The 2023 Rachel Kay Stevens Therapy Center Art Show and Sale HONOR THE MEMORY, CONTINUE THE LEGACY
August 25–27
The 7th-annual Rachel Kay Stevens Therapy Center Art Show and Auction will take place online August 25-27. The event benefits the student-run, pediatric, pro-bono occupational therapy clinic at UTHSC that serves the uninsured and underinsured in the Mid-South. Named for Rachel Kay Stevens, a student who died shortly after beginning her OT program at UTHSC, the art show honors her memory and her passion for pediatric occupational therapy and the arts.
Bid on pieces of art created and donated by children who receive OT services, as well as by local artists, and others. Check out the art and place your bids through the RKSTC Art Show and Auction website.
YOUR WALLS WILL THANK YOU!
For more information, visit www.32auctions.com/rkstc2023.
UTHSC Chancellor
Peter F. Buckley, MD
Dean, College of Health Professions
Stephen E. Alway, PhD, FACSM
Senior Associate Dean Research and Graduate Studies
James A. Carson, PhD, FACSM
Executive Associate Dean for Academic, Faculty, and Student Affairs
Neale R. Chumbler, PhD
Assistant Dean, Finance and Administration
Chermale Casem, MBA, PHR
Assistant Dean, Faculty Affairs
Patrick N. Plyler, PhD
Chair, Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology
Ashley Harkrider, PhD
Chair, Department of Diagnostic and Health Sciences
Neale R. Chumbler, PhD
Chair, Department of Occupational Therapy
Anne H. Zachry, PhD, OTR/L
Chair, Department of Physical Therapy
R. Barry Dale, DPT, PhD, OCS, SCS, MBA, ATC, CSCS
Vice Chancellor for Advancement
Brigitte Grant
Associate Vice Chancellor for Development and Planned Giving
Bethany Goolsby, JD
Senior Director, Advancement Services & Annual Giving
Cherisa Lewis
Assistant Vice Chancellor for Alumni and Constituent Engagement
Chandra Tuggle
Associate Director of Development, College of Health Professions
Ariel O’Brien
Director of Alumni Programs
Bettye Durham
Assistant Director of Alumni Programs
Blair Duke
A New Path Pathologists’ Assistant Program Trains First Cohort
< A New Home Rachel Kay Stevens Therapy Center has new space
Vice Chancellor for Communications and Marketing
Sally Badoud, MBA
Editor
Chris Green
Contributing Writers
Peggy Reisser
Janay Jeans
Chris Green
Designer
Adam Gaines
Photographer
Caleb Jia
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Making a Difference
PT Alumna Grateful for Lifetime of Caring
< Volunteering to Help PT Students Assist at Clinica Esperanza
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Eligibility and other terms and conditions of employment benefits at The University of Tennessee are governed by laws and regulations of the State of Tennessee, and this non-discrimination statement is intended to be consistent with those laws and regulations.
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From the Dean
This past year has been a banner year in many ways for the College of Health Professions. We are privileged every day to work with outstanding students who have come to train with our outstanding faculty, who are supported by our outstanding staff. However, our success is built on the backs of those who came before us and the alumni who continue to give back to our college, so that our college can train the next generation of health providers who are clinicians, educators, and scientists.
Our graduates have continued to achieve excellent first-time pass rates for licensure (from 93%-100%), and we are proud of each of our graduates and our alumni.
We were excited to launch in January our brand-new Pathologists’ Assistant Program in the Department of Diagnostic and Health Sciences. Under the direction of Michael Weitzel, this is one of only 12 such programs in the country.
Our college has made great strides in research funding, and for the first time, our college faculty have obtained more than $2.1 million in research grants and contracts. Some of our faculty have obtained national awards for their research efforts.
We opened after-hours study space for our students in the 930 Madison Building on the Memphis campus. Additionally, we have obtained new teaching space that is being renovated in the General Education Building for Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, and Medical Laboratory Sciences programs. We expect that these programs will be moving into their new space before summer.
The Occupational Therapy Rachel Kay Stevens Clinic has obtained new expanded space in the 920 Madison Building. Finally, part of the faculty and staff in the Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology have moved into beautifully renovated Phase 1 space in the UT Conference Center building on the campus of UT Knoxville. Phase 2 is being planned with renovations on the first floor of this building to hopefully begin later this year. This will finish the new office, clinic, and classroom space and allow the remainder of the faculty and staff for the Audiology and Speech and Language Pathology programs to join their colleagues in this building.
In November, we celebrated our 50th year as a college. The Medical Laboratory Sciences program also celebrated its 100th year of instruction. At our anniversary event, we were honored to recognize some of our outstanding alumni who have contributed so much to their professions and communities. We will be making our Alumni Awards an annual event, with the next planned for November 10.
In February 2022, we welcomed our new chancellor, Peter Buckley, MD, to UTHSC. Dr. Buckley will be leading us into the next chapter in our outstanding institution.
We have accomplished much and are proud of our accomplishments and want to share those celebrations with you. However, there is much more work to do. We appreciate and value your support, as we work together to continue our strides forward. The College of Health Professions will continue to strive to recruit and train a wider and more diverse workforce of health care leaders, clinicians, and researchers, who are representative of our state’s population and who will allow us to better impact our communities, our state, and our world.
Be healthy and stay safe!
Stephen E. Alway, PhD, FACSM Dean of the College of Health ProfessionsFrom the Chancellor
The new Pathologists’ Assistant Program that launched in January is an excellent example of how the College of Health Professions and the University of Tennessee Health Science Center are meeting the health care needs of the citizens of Tennessee. One of a handful of such programs in the country, it will train professionals to assist pathologists to make diagnoses on everything from laboratory specimens from cancer surgery to post-mortem examinations. The graduates will increase the ranks of health care professionals and help fill gaps in health care across Tennessee.
I am proud to tell you that with all six colleges, UTHSC is working to improve health care in Tennessee by training the highest-quality professionals, meeting current needs, and addressing unmet needs.
This is our legacy. This is our daily duty. This is our commitment to the future. For more than half a century, the College of Health Professions has done an outstanding job filling the ranks of health providers in varied professions from occupational therapy to physical therapy, to audiology and speech pathology, to laboratory and diagnostic health sciences. Our graduates take what they learned at UTHSC and use it to improve lives from one end of the state to the other.
In my time at UTHSC, I have been so impressed by our alumni, who are always ready to give of their time, talent, and funds to support those who come behind them. That speaks volumes for the education they received at UTHSC and the regard to which they hold their alma mater. It also speaks to their dedication to a brighter tomorrow instilled in them during their time at UTHSC.
As chancellor of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, I want to thank you for all you do for your university and for the wider world. We are grateful for the part you play in ensuring that our students and trainees are ready to face their future.
Sincerely,
Peter Buckley, MD Chancellor The University of Tennessee Heath Science CenterBY THE NUMBERS
Bright New Future for Rachel Kay Stevens Therapy Center
By Peggy ReisserThe Rachel Kay Stevens Therapy Center (RKSTC) at UTHSC has a new home in which to continue the caring legacy of its namesake.
The clinic is named for Rachel Kay Stevens, an OT student who died shortly after beginning her training in the College of Health Professions. She dreamed of working with children to help them live better lives. The pro-bono, pediatric occupational therapy clinic is staffed by OT students with faculty supervision and provides occupational therapy services at no cost to children of families that are uninsured or underinsured.
The clinic opened at UTHSC in 2016 in the old Boling Center, which also formerly housed the UTHSC Center on Developmental Disabilities. That building has since been demolished.
The RKSTC recently moved into more spacious quarters on the 5th floor of the 920 Madison Building on the Memphis campus. It shares the space with the Center on Developmental Disabilities, which has two observation and testing rooms in the suite. The main offices for the Center on Developmental Disabilities are located on the 9th floor of the 920 Madison Building.
The new RKSTC space includes a large observation room, where two students can be giving therapy, while supervised by a licensed OT therapist. There is adjoining space for 12 students to observe from behind a large window.
In setting up the clinic initially, OT students, many of them Rachel’s friends and classmates, painted and decorated the walls. A centerpiece of the décor in the old location was a large tree painted on one wall. Handprints of Rachel’s classmates formed the leaves on the tree.
For the new space, the students copied the tree and used a projector to show it on one wall so the old image could be authentically reproduced. That tree of love and friendship is now the focal point of the clinic, decorating one of its primary walls. New students also added their handprints.
Rachel’s parents, Randy and Katrina Stevens of Batesville, Arkansas, sent her signature, which was also projected on
the wall and copied. Additional artwork from the original space was copied and painted on the walls of the new space.
Near the friendship tree, a photo of Rachel Kay is displayed on a commemorative plaque that hung in the original clinic, and now, the new one. The walls of the new space are also adorned with brightly colored artwork from the show and sale held annually to raise money for the clinic. Purchasers have bought the art, done by students receiving OT treatment, and have donated it back to the clinic.
The clinic is in operation on the first and third Tuesday of every month from 3 to 6 p.m. In addition to working with children on fine motor skills and behavioral issues, the center provides education for families and teachers on how to help children with special needs.
