Mission to Cambodia: A country that has changed me

ErinPettepherSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Erin Pettepher, Nursing student

Cambodia. A small country in Southeast Asia. A country that has changed me.

The first time I came to Cambodia, I knew that I was being offered a life-altering trip. I was traveling alone for the first time, well, really I guess just without my parents. I was investing in a new culture. I was seeing devastating poverty with my own two eyes. I was learning what true joy looks like. And greatest of all, I was trying to share the same love with others that Jesus has for me.

Click on photos to enlarge

Click on photos to enlarge

Little did I know that two years later I would be attending a wedding as a bridesmaid for one of my very best friends. A friendship that blossomed over a friendly smile and a broken conversation due to poor translation.

My best friend’s name is Chhay, and today I had the honor to stand beside him and his beautiful wife, Dany, to celebrate God’s faithfulness as they joined their lives together. Today was filled with great happiness and celebration. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: Travel Day

JordynWestfallSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Jordyn Westfall, Nursing student

Click on photos to enlarge

Click on photos to enlarge

Friday was a traveling day for us. We had a relaxing breakfast by the pool at our hotel in Battambang, then hopped on the bus for the five hour drive back to Phnom Penh. On the way we were able to stop and get Cambodian potato chips, which we all loved.

Once in Phnom Penh we had dinner at one of our favorite restaurants, Anise (the air conditioned room won us over).Camb2014y

We took advantage of our free time after dinner and a few people got massages and pedicures while others relaxed and unpacked. We are all happy to be back at Golden Gate Hotel for a few more days.

Dean Johnston recognized as Health Care Hero by Nashville Business Journal

JohnstonSmall2The Nashville Business Journal has named Dr. Phil Johnston, dean of Belmont’s College of Pharmacy, as a Health Care Hero. Winners were selected for their contributions to Music City’s health community by a panel of industry judges. Johnston was recognized in the “Health Care Professional Services” category along with other local leaders, including Anne Sumpter Arney of Bone McAllister Norton PLLC, Vicki Estrin of C3/Consulting, Berry Holt of Bradley Arant Boult Cummings, Rosemary Plorin of Lovell Communications, Jerry Taylor of Stites & Harbison PLLC and Tommy Yeager of M.J. Harris Construction Services. The honorees will be recognized at an awards luncheon on June 6 at Loews Vanderbilt Hotel and in a special publication in the June 6 print edition of the Nashville Business Journal.  The luncheon celebrates “the accomplishments of the leaders, innovators, strategists and caretakers, whose work is helping to grow the region’s health care industry and reinforcing Nashville as the health care capital of the nation.”  Belmont University School of Nursing professor Jane Shelby was recognized as a Health Care Hero in 2009.

Pharmacy Students Trained as Hepatitis C Educators

HCV-Training-Photo-300x300Fourth-year pharmacy students William Herbert and Myduy Nguyen, along with pharmacy faculty member Dr. Ashton Beggs, recently attended a Hepatitis C Training Workshop. This intensive one-day training provided attendees with knowledge and tools to go into their communities and educate others about Hepatitis C. Topics covered in this workshop include the liver, Hepatitis C transmission, prevention, diagnosis, symptoms, disease progression and management as well as medical treatment.

In 2001, the Hepatitis C Support Project (HCSP) conducted a broad needs assessment for hepatitis C awareness and education. The HCSP determined the most needed resource was a quality hepatitis C educational process that could be widely distributed and utilized throughout underserved communities affected by hepatitis C. To accomplish this objective, HCSP designed a program that covers awareness and education in a training workshop environment. The goal of this program is to provide unbiased and quality education to individuals who can then educate their respective communities on the virus. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: at Angkor Watt

LibbyFranckSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Libby Franck, Nursing student

