Central New York AHEC Activities for Summer 2016

Every year Central New York AHEC holds summer programs and camps for students of all ages. Check out what is happening this summer!

Health Quest at Ithaca College July 11-15

High school students entering 10th, 11th and 12th grades get the chance to experience college dorm and campus living at this 5-day overnight camp at Ithaca College focused on allied health careers. Students will specifically learn about careers in physical therapy, speech language pathology, occupational therapy, and more! Health Quest chaperones and professionals will work with students to share their knowledge, skills, and advice in their studies and work in health care. Please click here to apply online or for more information.

MedQuest at SUNY Upstate Medical University June-July 2016

High school students, grades 10 through 12, and college freshman interested in pursuing careers in health care can apply to attend one of the Summer Camp Awareness Days. MedQuest is only available to New York State Residents. Unfortunately, the deadline has passed for this summer’s MedQuest; however, dates and topics are listed below.

June 28, 2016 – Nursing and Respiratory Care (9:00 am to 4:00 pm)

July 12, 2016 – Physician Assistant and Medicine (9:00 am to 4:00 pm)

July 13, 2016 – Biomedical Research, Medical Technology & Medical Biotechnology (9:00 am to 4:00 pm)

July 19, 2016 – Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy (9:00 am to 4:00 pm)

July 20, 2016 – Medical Imaging Sciences and Radiation Therapy (1:00 pm to 7:00 pm) – Will include X-ray, CT, MRI, Ultrasound and Radiation Therapy

For more information about SUNY Upstate Medical University’s MedQuest, please click here.

Medical Academy of Science and Health (M.A.S.H.) Camp June-August 2016

Students entering 8th and 9th grade this upcoming fall can participate in CNYAHECs summer M.A.S.H Camp programs. This two to three-day experience teaches students about careers in healthcare, exposes them to a variety of job opportunities, and their required on-the-job training or advanced college degrees needed for these careers. M.A.S.H. camps are designed to show students that there is a career for everyone in healthcare through workshops focusing on various topics specific to each healthcare facility. Workshops cover careers in physical therapy, nursing, surgery, food service, clinical laboratory sciences, cardiac care, speech language pathology, diagnostic imaging, recreational therapy, pharmacy, emergency medicine, and many more! This summer’s M.A.S.H. camps schedules are listed below. Find one near you and apply!

2016 Schedule

June 23 & 24…………..Auburn Community Hospital

June 28 & 29…………..Cayuga Medical Center

July 21 & 22…………….Lourdes Hospital

July 25 & 26……………Arnot Ogden Medical Center

July 27 & 28……………Cortland Regional Medical Center

August 3 & 4……………Oswego Hospital

August 3, 4 & 5………..Rome Memorial Hospital

August 17 & 18…………Community Memorial Hospital

For more information about M.A.S.H. camps or to apply, please click here.

MedLab Job Shadowing through Bassett Healthcare Network

High school and college students interested in pursuing careers in healthcare, particularly medical laboratory science, who enjoy solving puzzles, hands-on activities, and learning about new technological advances are encouraged to apply to MedLab Job Shadowing. CNYAHEC has partnered with Bassett Healthcare Network to give students the unique opportunity to spend a total of 15 hours shadowing professionals in medical laboratories. This program is flexible and can accommodate most students’ busy schedules. MedLab Job Shadowing offers ongoing open enrollment and job shadowing experiences in Cobleskill, Cooperstown, Delhi, Herkimer, Little Falls, Oneota, and Sidney.

To enroll, or for more information, please visit our MedLab Job Shadowing section of HWapps.

Healthcare opportunities are always available at MyHealthCareer.

For other opportunities offered through Central New York AHEC or more information about CNYAHEC, please visit their website.

Northern AHEC Summer Programs

The Northern Area Health Education Center (NAHEC), located in upstate New York, continues to help pre-health undergraduates explore health careers in rural communities.

The week of August 15th will mark the third annual Rural Healthcare Immersion Program with Wells College and River Hospital of Alexandria Bay. Rural areas tend to lack widespread and accessible healthcare services in comparison to suburban and urban areas. This program promotes the local community to future healthcare providers; more specifically, the Thousand Islands region. Through Rural Healthcare Immersion, students can see the benefits and challenges of providing healthcare in a rural environment. Students will shadow a variety of professionals at the hospital and experience life and events held in the community and surrounding areas. So far, the program has been highly accredited and extremely successful in influencing undergraduate students to continue studying medicine with the intent to bring their services to rural areas like the Thousand Islands region.

Not only does NAHEC provide opportunities for undergraduate and high school students, they also reach out to a younger population of future health care providers. This year’s Camp Med program is scheduled for July 18th at Alice Hyde Medical Center in Malone, NY. This program is geared toward upcoming Northern Borders P-Tech students (see below) who are currently in middle school. Through this program, students will experience a variety of healthcare careers and participate in hands-on experiments and real life situations alongside healthcare professionals. Camp Med works cohesively with other AHEC programs aimed to immerse students into healthcare and explore future options.

