Erie Times-News | GoErie.com |
Friday, May 3, 2019
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Celebrate National Nurses Week M AY 6 - M AY 1 2
It’s time to honor the nurses in our lives during a week that ends on May 12, Florence Nightingale’s birthday. The national weeklong celebration recognizes America’s 4 million registered nurses. In Erie, we salute local and regional nurses with stories about their careers. Most of the articles were written by nurses. #Thankanurse today.
Gannon students support anti-vaping By Brianna Rice Gannon University
includes a three-bedroom townhouse with fencedin backyard, utilities, internet and laundry. The program also includes supportive mentoring and classes in parenting and budgeting. “So many single mothers can’t continue to be successful,” said Butcher, who’s originally from Spartanburg. “Here they’re allowing us to grow. It’s giving me an opportunity to be a better mother. I’m more relaxed. Happier.” Jennifer White felt the desire to improve and provide the best for her son. But even with the help of family, she wasn’t able to work full time and care for her son. “I’m smart,” said White, 34, who had started school at the North East campus five years ago but had to withdraw. “It was frustrating to not be able to do more and be stuck.” Now she feels safe, supported and successful. “It’s important that a mother remember how important she is as a
A 20th-century American with a cigarette in hand was once seen as the example of sophistication and social maturity. It wasn’t until the mid-1960s that tobacco use faced a sharp decline as the general population began to understand the adverse effects it had on health. When Gannon University Villa Maria School of Nursing faculty discovered that e-cigarettes— products that contain nicotine and other harmful agents— had increased in usage by an astonishing 900 percent among high school students since 2015, they knew the irony was too heavy to ignore. Operating under the premise that all nurses are leaders and educators within society, assistant professors Carol Amann and Melissa Lund have taken the initiative to educate Erie’s youth about the adverse effects of vaping and lobby for legislation that restricts the marketing of the products. The effort has involved 24 nursing students. The anti-vaping education project is supported by the Andrea R. Lindell, Ph.D. ‘70VMC VMSON Social Change Impact Endowed Fund and is an effort to encourage students and faculty of the VMSON to engage in activities that impact social change or initiatives that will significantly impact health care in local or global societies. “Through this experience, we are educating our students on the process of how to reach a broad audience, develop a cause to fight for, improve the health of the community they live in and develop the underlying political expertise,” said Amann. Under the guidance of Lund, the educational component delivered by senior nursing students was initiated at Erie’s Wilson Middle school and East Middle School and included PowerPoint presentations and
See MOTHERS, N2
See STUDENTS, N2
NEW PROGRAM HELPS
single mothers
By Jennifer Smith Mercyhurst University
W
hat is mercy? It is compassion, something performed out of a desire to relieve suffering. It is nursing. In this region, some of the first nurses were Sisters of Mercy, members of a Roman Catholic religious order that was founded in Ireland and expanded to Pittsburgh in 1843, Titusville in 1870 and Erie in 1917. Their acts of mercy live on through hundreds of organizations and a unique new program at Mercyhurst North East that provides housing and residential support to single mothers at or near the poverty level to empower their educational achievement and personal growth. This is the first year for the Women with Children program, and while participants may choose any academic program, each of the four single mothers is pursuing a career in nursing.
TOP: Nursing students, from left, Jasmine Butcher, Daijah Campbell, Quanshay Carroll and Jennifer White have found mercy and support in their journey to become nurses through the Women with Children program at Mercyhurst North East. [CONTRIBUTED PHOTO]
ABOVE: Quanshay Carroll takes a break from her practical nursing studies to play with her daughter Delaysia, 4. [CONTRIBUTED PHOTO]
Jasmine Butcher earned her practical nursing degree on a Friday and moved into Mercyhurst North East the next week to begin the LPN to RN bridge program. The opportunity couldn’t have come at a better time, said Butcher, 22, whose daughter Noella
is 2. Before there was stress— from working, going to school, caring for her daughter, and struggling to find the money to pay for gas and a car that had just died. Now everything she needs is on campus. Participants pay tuition, but housing is free. That
Scholarship helps UPMC Hamot nurse earn degree By UPMC Hamot staff
They say timing is everything. UPMC Hamot nurse Melissa Altadonna can attest to that when it comes to her journey to becoming a nurse. “I’ve always wanted to be a nurse,” Altadonna, 47, said. “In my high school yearbook, that was my ‘dream.’ Each time I tried to pursue an
education something happened … life happened.” A family Altadonna member became ill. Her children needed her at home, and she wanted to spend time with them and enjoy them. In 2017, 30 years later, she enrolled in
Mercyhurst North East’s nursing program and will receive her associate degree this month. She’s already been hired by UPMC Hamot’s Medical-Respiratory Intensive Care Unit. Altadonna has worked at UPMC Hamot for 10 years as a patient care technician. She has been a certified nursing assistant for 30 years and worked
with patients at Western Reserve, Sarah Reed and St. Mary’s Home of Erie. Everything finally fell into place nearly two years ago when she decided to make her high-school dream come true. Family and friends pitched in to make her already full load a little lighter. One of her best friends and biggest supporters,
Ann Duda, who is also a nurse at UPMC Hamot, even threw her a surprise “congrats-you’re-goingback-to-school” party. “Missy goes to school full-time, works full-time, has two teenage children; I’d say that’s a full plate,” said Boo Hagerty, president, Hamot Health See DEGREE, N2