Cambodia2014-34Today, we all woke up at 4 am in order to go see the sunrise at Angkor Watt, the famous temple. We all arrived just as the sun was coming up and were greeted with an incredible sunrise, something really worth getting up for. After the sunrise was over we ventured into the actual temple to look around at all of the beautiful architecture and layout of Angkor Watt. I was really amazed at the size of the temple and of the thought that must have gone into the layout prior to laying the first stone. Cambodia2014-35After Angkor Watt, we went to a different series of temples, all similar yet very different than Angkor. I felt endlessly impressed and taken aback to the beauty and effort that was put forth while building these temples. I only wish that they had been preserved better by the people. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: A Big Day

PatrickHaltomSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
Patrick Haltom, Nursing student

Some days are bigger than others. Yesterday was a big day.

Some of the group on their Bamboo Train platform.  Click on photos to enlarge.

Some of the group on their Bamboo Train platform. Click on photos to enlarge.

We began the day working with a rural community outside of Battambang, preforming skits on hand washing and the dangers of smoking. Afterwards, we toured Handa and World Mate hospital and clinic facilities where we sang hymns with some of the staff and patients. Some of us even had the opportunity to give blood, a service much needed in Cambodia. As we left the doors of the hospital, our schedule did not slow down. We then went directly to the Bamboo Train, a tourist attraction in Battambang, and this is where I want to spend most of my time writing.

Last year on the trip, I met a young man named “P.” I’m not sure how to spell his name, but I know that it is pronounced like the letter. P and I got pretty close in the short time we spent together at his village, which is a 15 minute stop on the train for tourists to buy handmade Cambodian goods and snacks. Last year P gave me a tour of his home and of the brick-making factory where his family worked. This year I was so excited to return and see P, hoping that he would remember me out of all of the white, American tourists he sees yearly. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: Second Wednesday

KathrynNicholsSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Kathryn Nichols, Nursing student

On Wednesday we took a van to a village 2 hours outside of Bottambong. We drive an hour on a paved road and an hour on an incredibly bumpy dirt road. When we finally got to the village all of the people were very excited to see us. The people there knew little about basic hygiene so we taught them about hand washing and why it is important. We also did blood pressures and prayed with some of the adults that were feeling sick. It was an exciting experience being in a Cambodian village. We got a chance to really love on all of the people there. We played duck, duck, goose and a couple other games with the children and they loved it. In the afternoon we went to a bible study and midweek service with a local Church of Christ. It still amazes me how happy and welcoming everyone is here. They are always smiling and excited to see you.

Mission to Cambodia: Second Tuesday

MaryLynnWareSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Mary Lynn Ware, Nursing student

Click on photos to enlarge

Click on photos to enlarge

We ate breakfast at the hotel in Siem Reap before hitting the bumpy road for Battambang. When the bus arrived to pick us up we piled in and sprawled out thinking the whole bus was all ours- how American of us! We then stopped by the bus station to pick up the Cambodian bus patrons. After a 5 hour bumpy, wobbly ride, we arrived in Battambang! As we walked off the bus, all the tuk-tuk drivers swarmed around us looking to get business. It was immediately clear that this city was much smaller and less Westernized than Phnom Penh and Siem Reap.

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Mission to Cambodia: Second Sunday

EmilyPattonSmall

Mission to Cambodia 2014
from Emily Patton, Nursing student

Today was a pretty relaxing day. We woke up early to check out of our rooms because we were leaving on a flight to Siem Reap and had to be checked out of our rooms by noon. We all took tuk tuks to church to celebrate the 22nd anniversary and the grand opening of the new facility for Phnom Penh Church of Christ! When we arrived, we saw the family from the service project had come to the service! It was so amazing to see them there, dressed up and ready to worship for the first time. They did a ceremonial ribbon cutting and everyone piled into the church, where traditional Khmer dancers did a beautiful dance as tribute. Cambodians will look for any reason to have a party which I think is so awesome! Afterwards, we hung out and went to lunch and waited for our bus driver to pick us up for the airport! After a short 40 minute flight, we we made it to Siem Reap. The hotel is beautiful and you can definitely tell it’s a smaller, more low-key city than Phnom Penh. It’s already pretty late now and we need to get to bed early because we are waking up early to watch the sunrise at Angkor Wat!