As always, NAHEC continues to support the development of the Northern Borders Pathways in Technology Early College High School Partnerships, also known as P-TECH. This New York State-funded program allows students the opportunity to earn a high school diploma, associates degree, and technical training over six-year span. The program is for students who are interested in pursuing health-related careers or health-related technological careers while preparing them for college throughout their high school career. This program serves as an effective way to continue to bring healthcare services back into rural areas.

For more information about Camp Med, Rural Healthcare Immersion Programs, or Northern Borders Academy P-TECH, please contact Tammy Hill at 315-379-7701 or thill@nahecnet.org.

Central New York AHEC Activities for Summer 2016

Every year Central New York AHEC holds summer programs and camps for students of all ages. Check out what is happening this summer!

Health Quest at Ithaca College July 11-15

High school students entering 10th, 11th and 12th grades get the chance to experience college dorm and campus living at this 5-day overnight camp at Ithaca College focused on allied health careers. Students will specifically learn about careers in physical therapy, speech language pathology, occupational therapy, and more! Health Quest chaperones and professionals will work with students to share their knowledge, skills, and advice in their studies and work in health care. Please click here to apply online or for more information.

MedQuest at SUNY Upstate Medical University June-July 2016

High school students, grades 10 through 12, and college freshman interested in pursuing careers in health care can apply to attend one of the Summer Camp Awareness Days. MedQuest is only available to New York State Residents. Unfortunately, the deadline has passed for this summer’s MedQuest; however, dates and topics are listed below.

June 28, 2016 – Nursing and Respiratory Care (9:00 am to 4:00 pm)

July 12, 2016 – Physician Assistant and Medicine (9:00 am to 4:00 pm)

July 13, 2016 – Biomedical Research, Medical Technology & Medical Biotechnology (9:00 am to 4:00 pm)

July 19, 2016 – Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy (9:00 am to 4:00 pm)

July 20, 2016 – Medical Imaging Sciences and Radiation Therapy (1:00 pm to 7:00 pm) – Will include X-ray, CT, MRI, Ultrasound and Radiation Therapy

For more information about SUNY Upstate Medical University’s MedQuest, please click here.

Medical Academy of Science and Health (M.A.S.H.) Camp June-August 2016

Students entering 8th and 9th grade this upcoming fall can participate in CNYAHECs summer M.A.S.H Camp programs. This two to three-day experience teaches students about careers in healthcare, exposes them to a variety of job opportunities, and their required on-the-job training or advanced college degrees needed for these careers. M.A.S.H. camps are designed to show students that there is a career for everyone in healthcare through workshops focusing on various topics specific to each healthcare facility. Workshops cover careers in physical therapy, nursing, surgery, food service, clinical laboratory sciences, cardiac care, speech language pathology, diagnostic imaging, recreational therapy, pharmacy, emergency medicine, and many more! This summer’s M.A.S.H. camps schedules are listed below. Find one near you and apply!

2016 Schedule

June 23 & 24…………..Auburn Community Hospital

June 28 & 29…………..Cayuga Medical Center

July 21 & 22…………….Lourdes Hospital

July 25 & 26……………Arnot Ogden Medical Center

July 27 & 28……………Cortland Regional Medical Center

August 3 & 4……………Oswego Hospital

August 3, 4 & 5………..Rome Memorial Hospital

August 17 & 18…………Community Memorial Hospital

For more information about M.A.S.H. camps or to apply, please click here.

MedLab Job Shadowing through Bassett Healthcare Network

High school and college students interested in pursuing careers in healthcare, particularly medical laboratory science, who enjoy solving puzzles, hands-on activities, and learning about new technological advances are encouraged to apply to MedLab Job Shadowing. CNYAHEC has partnered with Bassett Healthcare Network to give students the unique opportunity to spend a total of 15 hours shadowing professionals in medical laboratories. This program is flexible and can accommodate most students’ busy schedules. MedLab Job Shadowing offers ongoing open enrollment and job shadowing experiences in Cobleskill, Cooperstown, Delhi, Herkimer, Little Falls, Oneota, and Sidney.

To enroll, or for more information, please visit our MedLab Job Shadowing section of HWapps.

Healthcare opportunities are always available at MyHealthCareer.

For other opportunities offered through Central New York AHEC or more information about CNYAHEC, please visit their website.

Nursing Summit 2015: The Role of the Nurse in Shaping the Future of Healthcare

You are invited to the Catskill Hudson Area Health Education Center’s Nursing Summit 2015!