Through this work, the center offers OT students realworld experience and educational opportunities they otherwise would not have.
“I am just excited to be able to carry on Rachel’s dream for pediatric OT therapy in this new space,” said Anne Zachry, PhD/OTR/L, chair of the Department of Occupational Therapy. “I am thankful for UTHSC being interested in the clinic and providing the space.” She said recently retired Executive Vice Chancellor Ken Brown was very supportive of the clinic and worked to secure the new space.
The RKSTC recently received a $25,000 commitment to help with its operation. The center also received a $25,000 grant from the Urban Child Institute to do outreach and training in underserved schools in the Memphis community.
Since it opened, the RKSTC has cared for 501 pediatric patients. Additionally, 317 OT students have been trained, 488 teachers have been trained, and 240 parents have been served for a total of 1,546 individuals reached by the center.
Speech-Language Pathology Student Extends Family Legacy into Third Generation
By Chris GreenFor Izzy Freeman, taking care of people comes naturally. Her love for helping others is one thing that drew her to a career in speech-language pathology, but her family history in the field provided the initial inspiration.
“Being surrounded by the profession my whole life was definitely a contributing factor,” she says.
Izzy, from Hendersonville, Tennessee, is on her way to becoming a third-generation speech-language pathologist (SLP), with her mother, grandmother, and grandfather preceding her in the profession. She describes her grandmother, Wanda Freeman, as the instigator. Gran, as Izzy calls her, received a degree in SLP in the 1950s and worked in the school setting for 30 years and in home health for another 20 years.
Izzy’s grandfather, Bill Freeman, received a master’s degree in speech pathology from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, in 1959. He went on to work as a speech professor at Cumberland College in Kentucky. “He was made for that job,” Izzy says. “If anyone loved to talk, it was Gramps.”
According to Izzy, her grandparents saw a knack for speech pathology in their daughter-in-law, Izzy’s mother, Robbi Freeman. After receiving an undergraduate degree in education, Robbi’s mother-in-law took her to the UT Hearing and Speech Center to enroll in the SLP program. She studied under Bernard Silverstein, PhD, founding director of the center, and Harold Luper, PhD, who followed Dr. Silverstein as director and headed the Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology for decades.
“Dr. Silverstein and Dr. Luper are SLP icons who taught me everything I know about articulation and stuttering to this day,” Robbi says. “We studied in every area of the clinic, and our professors, who wrote the textbooks, were there with open doors to educate, motivate, and challenge us to be the best in our profession. I was completely humbled by the experience and pray I have made them proud.”
Robbi started her career in home health and in the nursing home setting but has worked in schools since 1999, specializing in the preschool population. Watching her daughter continue her family’s legacy as an SLP makes her “extremely ecstatic.”
“It gives me much joy to see my girl follow the footsteps of her grandmother and myself into a profession that challenges you intellectually and allows you to touch the lives of others,” Robbi says.
The glimpses into the profession Izzy received throughout her childhood solidified her plans for her future. In addition to seeing her mother and grandparents work in the field, she was also inspired to pursue a health care career by her father’s work as a home-health physical therapist. Her high school senior project involving an SLP specializing in reading and cognitive intervention, along with her family’s own health experiences, provided additional inspiration.
“I think it became more apparent that this was what I wanted to do when my grandparents got older, and we started to take care of them. It was something that came naturally and comfortably for me,” Izzy says. “Generally, I love helping people and I felt this profession would help me pursue that.”
Izzy is now in her final months in the UTHSC MS-SLP program and has made some fond memories. “My clinical placement with Angie Orr was one of my favorites,” she says. “Each week we went to a rehabilitation center and led ‘Bingo-cise’ for the residents, where we would call out the Bingo numbers along with adaptive exercises. They loved when we came, and I thought it was such a fun and exciting approach to connect with the population.”
After she graduates in August, Izzy plans on returning to the area where she grew up and working with adults in an inpatient/outpatient setting. “I have always connected well with older adults and love listening to their stories,” she says. “I want to work with stroke patients or patients with progressive diseases because I have loved my experiences working with adults using compensatory speech strategies or augmentative and alternative communication devices to support their communication and participation in their world.”
As she prepares for her career, Izzy is thankful for the opportunity to not only make a difference in people’s lives, but to also make her family proud. “I am so proud of the work Izzy has put forth to become the next SLP in our family,” Robbi says, “and I cannot wait to watch her grow in a field that constantly provides others hope.”
“It gives me much joy to see my girl follow the footsteps of her grandmother and myself into a profession that challenges you intellectually and allows you to touch the lives of others.”
- Robbi Freeman Speech Pathologist and ASP student’s mother
Pathologists’ Assistant Program Provides New Path for CoHP Students
By Chris GreenIn January, the College of Health Professions at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center began offering one of 12 master’s degree programs for pathologists’ assistants in the country. It was a yearslong effort for the college, and it came at the perfect time for student Jasmine Becton, a Memphis native.
“There were no programs nearby, and I didn’t want to move because it wasn’t cost-efficient,” Becton said. “I found out a pathologists’ assistant program was starting here, and I was like, ‘as soon as the application goes up, I’m applying.’”
The program’s mission is to train highly skilled, entrylevel pathologists’ assistants who are prepared to assume positions in the gross room and autopsy suite, including laboratory management, research, and education. The college worked diligently to develop the program, beginning in 2018 and receiving final approval from Tennessee Higher Education Commission (THEC) in July 2022.
The program aims to prepare students like Becton for the American Society of Clinical Pathology (ASCP) board of certification exam and awards them with a degree of Master of Health Science (MHS) in Pathologists’ Assistant. After completing her bachelor’s degree in biology from Mississippi University for Women and receiving her Medical Laboratory Science certification from North Mississippi Medical Center, Becton began working in a lab at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital and developed an interest in anatomical science. “Currently, I work on the clinical pathology side, but I got to shadow an autopsy and I was hooked,” Becton said.
Becoming a pathologists’ assistant, Becton said, would allow her to pursue both her lifelong interest in science and her newfound appreciation for interacting directly with the parts of the human body. “I’m used to seeing different lab results, and that’s it. Actually being able to touch the organs,
look at them grossly, and dissect them is very interesting to me,” she said.
The more Becton learns about being a pathologists’ assistant, the more she seems to like it. One thing she enjoys is that every day is different, she said. “You might get the same type of specimens, but every case and patient are different. It’s like a box of chocolates – you never know what you’re going to get.”
She also appreciates the difference she will be able to make through her future career. “Most people think you have to have patient contact to have an impact on patients and their care, but you don’t,” she said. “Pathologists’ assistants perform autopsies that give families the closure they need about their loved ones. They perform duties such as grossing, which is vital in cancer diagnosis and treatment. The many duties that PAs perform allow the pathologist to focus on other duties, which speeds up the time it takes for a patient to receive a diagnosis and start treatment.”
Since joining the College of Health Professions’ inaugural pathologists’ assistant class, Becton has nothing but positive reviews. Not only are the classes meeting the standard, but Becton said the professors are going beyond her expectations to provide her and her classmates with the best education possible.
“It’s very rigorous and time-consuming, but I love it,” she said. “Professor Michael Weitzeil, the program director, and Professor Samantha Etters, the clinical director, are wonderful. They’re very encouraging and they’re great teachers. They explain things in a way that we get, and even if we don’t get it on the first try, they’ve given us their contact information, so we can contact them with any questions we’re struggling with. They just have open arms.”
The Department of Diagnostic Health and Sciences in the College of Health Professions hired Weitzeil in 2021 to help develop the program and guide it through the THEC approval process. Before joining UTHSC, he spent six years as the clinical coordinator in the pathologists’ assistant program at Loma Linda University in California. There he taught courses, worked clinically, and assisted the program through its National Accreditation Agency for Clinical Laboratory Sciences (NAACLS) accreditation, something UTHSC’s pathologists’ assistant program is currently seeking.
As an instructor, Weitzeil aims to engage and sharpen his students’ critical thinking skills to help them apply what they learn in the classroom to their practice in the lab. In describing his personal teaching philosophy, Weitzeil said, “Often, the challenge that awaits preemptive students is not the amount of didactic material to learn or the fast pace at which it is introduced, but the transition from theory to practice. It is easy to memorize the different segments of colon and the diseases that affect them but being able to critically think one’s way through the gross dissection of those tissues requires very specific psychomotor skills, mentorship, critical thinking, and knowledge.
“It is my goal in everything I do to set the standard of using independent critical thinking to work through a complex question and arrive at an evidence-based conclusion,” he said. “This learned skill makes for an excellent pathologists’ assistant, and I hope to instill it in (the students) in our classroom and laboratory interactions.”
In addition to the dedication from her instructors, Becton said her experience is made better by the program’s five other students, describing the class as a family who are learning together. “We all have things in common. There aren’t that many people you can discuss autopsies and those types of things with, and know that they understand you,” she said.