Mission to Cambodia: Second Friday

JessieCammuseSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Jessica Cammuse, Nursing student

Today I woke up excited for a new day in Cambodia. I had the opportunity to visit five families battling with HIV and TB. It was very heartbreaking to see these people but also warming to know that Hope, the organization that is with the hospital, helps supply these patients with food and for some a place to live.

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Click on photos to enlarge

This first lady we visited could not even get out of bed and was so frail and weak.  She could not have weighed more than 50 pounds. It was a pretty awesome moment when her son asked if we believed in God and when he said they did too. Before we left, we prayed over her and it was a beautiful moment.

Camb2014uThe last man we visited was also very emotional.  We has HIV and prostrate cancer, he was homeless but Hope have him a place to live. He invited us in and told us his story.  His story began during the Khmer Rouge regime when he was only four years old.  The Khmer Rouge killed his father and mother leaving him and his 4 brothers and sisters abandoned. Luckily, he escaped to Vietnam.  He also told us that when his siblings and neighbors found out that he had HIV, they abandoned him.  The man was so grateful for us as we were grateful for him.  Not only are we helping change the lives of Cambodia, they are changing our lives as well. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: Thursday

KarenSmithSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Karen Smith, Nursing student

Camb201401Today was an interesting day. We were split up into three groups again. One group went to the hospital, another went to HIV/Aids home visits and my group went to the service project. At the hospital Libby got a jump start on learning health assessment skills, listening to lung sounds. On the home visits while emotionally impacting they also were in for an unexpected surprise. On their way home their tuk-tuk tire popped leaving them stranded for an hour until another tuk-tuk came. It was quite the experience.

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Click on photos to enlarge

With the service project team the manual labor was about done when we arrived. The tin roof was nearly all replaced. The family showed us their house and with big smiles pointed out the new tin roof. You could see the excitement in their faces. So since the labor was about done we decided to put on a skit for the family. The family consist of about 20 people, between daughters, sons, husbands, wives, and grandchildren. Our translator was a 15 year old boy uncle to his 12 year old nephew.

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Mission to Cambodia: Wednesday

JordynWestfallSmallMission to Cambodia
from Jordyn Westfall, Nursing student

Today we all separated into groups and were able to do a few different things. Some students went to the hospital for the day and were able to observe a mastectomy. Although it was a little warm in the operating room (they don’t keep the operating rooms at freezing temperatures like we do in the states) they really enjoyed being able to watch a surgery from beginning to end.

Camb2014oAnother group of students went to continue work on the service project, which was replacing a family’s leaky roof with a new tin roof and support beams. They spent the day helping remove the old tin roofing from the home while getting to know the family and playing with children, teaching them tic tac toe.

Camb2014pThe rest of us visited the Missionaries of Charity which was founded by Mother Teresa in 1950. The Missionaries of Charity is a center where nuns care for orphaned children with HIV, abandoned adults with mental disabilities and illnesses and provides hospice for women with AIDS. We spent time throughout the day playing with and feeding the children, helping  during lunch to feed those with disabilities, doing range of motion exercises with the hospice patients and walking with the patients in the courtyard. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: “It take a village to raise a child.”

JessieFleurySmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Jessica Fleury, Nursing student

Today our group was divided into three groups doing different acts of service in the community. The group I was in went on HIV home visits to a village outside the city where we also climbed over 500 steps to get to a pagoda over looking the city.

Click on photos to enlarge

Click on photos to enlarge

Although most people said it was one of their favorite things we did so far, it was an emotional day for everyone. This was the first time that we saw the conditions that most Cambodians live in and it was truly a harsh reality.

