care facility.

“Our goal is to get you in and out within 30-60 minutes,” says Paul Nanda, M.D., who is the medical director for Fast Track’s four locations, including Wesley Chapel, South Tampa, Westchase, and Carrollwood. “We know you didn’t wake up that morning with plans to go to urgent care, so we want to make you better and get you back to your life as soon as possible.”

Dr. Nanda says Fast Track also offers free home delivery of medications. “If you’re not feeling well and have a fever, we know you don’t want to wait in line at the pharmacy,” he explains. “So, after your appointment, you can go home and we’ll bring your prescriptions to you within two hours.”

He adds, “We also handle all referrals in-house, so we actually make the phone call, ensure that the facility we refer you to will take your insurance, and set up the follow-up appointment for you,” says Dr. Nanda. “We help you navigate the healthcare system. And, we don’t just tell you to follow up with your primary doctor if you don’t feel better in a few days. We tell you to come back to us. We’re a boutique facility, so we give a higher level of care.”

Medical Staff

The staff at Fast Track includes a dozen Board-certified physicians, nurse practitioners and physician assistants. The team of experienced professionals rotate among the company’s four locations.

Fast Track Urgent Care Center was founded in 2005 by Tampa native Daron G. Diecidue, M.D., who is Board-certified in Family Medicine. Dr. Diecidue holds Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degrees in both Biology and Psychology from Florida State University in Tallahassee, and a degree in Chemistry from the University of South Florida in Tampa. He received his M.D. degree from the University of South Florida School of Medicine and performed his residency in family medicine at Bayfront Medical Center in St. Petersburg. He is an active member of the American Academy of Family Practice, the Florida Medical Association and the Urgent Care Association of America.

Meanwhile, Dr. Nanda has served as medical director of Fast Track Urgent Care since 2013. He also is Board-certified in Family Medicine. Dr. Nanda received a B.S. degree in Biology from Indiana University in Bloomington in 1996, and a Master of Science (M.S.) degree in Immunology from Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis in 1999, and his M.D. degree from the American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine in St. Maarten in 2003. He completed his residency at Ohio State University in Columbus in 2007.

Dr. Nanda also interviewed for a residency at Bayfront Hospital in St. Petersburg. At that time, he says he, “fell in love with Tampa” and was hoping to find an opportunity to work in the area. When the opportunity arose to work with Fast Track Urgent Care Clinic, he says he jumped at the chance.

“I really like the office and its philosophy of how to treat patients,” Dr. Nanda says. “When I interviewed with Dr. Diecidue, the CEO, I found that he is doing things the way I would do them if I owned my own practice.”

Dr. Nanda was hired in 2013 and was quickly promoted to medical director. He says he is, “responsible for ensuring the practice consistently offers patient-oriented, evidence-based, cost-effective care” at Fast Track’s four locations, including the Wesley Chapel center.

“I was always taught that patients come first,” explains Dr. Nanda. “As providers, we are advocates who do what’s best for the patient. Sometimes that means we have to fight with insurance companies. Sometimes that means we don’t randomly prescribe antibiotics. Sometimes that means we help people navigate the healthcare system, which has become more and more confusing. We hire providers who agree with our patient-first philosophy, and we ask them to treat every patient like they would treat their own mom or child.”

For a complete list of the medical providers at the Wesley Chapel office, go to FastTrackUrgentCare.com.

Newest Location: Wesley Chapel

The Wesley Chapel office opened in February of this year. The location was previously a different urgent care center, so Fast Track Urgent Care was able to move in quickly when that location became available.

“We were looking to get into this area because it’s exciting — and growing — and there was a lack of really good urgent care facilities,” says Dr. Nanda.

He says the practice treats most conditions that a traditional family practice would treat, but without the wait times that can be associated with a primary care physician in today’s healthcare environment. He explains that Fast Track’s doctors don’t handle long-term management of a chronic condition, such as high blood pressure or depression, but when you’re sick or injured, that’s the time to come to the center.