After completing the two-year program, Becton hopes to remain at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital, taking a position as a pathologists’ assistant. Her goal is to become a vital member of a laboratory team who plays an integral role in ensuring the highest quality of patient treatment and care. Eventually, she hopes to enter higher education and teach the pathologists’ assistants of the future.
“Teaching the next generation of pathologists’ assistants to become experts in the field and mentoring them will be a way I can give back,” she said. “I want to cultivate highly skilled individuals with the ability to critically assess and believe in their own capacity to make positive contributions to patient care.”
“Most people think you have to have patient contact to have an impact on patients and their care, but you don’t. Pathologists’ assistants perform autopsies that give families the closure they need about their loved ones.”
Pathologists’
DPT Student Leads as Student Representative on UTHSC Advisory Board
By Janay JeansElizabeth Evans, SPT, BS, has wanted to become a physical therapist since witnessing therapists caring for her youngest sister, who was born with cerebral palsy and autism. Now, she is pursuing a Doctor of Physical Therapy, while becoming a prominent student leader at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center.
Evans, a second-year physical therapy student in the College of Health Professions, is the student representative on the UTHSC Advisory Board.
“It’s a huge honor and responsibility,” she said. “I have already worked with the different college representatives in addition to the representatives for the Black Student Association and UTHSC Unite, and I may be the liaison, but it really is working within a team and trying to get as many student voices heard as possible. While it is a lot of work, I am thrilled to have the opportunities to work with people across the entire university.”
Evans was introduced during the board’s summer meeting in August 2022 and will serve in this position for one year.
“Having the voice of the students represented on the UTHSC Advisory Board is essential, and I believe Elizabeth Evans will do a terrific job in that role,” said Advisory Board Chairman Phil Wenk, DDS, CEO of Delta Dental of Tennessee. “Ultimately, we are here for the students and to ensure that our future generation of practitioners are prepared to work with their patients once they graduate. It’s also important for Elizabeth to help communicate back to her fellow students the importance of giving back to UTHSC as professionals in their fields.”
Evans grew up in Memphis and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in movement science from Texas Christian University in 2020.
She is also the 2022-2023 president of the Student Government Association Executive Council (SGAEC), representing the student body as a liaison between the administration and students. “It was a really great honor when I was appointed president of SGAEC, because I can not only look at what is impacting my class, but
also look at such a larger scale to what’s impacting all of the students at UTHSC,” she said.
In her service as SGAEC president, Evans is also the student representative on the strategic planning steering committee, helping construct UTHSC’s upcoming 20232028 strategic plan.
“It is an incredible honor. Throughout the process of developing and refining the strategic plan, Chancellor Buckley and Dr. Cindy Russell, vice chancellor for Academic, Faculty, and Student Affairs and chief academic officer, have been intentional about including student perspectives,” she said. “The strategic plan is all-encompassing and sets tangible objectives with corresponding metrics, ensuring that we, as a university, stay on target for meeting our respective goals.”
This past year, the SGAEC has met its targets and enhanced student experiences with efforts including assisting with planning and implementation of student events and expanding study and relaxation areas across campus. The SGAEC aims to continue facilitating interprofessional activities, inside and outside the classroom, and assisting with the establishment of university-wide guidelines regarding funding and planning of formal student academic ceremonies. Evans became interested in studying physical therapy at age 6. “As a young girl, I was able to see the life-changing impacts that quality medical care can elicit,” she said.
Evans credits Missy Brown, an occupational therapy graduate from UTHSC, for igniting her passion for therapy. “She kind of sparked a love for physical therapy in me, even though she was an occupational therapist. To engage my sister during therapy, she would encourage me to ‘play’ therapist with my sister or show me games I could play with her that would strengthen her,” Evans said. “Since then, I have never wavered from my desire to be a physical therapist.”
A native Memphian, Evans was inspired by her sister’s doctors and therapists, who were UTHSC alumni, to return to the city permanently and attend the university.
“My entire family lives here, and I really do love this city and want to serve this city,” she said. “Also, considering the quality care my sister was given, I wanted to learn from the same community that produced those medical professionals I view so highly.”
In recognition of her leadership and service, Evans is a member of the Imhotep Society, a campus organization that rewards and recognizes student leaders for their contribution to the UTHSC student community. Student leaders are nominated to be inducted into the society after being awarded value points for their leadership from their college’s student government.
Evans said UTHSC and the Department of Physical Therapy have provided many opportunities and are committed to supporting and valuing students’ voices.
“From my exciting clinical experiences to interacting and working with fellow students, faculty, and staff, UTHSC and the Department of Physical Therapy have brought me opportunities way beyond in-class learning,” she said. “I have been especially encouraged by the extent to which the Department of PT is student-centered. I feel the faculty and staff are not just devoted to educating us but are also devoted to listening to us and supporting us.”
After she graduates in the spring of 2024, Evans plans to practice physical therapy in Memphis and eventually pursue a PhD to work in research or academia.
“From my exciting clinical experiences to interacting and working with fellow students, faculty, and staff, UTHSC and the Department of Physical Therapy have brought me opportunities way beyond in-class learning.”
- Elizabeth Evans, DPT student
Clínica Esperanza Provides Student-Driven Health Care for the Underserved
By Janay JeansPart of the Department of Physical Therapy’s mission is to meet the physical therapy needs of society by advancing the profession through education, research, service, and patient care. This is made apparent through many areas of the program, including its public service within Clínica Esperanza, also known as the Clinic of Hope.
Clínica Esperanza, with the support of Christ Community Health Services, is a primary care clinic serving uninsured and underserved, Hispanic or Latinx patients in Memphis. Launched by the UTHSC College of Medicine in 2005, the clinic aims to enhance care to those who are often experiencing obstacles with language and communication, transportation, access to affordable health care, and other barriers. Student volunteers operate the clinic and provide hands-on services, under the supervision of faculty, every Tuesday at Christ Community’s facility.
The services students provide include updating patient records, interviewing and examining patients, and translating Spanish. From its inception with the College of Medicine, to bringing on the College of Pharmacy, this
past year the clinic has grown through a partnership with the Physical Therapy program.
Third-year DPT student Chance Arnold, president of the Doctor of Physical Therapy Class of 2023, led the proposal for the program to support Clínica Esperanza and expand physical therapy services to the clinic’s patients.
“When I came to UTHSC, after being involved through high school and college, I looked for service opportunities,” Arnold said. “In 2020, I read about Clínica Esperanza and saw that it was written out for medical students, and knowing about physical therapy’s impact on patient life, I was curious why physical therapy wasn’t mainstream in the clinic.”
At that time, Arnold connected with the student president for the College of Medicine and began shadowing at the clinic to see if patients would benefit from physical therapy. In 2022, Arnold saw an opportunity within the program’s service-learning project and gathered interested patients, physical therapy students, and faculty to discuss the vision for providing physical therapy care in the clinic. After submitting their proposal, student volunteers and faculty have been consistently providing care in the clinic.
“The faculty and staff in the PT department have been nothing but supportive and helpful in the entire process,” he said. “And seeing how eager and engaged the second-year and first-year classes are in this process with continuing this on, it builds what the PT program has to offer for its incoming students, as well as the collaboration experience we receive working alongside medical and pharmacy students and seeing the growth in patients’ quality of life. It’s a wonderful experience and one of the most interprofessional experiences you could get while studying at UTHSC.”
In the clinic, physical therapy students provide care including examining, giving treatment plans, and providing rehabilitation, preventative, and wellness initiatives to patients. Medical, pharmacy, and physical therapy students also participate in educational sessions at the clinic, amplifying collaboration and clinical education across the various fields.
“Seeing how eager and engaged the second-year and first-year classes are in this process with continuing this on, it builds what the PT program has to offer for its incoming students, as well as the collaboration experience we receive working alongside medical and pharmacy students and seeing the growth in patients’ quality of life. It’s a wonderful experience and one of the most interprofessional experiences you could get while studying at UTHSC.”
- Chance Arnold, third-year DPT student
“What the students gain here is extremely valuable. They gain more experience in doing evaluation and treatment of real patients,” said Richard Kasser, PT, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Physical Therapy. “It is also valuable that we’re on an interprofessional situation where students can learn from one another.”
“As faculty and licensed therapists, we’re considered supervised therapists, and it’s an incredible experience to work with patients, provide a treatment plan, and follow up weeks later and hear ‘we’re free of pain,’” said Carlos Clardy, PT, DPT, instructor in the Department of Physical Therapy. “We really want to thank our students because they have been very instrumental in ensuring we’re a part of this, and seeing how they truly care about their patients, I absolutely love it, and it’s a part of that calling of physical therapy.”
Clínica Esperanza is open on Tuesdays from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Christ Community Health Services Broad Avenue Health Center at 2861 Broad Ave. in Memphis. The program seeks to increase the number of clinic volunteers, including interpreters, to help with translating at the clinic. To volunteer with the clinic, contact clinicaesperanza@uthsc.edu.