Camb2014iOne thing that struck us was the sense of community. A lot of these people had little to no family and from our short time there it really seemed like the village was it’s own family. There were some little kids probably between the ages of 3-7 who we’re roaming from house to house often following us, climbing in hammocks of neighbors, climbing ladders. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: Monday

KarenSmithSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Karen Smith, Nursing student

Today we went to the Sihanouk hospital. Here half of us did check-off for the nurses in the hospital. Check offs was a type of memorization on a certain nursing process and skill. The five check offs we did were diabetes, pain, SBAR, Confidentiality and drug calculation. The nurses only have one check off a year, it is a big deal for them and they study very hard. It is all in English so many are more nervous about speaking the English correctly than knowing the skills. Everyone, however, had really excellent English. It was great to interact with them in this setting. Knowing as nursing students we have been in their shoes countless times.

The other half of the students were placed in different units of the hospital to have a clinical rotation. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: Sunday

MaryLynnWareSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Mary Lynn Ware, Nursing student

“We started off this hot and sweaty Cambodian Sunday morning with our friends at the Church of Christ. We took communion together and sang worship songs in both Khmer and English (see video below), such a beautiful and powerful worship experience. After church we had a quick lunch at the hotel of peanut butter and honey sandwiches, Pringles, local fruit, and Oreos.

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Damb2014eThen, those of us who had not been before, went to the killing fields at Choeung Ek, just 30 minutes outside Phnom Penh. This was where most of the tortured prisoners from Tuol Slang were taken to be executed. Camb2014fHere, via headset, we heard accounts of survivors and horrifying facts of what occurred in the very place we stood. We saw piles of human skulls, bones, teeth, and clothing, some even still just now making it to the surface of the mass graves that cover the field. Pictured is a tree which was used to beat children to death, and one of the largest mass graves at this site, which held the bodies of 450 victims, both decorated with bracelets left by past visitors paying their respects. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: Saturday

LibbyFranckSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Libby Franck, Nursing student

Today, we all went as a Group to the Asia School to teach. I had the privilege of watching the other students in our group teach as I took notes along with the Cambodian students. It was a great experience, not only to learn what I have not yet learned in school, but also to see how eager the Cambodians are to learn their practice. Camb2014bThough what we were teaching them were all fairly basic concepts to us (like hand washing and how to assess and report a patients condition) to them these concepts were less understood. The way they were engaged and asked questions was really great to watch because I could see the impact of what we were teaching.

After teaching all morning and having lunch, we had some down time. A group of us decided to go to the Russian Market for a bit (It is not actually Russian) to experience the culture of this beautiful city even more. Continue reading

Mission to Cambodia: Second day

KathrynNicholsSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Kathryn Nichols, Nursing student

On our second day in Cambodia we toured the Sihanouk Hospital Center of Hope and clinic that a few of us will be working in. The hospital is a private organization that works to provide free healthcare to those who need it. It was such an eye opener to see the difference between this hospital and the hospitals we have in America. Right when we pulled up, I was amazed to see people sitting everywhere. I learned that some of these people could wait all day to be seen or admitted. The ward was a room with 14 beds and no privacy. There is no air conditioning just open windows and fans exposing the patients to 80 to 90 degree heat.

Camb2014aIn the afternoon we went to Tuol Sleng or S-21. This is a museum that is in a former Khmer Rouge prison. Tuol Sleng was originally a high school but when the Khmer Rouge took over in 1975 it was converted into one of the biggest prisons in the regime. There were a total of 20,000 people that were imprisoned and tortured there. After these people were tortured they were taken to be killed in a nearby killing field. Of the 20,000 people, only 7 survived. Now only 2 of those 7 are still alive,  Vann Nath (picture) and Chum Mey. We were able to meet these two men. It was inspirational to hear each of their stories about their survival in the prison and made me so thankful for what I have.