“We treat everyone from infant to geriatric,” says Dr. Nanda. “The youngest patient I’ve ever treated in urgent care was two days old, and the oldest was 103,” although the clinic currently does not treat infants under three months old.

“For young, healthy people with no chronic conditions, in some cases we actually function as a primary care doctor,” says Dr. Nanda. “We’re not trying to take the place of a primary care physician, but you can come and see us whenever you’re sick or injured. We’re open 84 hours a week (12 hours a day, Sunday-Saturday), and we’re here to serve you and your medical needs. We make it as quick and easy as possible, and we take care of our patients with extra care services.”

He says another important role that the Wesley Chapel Fast Track Urgent Care Center plays is to give people an alternative to visiting the emergency room when they find themselves sick or injured, and their doctor’s office is either booked or closed.

“Healthcare is getting more and more expensive,” Dr. Nanda says. “While a typical emergency room visit can cost thousands of dollars (with no insurance), our average visit is just $125. We want to keep people out of the ER and get them feeling better.”

And, people do seem to be taking notice. On the center’s website, dozens of five-star reviews highlight what people love about Fast Track Urgent Care Center.

“Very quick, and attentive staff all around,” writes John P. “Best urgent care experience I’ve ever had.”

And, patient Carmen L. writes, “Fast Track is always the place I choose when I can’t get in to my own doctor. They always give exceptional service. I truly recommend Fast Track for your urgent care needs.”

Fast Track Urgent Care Center has four locations throughout the Tampa Bay area. The Wesley Chapel office is located at 5504 Gateway Blvd. and is open seven days a week, 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. To make a reservation with Fast Pass or for more information, go to FastTrackUrgentCare.com or call 925-1903.

Goddard School Hoping To Open Soon

GoddardThe Goddard School is extending its franchise into Wesley Chapel, with the early childhood education provider hoping to open a new location by the end of the year across Bruce B. Downs Blvd. from Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel (FHWC).

According to local owner Dinesh Patel, the new school could soon be opened, weather permitting. He says the summer rains have slowed down construction of the 10,000-sq.-ft.- learning facility, but he is still pushing the company building it.

“We have broken ground, and it looks like we should be able to open by the end of this year in the last quarter,’’ says Patel, a businessman who lives in Punta Gorda but is planning to relocate his family to Wesley Chapel.

Goddard Systems, Inc. (GSI) is a successful franchisor of The Goddard School, with more than 400 locations in 35 states. It was established in 1986 in Malvern, PA, by AAMCO Transmissions founder Anthony A. Martino. Using its proprietary F.L.EX (Fun Learning Experience) program, a play-based curriculum, the school focuses on early education, from the age of six weeks to six years old.

“One of our friends was involved in it, and we liked the concept,’’ Patel says. “”We did a little more looking into it and thought it was a really good idea.”

Patel feels modern day daycares have their place, but don’t work as well as they could. The Goddard School, he adds, takes the daycare model and adds a strong developmental education thrust to it, using the most current and academically-endorsed methods of teaching, while collaborating with parents.

“Nowadays, daycare doesn’t work,’’ he said. “It’s the 21st century. Young children’s brains are like sponges at that young of an age, and child development should be an important part of it.”

Goddard School, however, isn’t a dreary, regimented academic facility. It stresses learning in a fun environment, for best results, whether that is through physical activities like yoga or music and languages. “The children work at their own pace,’’ Patel says, adding that the curriculum is “very advanced.”

In site plans issued to Pasco County, the main learning center will be flanked by two playgrounds – one 7,950-sq.-ft. for toddlers, and another 5,068-sq.ft. playground for infants.

Patel says he expects to hire at least 25 teachers – who must hold degrees in early childhood education or related fields and also must complete an exclusive Goddard School training program — and will maintain a low student-to-teacher ration.

The Wesley Chapel location will be the fifth in the Tampa Bay market. Other locations are in Lakewood Ranch, Lithia (Fishhawk area), Temple Terrace and Westchase.

For more information, call Patel at 603-6100, or visit GoddardSchool.com/tampa/wesley-chapel-bruce-b-downs-boulevard-fl.