High School to Health Care, Forging Pathways into Lab and Data Sciences
By Janay JeansThe laboratory and data sciences fields have experienced a severe shortage of professionals and face challenges with recruiting prospective students into lab and data sciences programs. Now, faculty within the College of Health Professions have created a new program to enhance recruitment and introduce high school students to lab and data science careers.
“There is a large gap in rural areas of Tennessee regarding interest and awareness of these professions, especially in high schools, when many students are beginning their educational training for careers,” said Jacen Moore, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Diagnostic and Health Sciences. “Many training programs have closed due to the difficulty of recruiting students, and we need a way to not only increase the knowledge about the professions, but also fill vacancies in the professional environment.”
Currently operating in the University of Tennessee at Martin’s Ripley Center, the High School to Health Care program offers free educational opportunities for high school students, including a dual enrollment course and a lab and data science summer camp. In addition, the program will provide free professional development training for high school teachers and offers educational resources such as curricula and materials for teachers to use in their courses.
“In this way, we’re not only creating the materials to educate teachers and students, but also creating pipelines for those students to pursue these careers as they progress through high school and college,” Dr. Moore said.
High School to Health Care received support through the National Institute of Health’s Science Education Partnership Award, and last fall, the program was awarded a $1.3 million grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. The funding will be used to purchase lab equipment, virtual reality headsets, and additional materials to assist the program’s operations and outreach.
The Introduction to Laboratory and Data Sciences dual enrollment course educates students about lab and data sciences and offers college credit for successful completion of the course. It is a 16-week course exposing students to the various fields in lab science – such as hematology, immunohematology, microbiology, cytology, and clinical chemistry – and data science, which studies the importance of health record data, data safety, and the analyses of human medical data. In this course, students will also hear from specialists in the lab and data science professions, learn more about professional ethics, and analyze data on health issues that are present within their communities.
The lab and data science camp, launching next year, is a week-long summer program that aims to educate high school students with an interactive experience with various forms of lab testing and working with molecular and lab science equipment, learning lab techniques, and studying authentic health data.
“Our goal is to nurture that exposure with those students who may be interested in pursuing these fields as a career and creating a pathway for them,” Dr. Moore said.
Members of Dr. Moore’s team include Rebecca Reynolds, EdD, professor and program director of Health Informatics and Information Management, and Keisha Brooks Burnett, EdD, associate professor and program director of Cytotechnology and Histotechnology. The program also collaborates with a team from the University of Tennessee at Martin, led by Simpfronia Taylor, EdD, director of UT Martin’s Ripley Center, and a team from the University of Memphis Center for Research and Educational Policy, led by Carolyn Kaldon, PhD.
“Once the program moves forward, we are hoping to expand, collaborate with other institutions, and establish centers in neighboring counties and states,” said Dr. Moore. “Our main focus with this program is to promote knowledge of our professions, to get students excited about lab and data sciences, and provide tools for them to pursue valuable careers that support the health and well-being of the residents in Tennessee and beyond.”
“We’re not only creating the materials to educate teachers and students, but also creating pipelines for those students to pursue these careers as they progress through high school and college.”
- Jacen Moore, PhD, assistant professor, Department of Diagnostic and Health SciencesCoHP Research Accomplishments
BY THE NUMBERS*
CENTER FOR MUSCLE METABOLISM AND NEUROPATHOLOGY
The Center for Muscle Metabolism and Neuropathology (CM2N), created by Dean Stephen Alway in 2019 and located within the CoHP Division of Regenerative and Rehabilitation Sciences, focuses on research that impacts human muscle function and movement. CM2N’s overarching goal is to provide the fundamental basis for novel strategies that enhance independence across the age spectrum, with current research programs comprising muscle regeneration from damage, sarcopenia and aging, cancer therapeutics and survivorship, and the impact of stroke on mobility and movement.
CM2N ACCOMPLISHMENTS
James Carson, PhD, division chief of Regenerative and Rehabilitation Sciences and senior associate dean of Research and Graduate Studies, is conducting an NIH NIAMS-funded study to determine mechanisms of bone muscle crosstalk that can accelerate muscle mass recovery after periods of forced disuse.
• The four faculty members currently associated with CM2N have secured four federally funded grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense as principal investigators.
• CM2N faculty have published over 38 referred research papers since 2019.
• Currently, Dean Alway is leading a Department of Defense-funded project examining mechanisms to improve muscle regeneration from injury.
• Dr. Alway and Dr. Carson also collaborate on NIH-funded studies in the Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology and the Department of Genetics, Genomics, and Informatics, examining genetic factors contributing to functional deficits with aging and Alzheimer’s disease.
A LOOK AT THE PROJECTS
Neale Chumbler, PhD, chair of the Department of Diagnostic and Health Sciences and executive associate dean of Academic Development and Accreditation, received U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs funds for a project to use health information technology and telehealth technologies to improve access to quality care and rehabilitation outcomes. Dr. Chumbler was also the corresponding author of “Racial and Socioeconomic Characteristics Associated with the use of Telehealth Services Among Adults with Ambulatory Sensitive Conditions” published in the peer-reviewed journal Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiology, in collaboration with UTHSC’s Ming Cheng and Satya Surbhi, PhD, and Rhodes College’s Austin Harrison, PhD.
Kathleen Kenwright, EdD (left), program director for Medical Laboratory Science, and Sheila Criswell, PhD, Department of Diagnostic and Health Sciences, received grants from the American Society for Clinical Pathology related to the UTHSC Histopathology and Medical Laboratory Sciences programs.
• Charisse Madlock-Brown, PhD, Department of Diagnostics and Health Sciences, is heading up a project funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to examine data-driven identification of costly multi-morbidity groupings and their progression.
• Eun Jin Paek, PhD, Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology, is leading an NIH-funded study to investigate the social communication abilities of individuals with Alzheimer’s disease.
• Jacen Moore, PhD, Department of Diagnostics and Health Sciences, is leading an NIH-funded project to create an educational program in rural West Tennessee promoting lab and data science careers.
• Ilsa Schwarz, PhD, and Julian McCarthy, PhD, in the Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology, are working on two projects funded through the Department of Education to examine the improvement of early language and pre-literacy outcomes with children who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing and develop early language and literacy education to support young children with complex communication needs.
• Anne Zachry, PhD, chair of the Department of Occupational Therapy, received a grant from the American Occupational Therapy Foundation to examine the use of medical record analysis to determine inequities in access to home occupational therapy of post-stroke patients in Tennessee’s statewide Medicaid population.
Student Recognized at 2022
UTHSC Impact Awards
Tiana Bridges, a first-year occupational therapy student, was honored in December at the UTHSC Impact Awards. Ten students from all six UTHSC colleges were nominated for the Student Social Justice and Diversity Healthcare Leadership Award, and Bridges was one of three winners. The award recognizes students whose actions demonstrate the importance of social justice activism, equity, and diversity while positively impacting UTHSC and the community.
Volunteer Your Voice Summer Camp Returns
After a 2-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology’s (ASP) Volunteer Your Voice Summer Camp returned last summer. The week-long camp, designed specifically for children ages 7-12 who have speechlanguage and/or hearing challenges, was held at Ijams Nature Center in Knoxville and staffed by ASP faculty, graduate students, and Ijams staffers. It was a wonderful, wild week with great adventures, muddy shoes, soaking wet clothes, unexpected friendships, and meaningful conversations.
Madlock-Brown Highlighted in Nature Article
Charisse Madlock-Brown, PhD, professor in the Department of Diagnostic and Health Sciences, was recently featured in an online article published by the journal Nature. The article, titled “Unlocking the Potential of Health Data to Help Research and Treatments,” examines how doctors and researchers could utilize data-sharing methods to better treat patients and conduct studies without compromising patient privacy. In the article, Dr. Madlock-Brown, who serves as co-director of the Tennessee Clinical and Translational Science Institute, spoke about using patient-level data in her studies of the social determinants of health.
Pause, Protect, Play
ASP students collaborated with the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, School of Music for a project that aims to increase students’ awareness of noise exposure risks and the importance of using hearing protection. The program provides educational resources, including videos titled “Pause, Protect, Play,” that educate on hearing protection options, noise-induced hearing loss, and Tinnitus. According to their videos, approximately 26 million people suffer from preventable noise-induced hearing loss. Visit uthsc.edu/asp/pause-protect-play to view the project and receive more resources on hearing protection.
Reynolds and Woods Receive 2022 Excellence in Teaching Awards
Rebecca Reynolds, EdD, professor in the Department of Diagnostic and Health Sciences
(left), and Lauren Woods, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Occupational Therapy, were among the recipients of the 2022 Excellence in Teaching Awards. Each year, the Student Government Association Executive Council selects two faculty members from each UTHSC college, nominated by the students in the respective colleges, to receive the award, which comes with a plaque, a $2,500 stipend, and public recognition at the SGAEC Banquet, College Convocations, and Commencement Ceremonies.
Students Promote Hearing Safety at Volapalooza
In observance of Better Hearing and Speech
Month members of the UTHSC National Student Speech Language Hearing Association handed out approximately 150 pairs of earplugs at Volapalooza before a Wiz Khalifa concert. Volapalooza is an annual student event hosted by UT Knoxville to celebrate the end of the academic year. The earplugs were branded with “Pause, Protect, Play.”