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PT professor recognized for exceptional service by state organization

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Dr. Cathy Hinton (right) receives Carol Likens Award

Dr. Cathy Hinton, professor of physical therapy, recently received the 2014 Carol Likens Award (CLA) presented by the Tennessee Physical Therapy Association (TPTA). The award is given annually to a TPTA member who has provided exceptional service to the profession of physical therapy.  Dr. Hinton served two terms as president of TPTA and currently serves the state chapter as State License Board Liaison. The Likens award is named for its first recipient who served the chapter as president from 1985 to 1995 and whose vision, leadership and commitment to the profession brought the TPTA through one of its greatest periods of growth and service to members.

Pharmacy student receives US Public Health Service Award

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Mary-Martin Johnson is recognized by Dr. Philip Johnston, Dean of the College of Pharmacy

Fourth-year pharmacy student, Mary-Martin Johnson, of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, recently received the United States Public Health Service Excellence in Public Health Pharmacy Practice Award.  Johnson was presented the aware by Dr. Chris Lamer, a clinical informaticist with the Indian Health Services.   The U.S. Public Health Service created the program to encourage student pharmacists to become active in public health issues.  The annual award recognizes student pharmacists who have demonstrated a commitment to public health and public health practice across America.

Johnson was recognized for her work in the American Pharmaceutical Association-Academy of Student Pharmacists (APhA-ASP) chapter within Belmont’s College of Pharmacy.  She has served as operation heart chairwoman and patient care coordinator for the organization. Through her efforts sustainable contributions to organizations such as the Barren Plains Hispanic Ministry have been initiated in the last few years. The APhA-ASP chapter has provided migrant workers free blood glucose and blood pressure screenings as well as patient education regarding diabetes and hypertension. In addition, the APhA-ASP chapter provided influenza immunizations to the migrant workers. Additionally, as service chairwoman within the Class of 2015, she has worked with The Little Pantry That Could.  The nonprofit organization that provides food and healthcare services to the homeless population in west Nashville.  Without a doubt, Johnson embodies the mission of the United States Public Health Service.  Through her efforts as a student pharmacist, numerous lives have been changed.

Mission to Cambodia: First Impressions

EmilyPattonSmallMission to Cambodia 2014
from Emily Patton, Nursing student

After over 30 hours of traveling, we finally made it to Phnom Penh! From the moment we walked out of the airport, we have literally (and I mean literally) have not stopped sweating. I think this is the first time many of us have experienced 95 degree heat with 85% humidity. Anyways, we were happily greeted at the airport by 3 Cambodians that our instructors have come to view as family and took two buses to “The Golden Gate Hotel” where we unpacked and got ready to explore the city. We stopped at a place called the Java Café and it was not only extremely cheap (by American standards), but to my surprise, was full of mostly American and Europeans.

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OT and PT faculty and students help make disabled children mobile

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Photo courtesy of WSMV

The Inman Health Sciences Building became a workshop and playground on Thursday as part of an international project to promote pediatric mobility. University of Delaware physical therapy professor Cole Galloway and his Pediatric Mobility Lab and Design Studio bought to Belmont Go Baby Go, a program that teaches adults how to modify existing toy cars in a few hours to make them  functional for children with disabilities.

Eight families and their therapists from Tennessee, Kentucky and Georgia worked alongside Belmont occupational therapy and physical therapy students and alumni to learn how to modify toys and the logistics of the Go Baby Go program. Together, they altered Fisher Price Lightning McQueen red cars with Velcro, PVC pipes, pool noodles and kickboards to create wheelchair-like toys. The cars also function as physical therapy devices to teach strength and balance while allowing the disabled children to socialize with other children their age. Through constraint-induced therapy, the children are motivated to use their weaker muscles to gain independence and operate the toys, which by nature are fun. Buttons were moved so that the toy car moves only when a girl with cerebral palsy holds her head up or a boy with a spinal cord injury stands.

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