Date: October 22, 2015

Time: 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Location: The Henry A. Wallace Center of the FDR Library, 4079 Albany Post Road, Hyde Park, NY

Registration: Contact Kathy Doyle at KDoyle@chahec.org or call (845) 883-7260

Summary:

The Delivery System Reform Incentive Project (DSRIP) is the main mechanism by which New York State will implement changes to the delivery of healthcare. A major goal of this Medicaid reform project is in decreasing preventable hospitalizations by 25% over time as well as reducing Medicaid spending through various mechanisms. To achieve healthcare reform of this magnitude, institutions have developed and implemented strategies toward achieving the “Triple Aim.” These strategies are geared toward improving overall health in a defined patient population; improving the patient care experience and outcomes (e.g. quality, access, reliability, etc.); and decreasing or containing the cost of per capita care.

The purpose of this program is to provide an educational forum to discuss various changes in healthcare delivery as a result of DSRIP toward achieving the Triple Aim; emerging roles in nursing leadership and practice, new technologies to enhance healthcare delivery; and the importance of continued nursing involvement toward the improvement of healthcare and patient care outcomes.

The intended audience for this program are nurses in leadership, education and practice, nursing students, and other healthcare professionals interested in topics related to the progression of the Triple Aim on healthcare delivery and the implications this will have on the nursing profession.

Co-sponsorship provided by Sigma Theta Tau International, Omicron Sigma Chapter. This activity has been submitted to PA State Nurses Association for approval to award contact hours. PA State Nurses Association is accredited as an approver of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation. This activity has been submitted for 5.25 contact hours. For more information about contact hours, please contact Roxanna Raffa at 845-883-7260 or rraffa@chahec.org

 

Reflections from Rural Health Immersion

While sitting across from four New Visions students in the conference room of Oswego Hospital, I felt nervous. These students were about to graduate and embark on a long journey to bushwhack their own path through life; I realized I was still in the thicket of my own. They looked so put together and had firm, confident handshakes. I was embarrassed to admit that I didn’t participate in the New Visions program at my own high school because I had always assumed that I would get a job, not a college degree. As questions were posed to me, about how to best prepare for a career in healthcare, I could only muster a single message: believe in yourself. It was that night, after having dinner with the CEO of the hospital and other accomplished professionals involved with the Rural Immersion Week in Oswego that I realized I also needed to heed the words of my own advice before entering my second year of medical school.

I remember the first time I was given permission to believe that I could be a doctor. It was by the man who gave me my first immunizations as a baby, and managed my grandmother’s diabetes, and convinced my father to get a colonoscopy at age fifty despite his adamant protests and red cheeks that declared this country boy’s utter embarrassment at such a prospect. I was nineteen and had already bounced around to multiple colleges while working full or part time jobs as a waitress or cook, changing directions and majors more times than there are bones in the body. I asked to shadow my family doctor out of raw curiosity; but after a day of witnessing him care for the members of my community, some of whom were perplexed to encounter me working with him at his office, he told me without hesitation that I could be a doctor too, and in fact “Lord willing and the creek don’t rise,” I might even be good at it.

By that point I was attending a large university that is considered to be elite by many, and often considered unobtainable to those I grew up with in a small town and farming community in Central New York. I chose it because of its agricultural programs only to realize many of the students in my basic science classes considered agriculture as a pauper’s game and instead identified themselves as “pre-med,” a nearly foreign word to my ears. Many of these students seemed so self-assured, as if they were simply living out a preordained plan to attend the best kindergartens, the best middle and high schools, the best colleges, and the best medical schools. They were years ahead of me in preparing for the application process; it felt as if I was already too late and ill equipped to assimilate into this competitive profession. What right did I have, after all, to compete for a seat in medical school when theirs had been claimed since birth?

If not for a country doctor who grew up not far from where I did, and a distant twinkle of hope that rural medicine would still be viable by the time I was able to practice, I would not be attending SUNY Upstate today. I wanted those four New Visions students to feel the way I felt when my doctor told me I could do it; I needed to tell them they had permission to leave their small towns, and deserved to achieve their dreams, whatever they may be and wherever they may lead, because who knows if they have heard it before or would hear it again.

During my first year of medical school I faced many of the same insecurities about my cultural background and socioeconomic status as I did in college but with deeper penetrance. I grew up on a farm and felt privileged to have educated parents who held passionate debates about science, literature, and philosophy at the dinner table. My parents transitioned out of dairy farming and started their own business when I was very young. The business began with one desk in a converted milking room and struggled financially throughout my adolescence before reaching marked success and stability.

We still cut hay, manage a small orchard, and care for thirty chickens—I was called home before one of my exams this year to correct a hen’s vent prolapse, or kill and bury her if I couldn’t. It was my natural inclination to compare myself to other medical students, whose parents were doctors, lawyers, and formal professionals. I internalized that they deserved to be here, while I certainly did not. When I told my colleagues at medical school I wanted to be a country doctor, some would even laugh, and so I stopped saying it out loud. It wasn’t until the Rural Immersion Week in Oswego that I met outstanding physicians and medical students with similar ideals and sensibilities. I was reminded of the reason I came to medical school in the first place—to live and work in a small underserved community, to tear down the walls formalized medical training teaches us to build around our profession, to be, Lord willing and the creek don’t rise, a damned good country doctor.