Physical Therapy Faculty Present at National APTA Meeting
Several faculty members from the Department of Physical Therapy recently attended the American Physical Therapy Association’s Combined Sections Meeting in San Diego, California, including three faculty members who delivered presentations. Jacque Bradford, PT, DPT, presented “Simulation-Based Education in Physical Therapy Education and Research.” Kim Carter, PT, ScDPT, and Myra Meekins, PT, DPT, PhD, presented the poster “The Use of Original Frenkel’s Exercises to Improve Functional Performance in Late-Stage Friedreich’s Ataxia.”
Pediatric Occupational Therapy Tips Blog Lauded
Anne Zachry, PhD, OTR/L, professor and chair of the Department of Occupational Therapy, was honored by Blogspot for her blog “Pediatric Occupational Therapy Tips” (drzachryspedsottips.blogspot.com). Blogspot ranked Dr. Zachry’s blog 14th in the top 70 Occupational Therapy blogs and websites to follow in 2022, and 12th in the top 50 Pediatric Occupational Therapy blogs and websites to follow in 2022.
Two CoHP Students Honored at 2023 BSA Awards
The Black Student Association (BSA) Awards Ceremony honors student leaders from each of the UTHSC colleges as they move toward graduation. Two CoHP students were recognized at the ceremony in February: Siham Sherif and Bianca Jackson.
Siham Sherif
Siham Sherif, a third-year Master of Occupational Therapy student, is known across her department for her academic excellence, professionalism, and commitment to the community. She has maintained a 4.0 GPA throughout the program, while also participating in many leadership and volunteer activities.
Prior to becoming a student at UTHSC, she founded and was president of the Eritrean-Ethiopian Student Association (2019) at the University of North Carolina, was a tutor in a Gross Anatomy lab, and was a supervisor of facilities and operations at the UNC Campus Recreation Center.
Sherif has demonstrated excellence in scholarship. She and several classmates presented a poster at the 2022 Tennessee Occupational Therapy Association Annual Conference titled, “Effects of Sensory Intervention on Neurological Development in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: A Critically Appraised Topic.”
She is a board member of the Rachel Kay Stevens Therapy Center, a student-run pro-bono pediatric clinic for uninsured or underinsured Tennesseans. She served as the secretary of the Delta Zeta Chapter of the American Occupational Therapy Foundation’s honor society, Pi Theta Epsilon. She also served as a gross anatomy teaching assistant, providing support to occupational therapy and physical therapy students. She volunteers at the Memphis Islamic Center, where she has helped set up and run community health fairs, COVID vaccination events, and dinners for families in need during Ramadan. She is also a youth head soccer coach.
Bianca Jackson
After studying biology during her undergraduate years, Bianca Jackson, MPH, discovered her interest in improving health outcomes on a large scale.
“I learned about how we can use data to improve health outcomes, as well as doing a grounded approach of talking to people within the community to understand the social determinants in order to get to the core of how these chronic diseases and morbidities are impacting them,” Jackson said. “I arrived at UTHSC because the professors in this specific program are interested in improving health outcomes by utilizing their various research skills, and there is a large focus on helping the community around us.”
Jackson, from Memphis, is pursuing a PhD in health outcomes and policy research with an emphasis in health informatics and information management. Before joining UTHSC, she earned a Bachelor of Science degree in biology from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and her Master of Public Health degree with a concentration in health systems management from the University of Memphis.
Her research experience includes qualitative and quantitative research, clinical research, health technology assessment development, and evidence evaluation, analysis, and synthesis. Her dissertation focuses on the use of machine learning to predict lung cancer risk using electronic health record data.
“We see that lung cancer is one of the deadliest cancers and that it is most prevalent within the southern region. I am diving into how we can improve the outcomes of those with lung cancer, identify the risks, and prevent the incidence of lung cancer within our community and in our region,” she said. “Using that data, we can understand what is causing this, specifically within individuals in Tennessee, who are at greater risk, how it is impacting patients in Memphis compared to Nashville or Knoxville, and how we can apply the knowledge of health informatics to improving the outcomes of people within my community and across the state.”
Jackson served as a student representative on the Graduate Student Executive Council. She is praised in her college for the energy she brings to her work that inspires colleagues, faculty, and staff. About being honored at the BSA Awards, Jackson said, “It was awesome to be in a room of people that look like and share the same interest as me. Although we are in different fields, our ultimate goal is to help others and improve the health of others.”
After graduating, Jackson will pursue consulting in the field of health economics and outcomes research and plans to apply the research and analytical skills she received from the program to improve health outcomes in many therapeutic areas.
Honoring Outstanding Alumni
The College of Health Professions gave out its inaugural alumni awards during its 50th anniversary celebration in November. The awards will become an annual event.
The 2023 Outstanding Alumni Award Winners are:
Lisa Cunningham
Outstanding Alumna
Lisa Cunningham, PhD, is the scientific director of the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD). Born and raised in East Tennessee, she received bachelor’s and master’s degrees in audiology from the University of Tennessee and completed a clinical fellowship in audiology at Indiana University. She obtained a PhD in neuroscience from the University of Virginia and completed a post-doctoral fellowship in auditory neuroscience at the University of Washington. Dr. Cunningham’s lab at NIDCD conducts basic, translational, and clinical studies on hearing loss and develops therapeutic strategies to safeguard hearing. Of particular interest is the development of therapies to protect the hearing of patients undergoing treatment with therapeutic drugs that treat life-threatening diseases but that also damage the cells of the inner ear and result in hearing loss.
Dr. Cunningham was voted among the Top 10 teachers in the Medical University of South Carolina College of Graduate Studies three times between 2004 and 2007. She received the National Organization for Hearing Research Burt Evans Young Investigator Award in 2008, and she was honored with NIDCD Director’s Awards in 2016 and 2020.
In 2018, she received a National Institutes of Health (NIH) Graduate Partnerships Program Outstanding Mentor Award. Highlighting her innovation in bridging basic and clinical research, in 2020 Dr. Cunningham received an NIH Bench-toBedside Award in support of a Phase 3 study designed to protect the hearing of cancer patients being treated with cisplatin, a drug that is known to cause hearing loss.
Dr. Cunningham was appointed as NIDCD scientific director in April 2021. In this role she oversees the NIDCD intramural research program, which includes over 160 scientists, clinicians, and administrators in 17 research labs, research core facilities, and research clinics.
Lynn Ingram
Outstanding Alumna
Lynn Ingram is a 1973 graduate of UTHSC, where she earned a Bachelor of Science degree in medical technology. In 1981, she received her Master of Science degree from Memphis State University (now the University of Memphis). Her commitment to quality education has been demonstrated through her service as a full-time faculty member at UTHSC. Several years after her retirement, she continued to teach as an adjunct professor. Throughout her career, she mentored countless new laboratory students.
Ingram has diligently promoted her profession, serving in multiple capacities with the American Society for Clinical Laboratory Science (ASCLS), the National Accrediting Agency for Clinical Laboratory Sciences (NAACLS), the Memphis Society for Clinical Laboratory Sciences (MSCLS), and the Tennessee Society for Clinical Laboratory Sciences (TSCLS). She has made numerous presentations at local, regional, and national conferences and meetings. She has more than 30 publications to her career and authored a chapter in a chemistry book.
David W. Mensi Outstanding Alumnus
David W Mensi, BS SCT (ASCP), is a 1984 graduate from the cytotechnology program at UTHSC. He began his career at the Duke University Medical Center. After two years, Mensi moved back to Memphis to enhance his knowledge, first at UTHSC as a cytotechnologist in the laboratory and a clinical instructor, then later as senior cytotechnologist at Baptist Memorial Hospital. In 1998, he began a new role at Trumbull Laboratory, where he serves as the supervisor of the Cytopathology Department.
Mensi’s primary areas of focus are gynecological cytology, body cavity fluid cytology, and fine-needle aspiration of bone and soft tissue sarcomas. He has provided diagnoses to over 400,000 patients, helping with the detection of cancer in its early stages. He has also conducted research and authored articles on salivary gland duct carcinoma and dermoid cysts with malignant transformations.
Mensi continues to give his time and expertise back to UTHSC. Over the last 30 years, he has assisted the UTHSC cytotechnology program by teaching over 150 students. He has delivered numerous lectures to students each year on special topics and selects interesting diagnostic cases for the student presentations. For years, he has been supplying the program with valuable cytologic and histologic slides for study and testing purposes. This essential teaching material is the backbone of the program. In addition, Mensi serves as a clinical instructor overseeing students assigned to Trumbull Laboratory.
Anne Zachry Outstanding Alumna
Anne Zachry, PhD, OTR/L, is a graduate of UTHSC and the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She received a PhD in educational psychology and research from the University of Memphis in 2010. Prior to joining the UTHSC Occupational Therapy (OT) faculty in 2013, she practiced as a pediatric occupational therapist for more than 20 years in a variety of pediatric settings, including early intervention settings and the local public school system.
