Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Semester in Review by Jon George

Well I am finally moving up. I started volunteering by taking down messages left on the voice machine. I have now been able to enter prescription arrivals in the computer. Though it is still not patient interaction, I am hoping that it will slowly happen. I think one of the reasons that it will change next semester is my schedule change. I was volunteering along with other MSU nurses and pre-med volunteer students. So work may have been very limited. I will also be working more hours since all of us have all the paper work done. Next semester looks very hopeful.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

For the most part the duties at the Kitchen have been pretty steady this month. Nothing major has changed since I began this semester. I roomed patients and filled out paper work for various perscriptions and that has been the just of my day every time I go in.

My best experiences so far with the Kitchen have been the encounters with the all the people from many different walks of life. I've enjoyed working with these people and hopefully being a positive influence on them. It gives you a sense of purpose you know. The toughest experience I've had so far has been scheduling a regular time to get in to the clinic to help. I've had a lot of homework, projects and test this month since its the end of the semester, and a track meet to top it off with lots of practice so its been hard working around those things to make it in steady this month. 

I feel like our project with the Kitchen will for the most part stay the same next semester. The only things that should change is us fixing the problems of last semester. We'll have better communication between each other and the Kitchen hopefully. We will also hopefully be doing a lot of good with out alloted funds next semester. Otherwise though I think we'll continue to do what were doing, going in and providing them with as much help as we can outside of our busy schedules. Us being there to help goes a long ways with a small stressed out staff.

I've gained better people skills from this experience so far with our project, being that I must work directly with people every time I go in. That will go a long ways for me too, because I plan to become a physical therapist so I'll need to be good with people. I've used it to learn how to interact with people so that they feel comfortable. I also gained some experience living with the three other people in my group. Its helped me to learn how to work around conflict with others outside of just my family. Although my brother is one of those people I still have two others that I've never been with so its been good to develop experience living and working with others. That will help me in the future.

I really enjoyed the experience and introductions to the various stress relieving type strategies. Some were strange to me and I probably won't get involved in them in the future but aside from that still fun and I went in with an open mind and took from it what I could. I think most would agree that the message was their favorite out of all of the experiences. As far as the program on the computer goes, well I'll be honest, I didn't have much time to commit to those exercises. I tried a few times but it was very hit and miss. It more stressed me out than doing what it's supposed to do, just because it just added on to the already mountain of things I had to do every day. In the future I would probably suggest not including that or at least just making it optional so there is still that important exposure that the program was going for. Overall though the whole experience was fun and interesting and I would likely do it again. 

Over break I'm looking forward to just relaxing and enjoying time with family and friends. If you mean after break, then I'm looking forward to starting out a strong semester both academically and in the volunteer field. I hope that as a group we can start out strong having fixed our previous issues. I'm also looking forward to a very exciting season in Track. 

Paul


Friday, December 10, 2010

December update

            This past month there havent been any special events at the clinic besides normal operation. I have gotten to spend more time doing pharmacy tech work and I really like it. It's tedious but needs to be done and I am getting good at it.
             With the semester ending is a week, I can look back and say that the best experience from the clinic is being able to observe how the clinic operates as a whole between the nurses, doctors,and the front office. The most trying experience was getting ready to work at the clinic (lets face it, no one likes HIPPA)
              In the spring we will be able to hit the ground running and start back staffing at the clinic as soon as possible. We all have our classes scheduled already and that is in order.
              As a result of being in Summit, I feel that I am becoming a better communicator. With all the presentations we do, I have started to become more comfortable with it.
             Stress Free Now was a pain in the butt all semester. It was a good program, but I just don't have the time to devote to it so I get the full effect. I do however, like the tai-chi and yoga classes.
             The thing I am looking forward to winter break most for is getting to sleep. I normally am up till 3AM and I have a class at 8AM so its been tough.
Ben

An interesting day at the Clinic

Today started out just like any other day of volunteering at the clinic. I did a few charts, escorted several patients, and did my fair share of playing games on my iPod in between. Then of course I escorted a patient who, shortly after I had left the room to allow the Doctor to go in, began showing signs of a heart attack. So, what was a regular day turned into sirens, stretchers, and oxygen tanks.

Other than that instance though, everything has gone smoothly at the Kitchen Clinic. We really haven't had any official events, only busy days of escorting patients and taking the load off the staff. Even without any events or parties at the Clinic to attend, I've had a good time, the staff is friendly, the job is simple, and I think our group as a whole has been a lot of help. Being in Architecture has definitely made it a bit harder, namely because of the late nights, (or should I say mornings?) and having to get up early for volunteering in the morning (9 am is early :-P). Over all, this semester has gone very well at the clinic, with only one "scary" moment today with the heart attack.

In the coming semester, I think we'll be able to beat our record this semester of 72 hours of service, if only because we'll be starting sooner. I learned a lot this semester about the medical field, far more than I would have had I not volunteered at the kitchen, including not using a red pen on patient charts. I could also say that I've grown more accustomed to working with a wide variety of people through my volunteering experiences.

As far as our Summit Park classes go, I've enjoyed the various "stress free" activities we've been able to take part in, namely the massages (tough homework to be sure :-P). The only activity I haven't especially enjoyed are the recordings we've had to listen to daily; which I've typically downloaded as podcasts. I have found Dr. Morledge's tips and writings interesting, however, as well as useful for making decisions related to health. As far as suggesting improvements, I think the online activities could use some improvement to make them more useful to the users - maybe something other than recordings. Overall I have enjoyed the pilot Stress Free Now program.

Now that nearly all but two of my Finals are out of the way, I'm looking forward to a long winter break. Being a bit of a "homebody" I don't see myself doing anything too exciting, just enjoying the time off - and maybe watching the snow fall outside.