Public Health Major Akia Thompson Receives BlueCross BlueShield Power of We Scholarship

The organization awards minority students pursuing degrees in health care in order to “reduce health care disparities by improving workforce diversity.” This year, the organization decided to double the number of recipients from 3 to 6, Thompson being one of them.

Thompson first developed her goals for post-graduation through an internship at Meharry Medical College in Nashville. “Shadowing health professionals in multiple roles was so educational, and now I’m pursuing a career as a family nurse practitioner,” she said. “I like that I’ll get to spend time with patients, get to know them and deliver hands-on, holistic care.”

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Dr. Laura Gray shares about her recent research project

Dr. Laura Gray, Assistant Professor of Nursing, answers questions about her recent research project.

What is your research topic? Why did you choose it?
Sleep in children with ADHD and their families.

What are some of your most interesting results?
Parent ADHD symptoms can impact children’s sleep hygiene and some objectively measured sleep parameters such as sleep onset latency (time it takes the child to fall asleep) and wake after sleep onset (waking up during the night).

What is the importance/application of your research?
Since about half of children who are diagnosed with ADHD will have a parent with ADHD, it is important for clinicians to recognize the shared behaviors and how they impact child sleep. This may point to a need for specifically tailored sleep education with structured schedules, sticker charts, checklists and other concrete supports.

Where have you presented your research?
Presented at the Southern Nursing Research Society meetings. Published in Pediatric Nursing. I am working with researchers at Vanderbilt to expand sleep education to families of typically developing children.

MSOT Alumna Presents at Tennessee Occupational Therapy Association Conference

Joy’s workshop was titled Strategies for OT Practitioners to Elevate Cultural Humility & Cultural Responsiveness.

Dr. Sells shares about his faculty research project

Dr. Pat Sells, professor of physical therapy, answers questions about his recent research project.

What is your research topic? Why did you choose it?
Blood Flow Restriction (BFR). Muscle mass and aerobic capacity may increase with BFR training, and this suggests that reduced exercise intensity may achieve gains similar to more intense exercise.

What are some of your most interesting results?
BFR compared to non-BFR in patient’s treadmill walking at 3 miles per hour creates a physiological response similar to exercising at much higher intensity, e.g., 6 miles per hour.

What is the importance/application of your research?
BFR could allow improvements at much lower, safer levels of activity. This could mean better outcomes for elderly, cardiac and pulmonary patients, or among any patients who could benefit from increased functional capacity.

Where have you presented your research?
American College of Sports Medicine and the research symposium for the School of Physical Therapy.

Blash Invited to Publish Primer on Pharmacy Informatics

The article, entitled Pharmacy Informatics and Its Cross-Functional Role in Healthcare, was written to help others understand the role of Pharmacy Informatics in organizational success. This article and other informative publications on Healthcare Informatics may be found in the HIMSS Resource Center, where visitors are invited to “get actionable insights into health information and technology topics” from subject matter experts.