Dr. Zachry’s research interests include enhancing infant and child development through the provision of OT services. Her blog, “Pediatric OT Tips” has been ranked as a top occupational therapy blog for the past five years. In 2015, Dr. Zachry led the initiative to develop the UTHSC Rachel Kay Stevens Therapy Center, a studentrun, pro-bono, pediatric OT clinic. In 2016, she received the Student Government Association Executive Council Excellence in Teaching Award and was a finalist for the Memphis Business Journal’s Health Care Heroes Award. She received the UTHSC Alumni Association Public Service Award in 2016 and participated in the University of Tennessee Leadership Institute in 2017. In 2019, Dr. Zachry was a nominee for the University of Tennessee Educate President’s Award. Her books, “Retro Baby: Cut Back on all the Gear and Boost Your Baby’s Development with over 100 Time-Tested Activities” and “Retro Toddler: More Than 100 Old-School Activities to Boost Development,” were published by the American Academy of Pediatrics. “Retro Baby” won the Benjamin Franklin Gold Award in 2013. Dr. Zachry currently serves as the chair of the UTHSC Department of Occupational Therapy.
Karen R. Smith
Outstanding Alumna
Karen R. Smith, PT, DPT, NCS, CWS, WCC, FACCWS, C/NDT, CSRS, is a 1986 UTHSC graduate with a BS in physical therapy and a 2006 UTHSC graduate with a Doctorate in Physical Therapy. She has a 2017 graduate certificate in pediatrics from the University of Indianapolis. She is a board-certified neurologic clinical specialist with the American Physical Therapy Association (APTA), a certified wound specialist with the American Board of Wound Management, wound care certified with the National Alliance of Wound Care and Ostomy, and a Fellow of The American College of Clinical Wound Specialists.
Dr. Smith is certified in the Neurodevelopmental Treatment Approach for the management of adults with stroke and brain injury with the Neuro-Developmental Treatment Association and is a certified stroke rehabilitation specialist with the National Stroke Association. She is an advanced credentialed clinical instructor with the APTA. She is a Vanderbilt grant faculty member for the Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental Disabilities program (Vanderbilt Consortium LEND) and a Tennessee State University grant faculty member for the Connecting Faculty Learning to Student Learning program.
Dr. Smith is a tenured assistant professor in the Department of Physical Therapy, College of Health Sciences, at Tennessee State University (TSU). She has 36 years of experience as a physical therapist in multiple clinical settings and currently sees patients at the pro bono TSU Tiger Community Rehabilitation Clinic. Her clinical focus and specialty are neurologic PT and advanced wound management. She was the secretary of the PT Class of 1986 and has organized class reunions, social media pages, and newsletters. At TSU, she is active in committees at the department, college, and university levels. She is the assessment coordinator and service chair for the Department of Physical Therapy. Dr. Smith organizes and volunteers at several community events each year for TSU PT faculty/student participation. She received a Frist Humanitarian Award in 2011.
Dr. Smith is currently the APTA-TN Nashville District Chair, on the APTA-TN Board, and is a delegate to the APTA House of Delegates. She is a Specialization Academy of Content Experts item writer and case report reviewer in wound management for the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialists and is an item writer for the National Physical Therapy Exam (NTPE) for the Federation of State Boards of Physical Therapy. She is a consultant to the Tennessee Board of Physical Therapy. Dr. Smith received the 2022 Outstanding District Award, APTA-TN.
PT Alumnus Proud of Profession that Makes a Difference in People’s Lives
Laura Lee (Dolly) Swisher, PT, MDiv, PhD, FAPTA, was going into the ministry, working on a PhD in religious ethics at Vanderbilt University years ago, until she felt called to go in a different direction.
She remembered how her father took excellent care of her mother, who had multiple sclerosis. A forklift truck driver, he also had an artistic side, and later in life repaired violins and cellos. She worked with him then, and recalled how she loved the hands-on work.
An internship as a hospital chaplain before studying at Vanderbilt contributed to what she calls an “aha moment” that set her on a different career path. She decided she wanted to be a physical therapist, a field that combined caring for people, just like her father had done with her mother, and hands-on work to improve people’s lives. Already in Tennessee, she applied to the University of
Tennessee Health Science Center, was admitted, and graduated in 1986 as a physical therapist, a career she has loved for almost 40 years.
“Physical therapy is a wonderful profession in terms of being able to work closely with your patient, which you don’t get to do in all health care professions,” Dr. Swisher said.
Dr. Swisher, who lives in Prosper, Texas, is Professor Emerita and the former director of the School of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Sciences at the University of South Florida (USF) in the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine.
She credits UTHSC with giving her an excellent education from instructors who cared about their students and the patients they would serve.
“I think that the faculty were just so caring about students,” she said. “They were very much oriented towards being a great practitioner, but at the same time building a foundation for you to be successful in your professional life.”
After graduating from UTHSC, she returned to Vanderbilt, working in outpatient physical therapy and became a certified hand therapist. An opportunity to teach at Tennessee State University came her way, and she eventually became the interim program director and head of the Department of Physical Therapy. Realizing she had some unfinished business to attend to, she earned a PhD in public administration at Tennessee State University and wrote her dissertation on ethics.
She joined USF in 1998 as an assistant professor, rising to become the director of the School of Physical Therapy & Rehabilitation Sciences in 2018.
Dr. Swisher said her education at UTHSC trained her not only to be a caring and good physical therapist, but a leader in advancing her profession.
Dr. Swisher served as the vice president of the Tennessee Physical Therapy Association and served as a member and chair of the American Physical Therapy Association’s Ethics and Judicial Committee, and the Commission on Accreditation. One of the things she is most proud of is serving as cochair of the task force to revise the code of ethics for physical therapists.
She has been on several editorial boards and is a Catherine Worthingham Fellow of the American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) and the recipient of the APTA Lucy Blair Service Award, the Polly Cerasoli Lectureship Award, and Mary McMillan Lecture Award, the most prestigious award given by the APTA.
Dr. Swisher is retired now, but she continues to contribute to research in her field. Decades after that aha moment, she is certain she followed the right path.
“We talk a lot in physical therapy about the significance of movement,” she said. “Well, you are empowering people to have more out of their lives. Physical therapy allows you to be involved in helping people to maximally enjoy their daily life, whether it’s in walking more, biking more, but also when you get down to the family things, they are some of the things that turn out to be most meaningful as a physical therapist. Can you help somebody walk down the aisle for a child’s wedding? Can you help someone to travel somewhere to see someone graduate? And are you able to help somebody get down on the floor maybe and play with their toddler?”
Congratulations to Our 2022 Graduates!
Commencement ceremonies for the College of Health Professions were held in Memphis on May 10 at the Renasant Convention Center for spring graduates, and December 12 at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts for fall graduates. The Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology’s commencement was May 18 in Knoxville, Tennessee. Graduates who received a Master of Science in Clinical Laboratory Science had their degrees conferred in August.
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN
MEDICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE
Marian Ivy
Diem V. Mai
Ahlam Murshed
Somartha Prak
Quentila Taylor
Kalene Farley
Kyle Weber Furlow
Jeffery Thomas Givens
William Trey Johnson III
John Morgan Knight
Kristina Ly Leav
Elizabeth McEwen McCanless
Erika Jeanne Panek
Bhavi Dhansukhbhai Patel
Michelle Lynn Stoutenburg
Amy Lynn Patton
Madison Renee Payne
Mallori Lynn Rodrigue
Clare Elizabeth Sauser
Rachel Elizabeth Schwam
Olivia Camille Smith
Steffani Takahashi
Mikayla Beverly Taylor
Kathryn Suzanne Tenner
Shelby Terry
MASTER
OF SCIENCE IN CLINICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE
Yazan Salem Akel
Courtney Danielle Grant
Jeffry Greenlee
Puja Mistry
Jessica Renae Parks
Carter Pruett
Shawn A. Rennison
Lauren Yvonne Shine
Cameran Taylor
Katelyn B. Wright
MASTER OF CYTOPATHOLOGY PRACTICE
Amberly C. Baker
Chelsea Mo’ney Sandrill Bridges
Christie Lyndell Fumbah
MaKalea Cathryn Kirkland
Caitlin Ryanne Richmond
MASTER OF HEALTH INFORMATICS AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
Eseosa T. Amenaghawon
Tiffany Elaine Camp
Dominique Sheree Crutchfield
Miriam A. Sward
Joshua Wilkinson
Rose Zeng
MASTER OF OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
Elizabeth Grace Barton
Allison Elizabeth Rebecca Brewer
Mary Elizabeth Burton
Lauren Elizabeth Camenzind
Amy Michelle Carver
Lucy Dalton DiAngelo
Kylie Blair Dunavan
Tedrin Elion
Caleb Josiah Harbor
Megan Denise Henley
Lindie Elizabeth Hill
Sydney Dawn Inman
Molly Jean Kafader
Alexandria Marie Keathley
Kyla Mychelle Key
Molly Grace King
Carolyn Knight
Samuel Allen Lopez
Katy Elizabeth Lowry
Carley Jo Mahaffey
Brittney Rae Malone
Kayla Marie McDaniel
Allison Elaine Nance
Rachel Lynn Walker
Hailey Nicole Warrington
Zoie Jane Wilkes
Erin Denise Healy Williams
Madison Faith Williams
Alexis Rivers Williamson
Megan Elizabeth Wilson
James Trevor Wright
DOCTOR OF PHYSICAL THERAPY
Robert Gerald Balducci
Rachel Taylor Halford Bolton
Alexis Marie Burton
Kristina Annalice Caller
Caroline Campbell
Dalton Chase Campbell
Ian Rhoan Campbell
Sloane Nicole Cline
Alexandra Claire Collier
Hailey James Daugherty
Andrew Thomas Davis
Kali Jo Decker
Tasha Denton
Sydney Pearson Duncan
Thomas Layne Ellis
Rebecca Leigh English
John Phillip Epperson
Thomas Roy Ewing
Maria Farag
Samuel Joseph Farmer
Ross Kaelund Granderson
Gabrielle AnneMarie Grant
Kody Groves
Madeline Ruth Hamblen
Victoria Marie Hamby
Joel Gregory Harbolt
Haley Grace Hathcock
Chandler Elizabeth Hawkins
Annika Leigh Hedlund
Summer Amanda Hedrick
Rebecca Hidalgo
Christopher Matthew Huff
Courtney Lynn Isom
Kadarius Eugene Jack
Hannah Gale James
Venkatasushma Kalava
Emily Cunningham Kyle
Glenn Jackson Lamar Jr.
Rachel Georganna Lawhorn
Rebekah Cheyenne Lockhart
Rebecca Morgan Luther
Stephanie Elizabeth McClanahan
Abbey Walden McCrory
Clare Lynn Morris
Leigh Taylor Moss
Rahul R. Patel
Shivani Mukesh Patel
Brooke Kay Patton
James Cole Patton
Halle Elizabeth Perryman
Mitchell Anthony Quigley
Emily Anne Rice
Kaitlyn Ross
Kenan Sakic
Ashton Gail Smith
Mason Cain Stephens
Jordan Phillip Walsh
Alexander K. Williams
Katelyn Elise Wilson
William Hayes Wright
DOCTOR OF AUDIOLOGY
Caitlyn Dora Adams
Tessie Blanchard
Ashton Boyd
Kelsey Brittingham
McKenna Wellborn Brown
Larissa Conolly
Caelan Pacelli Cordova
Harlee Elizabeth Daniel
Jesús D. Gomez
Heather Martin Harris
Nancy France Hawkins
Janelle Lynn Heinks
Malina E. Kinnard
Erin Kinney
Dora Leigh Klink
Molly McCormick
Ashton Moss
Sarah Grace Norris
Lindsay Nicole Taylor
Patricia White
MASTER OF SCIENCE IN SPEECH LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY
Madeline Rae Anasiewicz
Jannai Arellano
Rachel Baird
Nicole Catherine Block
Melissa Brooks
Emily Carter
Marissa Danielle Chappell
Marklee Cook
Julia Desmedt
Madison Fisher
Linnea Gaetjens
Rachel Idem
Margaret Jennings
Grace Jepson
Annalee Elizabeth Johnson
Lauren Elizabeth Judd
Skylar M. Kelley
Kayla Ketron
Alison Kilgore
Mckenzie Yarboro Krebs
Brianna Kreiger
Megan Elizabeth Lane
Katherine Lingle
Alyssa Catherine Llewelyn
Mckayla Locke
Carley Mayer
Macy Maynard
Kaitlyn McGruther
Abby Milillo
Carlie Morgan
Abigail G. Mynatt
Abigail Grace Norman
Maribel Del Carmen Pardes
Mary Parliament
Ashley Patton
Meagan Kalei Phillips
Kelly Ann Quirion
Lauryn Rees
Madeline Rietschel
Addie Rose Ringenberg
Ragan Rushing
Bayleigh Scoggins
Nitya Subbanna
Angela Elysabeth Tate
Madeline Weih
Robinson White
Addison Kate Willard
Kaelyn Wilson
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN AUDIOLOGY AND SPEECH PATHOLOGY
Kaelei Madison Adams
Sarah Jessica Amador
Alexis E. Arnize
Abigail Marie Baricevich
Sydney Ann Bhandari
Elizabeth Wright Brandon
Katherine Faith Burton
Callie Mae Canfield
Brooke Elizabeth Choate
Lily R. Cooze
Allison Michele Costello
Lauren Dianna Courtney
Addison Claire Crawford
Carter Crenshaw
Lauren Elizabeth Day
Eliza Rose Dean
Lily Catherine Deinhart
Macy Lauren Diehl
Anna E. Duhon
Brooke Lashae Farrow
Zareeya Nichole Folds
Holly Leann Fussell
Taylor Gonzalez
Grace E. Goodacre
Carmen Lynlea Griffith
Grace Catherine Hall
Justine Emily Happe
Joshalyn H. Harmon
Riley Dane Harris
Madison Lee Henry
Leah Price Horner
Catherine Marie Hughes
Emma C. Hunt
Sara Glen Hutchinson
Katherine Dale Kaminsky
Megan Rose Kane
Megan Kirk
Nicole Lynn Kubica
Ashley Elizabeth Latiff
Hannah Rebekah Maner
Caroline Anne Manning
Elizabeth Neely Marshall
Selecia M. Mathis
Sadie R. Mcabee
Caroline Frances McCarthy
Sydney Nicole McCubbins
Grace Ellen Mennen
Ragan Elise Middleton
Hayley Grace Moffatt
Alisha Noel Montgomery
Elizabeth Anne Norton
Kaitlyn Elise Ozdych
Lainey Faith Parker
Sela Olivia Peterson
Kristen Nicole Roberts
Bailey Scott Rose
Zach Rose
Sydney A. Rule
Gabrielle Renee Rysdon
Student Leaders Honored
Natalie Lynne Elise Schaad
Radel Elizabeth Smithers
Anna Elisabeth Street
Tyler Elizabeth Sullivan
Sarah Emmaline Talley
Madison Michelle Theken
Mary Blair Threlkeld
John Robert Tucker
Christina Jean Villers
Kylie Diane Vogel
Katherine Murphy Weisenmiller
Abigail Catherine Whirley
Eli Shannon Williams
Rachel Rochelle Wiser
Rachel Sierra Wolfe
The College of Health Professions is proud to recognize the following students honored during the 2022 Commencement ceremonies..
ALPHA ETA SOCIETY
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN MEDICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE
Diem V. Mai
Ahlam Murshed
Bachelor of Science in Audiology and Speech Pathology
Callie Mae Canfield
Lily Catherine Deinhart
Brooke LaShae Farrow
Holly Leann Fussell
Taylor Gonzalez
Riley Dane Harris
Emma C. Hunt
Elizabeth Neely Marshall
Selica M. Mathis
Caroline Frances McCarthy
Ragan Elise Middleton
Somartha Prak
Natalie Lynne Elise Schaad
Anna Elisabeth Street
Sarah Emmaline Talley
Kylie Diane Vogel
Eli Shannon Williams
MASTER OF SCIENCE IN CLINICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE
Courtney Danielle Grant
Katelyn B. Wright
MASTER OF CYTOPATHOLOGY PRACTICE
Chelsea Mo’ney Sandrill Bridges
MASTER OF HEALTH
INFORMATICS AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
Tiffany Elaine Camp
Dominique Sheree Crutchfield
MASTER OF OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
Allison Elizabeth Rebecca Brewer
Amy Michelle Carver
Lucy Dalton DiAngelo
Megan Denise Henley
Molly Jean Kafader
Kayla Mychelle Key
Carley Jo Mahaffey
Kathryn Suzanne Tenner
MASTER OF SCIENCE IN SPEECH
LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY
Rachel Baird
Marissa Danielle Chappell
Marklee K. Cook
Madison Noel Fisher
Linnea Gaetjens
Rachel Catherine Idem
Margaret Jennings
Grace Daly Jepson
Annalee Elizabeth Johnson
Alison Catherine Kilgore
Alyssa Catherine Llewelyn
Kaitlyn S. McGruther
Ashley A. Patton
Meagan Kalei Phillips
Kaelyn Wilson
DOCTOR OF AUDIOLOGY
Caitlyn Dora Adams
McKenna Wellborn Brown
Larissa Gale Conolly
Harlee Elizabeth Daniel
Nancy France Hawkins
Malina Emma-Lyn Kinnard
Erin Elizabeth Kinney
Sarah Grace Norris
DOCTOR OF PHYSICAL THERAPY
Hailey James Daugherty
Rebecca Leigh English
Victoria Marie Hamby
Haley Grace Hathcock
Summer Amanda Hedrick
Venkatasushma Kalava
Emily Cunningham Kyle
Rebekah Cheyenne Lockhart
Clare Lynn Morris
Shivani Mukesh Patel
Mitchell Anthony Quigley
Emily Anne Rice
FACULTY NOMINEES
Mark Hedrick
Jacen Moore
Chelsea Peeler
Teresa Vaughn
Lee Williams
HONORS GRADUATES
AUDIOLOGY AND SPEECH LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY
HIGHEST HONORS
Abigail Marie Baricevich
Callie Mae Canfield
Lily R. Cooze
Addison Claire Crawford
Lauren Elizsbeth Day
Lily Catherine Deinhart
Brooke Lashae Farrow
Zareeya Nicole Folds
Holly Leann Fussell
Justine Emily Happe
Riley Dane Harris
Emma C. Hunt
Sara Glen Hutchinson
Selica M. Mathis
Grace Ellen Mennen
Gabrielle Renee Rysdon
Anna Elisabeth Street
Sarah Emmaline Talley
Mary Blair Threlkeld
Eli Shannon Williams
HIGH HONORS
Allison Michelle Costello
Macy Lauren Diehl
Anna E. Duhon
Taylor Gonzalez
Grace E. Goodacre
Megan Rose Kane
Megan Kirk
Elizabeth Neely Marshall
Caroline Frances McCarthy
Ragan Elise Middleton
Hayley Grace Moffatt
Elizabeth Anne Norton
Sela Olivia Petersen
Kristen Nicole Roberts
Bailey Scott Rose
Madison Michelle Theken
Kylie Diane Vogel
HONORS
Kaelei Madison Adams
Sydney Ann Bhandari
Katherine Faith Burton
Grace Catherine Hall
Joshalyn H. Harmon
Catherine Marie Hughes
Katherine Dale Kaminsky
Ashley Elizabeth Latiff
Caroline Anne Manning
Sadie R. Mcabee
Sydney A. Rule
Tyler Elizabeth Sullivan
John Robert Tucker
Abigail Catherine Whirley
Rachel Rochelle Wiser
MEDICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE
HIGH HONORS
Ahlam Murshed
HONORS
Diem V. Mai
CLINICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE
HIGHEST HONORS
Katelyn B. Wright
HIGH HONORS
Courtney Danielle Grant
HONORS
Cameran Taylor
CYTOPATHOLOGY PRACTICE
HIGHEST HONORS
Chelsea Mo’ney Sandrill Bridges
HIGH HONORS
Christie Fumbah
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
HIGHEST HONORS
Amy Michelle Carver
Lucy Dalton DiAngelo
Megan Denise Henley
Molly Jean Kafader
Kyla Mycahelle Key
Carley Jo Mahaffey
Kathryn Suzanne Tenner
Alpha Eta Society
HIGH HONORS
Kylie Blair Dunavan
Carolyn Knight
Mikayla Beverly Taylor
Zoie Jane Wilkes
James Trevor Wright
PHYSICAL THERAPY
HIGHEST HONORS
Rebecca Leigh English
Victoria Marie Hamby
Haley Grace Hathcock
Venkatasushma Kalava
Rebekah Cheyenne Lockhart
Shivani Mukesh Patel
Mitchell Anthony Quigley
Emily Anne Rice
HIGH HONORS
Hailey James Daugherty
Maria Farag
Summer Amanda Hedrick
Emily Cunningham Kyle
Clare Lynn Morris
Halle Elizabeth Perryman
COLLEGE OF HEALTH PROFESSIONS SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AWARD
MASTER OF HEALTH INFORMATICS AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
Kristina Ly Leav
THE IMHOTEP SOCIETY GRADUATING MEMBERS
Lucy Dalton DiAngelo
John Phillip Epperson
Carley Jo Mahaffey
Madison Renee Payne
Jordan Phillip Walsh
Megan Elizabeth Wilson
PROGRAM AWARDS
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN MEDICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE
Frances Guthrie Outstanding Student Award in Medical Laboratory Science
Diem V. Mai
Somartha Prak
MASTER OF SCIENCE IN CLINICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE
Brenta G. Davis Outstanding Clinical Laboratory Science Graduate Student Award
Jessica Renae Parks
Katelyn B. Wright
Alice Scott Hitt Faculty Award in Medical Laboratory Science
Courtney Danielle Grant
MASTER OF CYTOPATHOLOGY PRACTICE
Cyrus C. Erickson Award in Cytotechnology
Chelsea Mo’ney Sandrill Bridges
Gerre Wells Gourley Award in Histotechnology
MaKalea Cathryn Kirkland
MASTER OF OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
Achievement Award in Occupational Therapy
Kylie Blair Dunavan
Leadership Award in Occupational Therapy
Carly Jo Mahaffey
The Rosemary Batorski
Community Service Award in Occupational Therapy
Rachel Lynn Walker and Tedrin Elion
President’s Award for Service in Occupational Therapy
Megan Elizabeth Wilson
DOCTOR OF PHYSICAL THERAPY
The Outstanding Physical Therapy Student Award
Dr. Victoria Marie Hamby
Dr. Hayley Grace Hathcock
Ayers Award
Dr. Ian Rhoan Campbell
Physical Therapy Faculty Award
Dr. Summer Amanda Hedrick
Physical Therapy Class President Recognition
Dr. John Phillip Epperson
Thank You for Your Membership in the 1911 Society
The University of Tennessee Health Science Center’s 1911 Society recognizes philanthropic support, which is critical to our mission of educating students, conducting innovative research, and improving health outcomes. Named for the year the Health Science Center was founded, the 1911 Society celebrates the generosity of our community. Membership in the 1911 Society is granted across multiple levels: Annual Giving Partners who make a donation of $100 or more in any given fiscal year; Sustaining Partners who give annually at any amount
We are grateful to the following donors for their gifts through June 30, 2022.
ANNUAL PARTNERS
Peggy D. Adams
Rhonda K. Allen
Michael L. and Chandra D. Alston
Stephen E. and Michelle Alway
Pamela Denise Anderson
Kristopher Arheart
David and Amanda Armstrong
Margaret Ayers
Jeffrey M. and Sally E. Badoud
Jeffrey and Sally Jo Baerman
Laura Bain-Selbo and Eric Walter Selbo
Vickie D. and Robert C. Barnes, Jr.
Janice E. Beard
Julie A. and George Beeler
Mary Sue Bennett
Carol Sue Bloomquist
Sandra and Michael E. Bogard
Candice L. Bolin
Janie M. Bowles
Elizabeth Bowman
Michael and Susan Boyd
Ashley Nations and David C. Bradford
Jacque Lynn Bradford and Jeremy Lynn Bradford
Jack W. and Lillian G. Bray
Deborah and McNeal Brockington III
Fred S. Buchanan, Jr.
Loretta L. Bunn
William H. and Sybil A. Byrd
James and Margaret Carson
for five or more consecutive years; and Lifetime Partners who make cumulative commitments of $25,000 or more during their lifetime.
The Office of Development and Alumni Affairs wishes to thank all donors for their commitment to the College of Health Professions and to the university. For details go to giving.uthsc.edu/1911. To make a gift, please visit giving.uthsc.edu/give or call 901.448.5516.
Frank and Brenda Carter
Randy and Johnna Cashon
Tamika D. Catchings
Austin Alexander and McKenna Childress
Walter E. and Delilah C. Clark
Tiffany Clay
Jeannine H. and Benjamin T. Cockrill Jr.
Neal W. Coke
Mark and Alicia Collins
Patrick D. and Heather L. Conley
Barbara H. and Michael J. Connolly
Brenda Conti
Susan P. and Jerry B. Cowgill
Peggy and Thad S. Cox Sr.
Johnny R. and Andrea R. Crisler
Sheila L. Criswell
Judith Gayle Davis
Berniece Depue
Denise P. Descouzis
John W. and Sandra S. Downing
Barbara Lynn DuBray-Benstein
Saxon and Bettye Durham
Dennis C. and Patricia Wojciak Earl
Norman D. Estep
Carol Sue Eyer
Jerry J. and Margaret H. Faerber
C. Thomas Fennimore
Michael J. Fisher and Carolyn Sweeney-Fisher
Li Gao
David Gaunt
Mark S. and Nan McCammon Gaylord
Jeff Harrison Gill
Rosario L. and Karl A. Giulian
Jamie Lee Glenn
Michelle Elise Grzybowski
Cheryl D. Gunter and Mr. Paul A. Rabe
Mary A. Handel
Ashley Harkrider
Larry and Angela Harmon
Mark Stephen Hedrick
Bill and Peg Helms
Sheri Henderson
Scott and Jerri Henley
Steve Hoelscher
M. James and Joyce A. Howard
Craig and Elizabeth Humphrey
Stacey Hunt
Alexis and Ray Hurt
Dawn and Chris Hurt
Tonya and David Hurt III
Dianne Jones
Kalon Owens Jones and Kenneth Earl
Ann Scarlet Jordan
Richard J. and Christine L. Kasser
Michael and Elizabeth Kelly
William D. and Kathleen M. Kenwright
Terrell and Pete Kerr
Patricia Marie King
Christine M. and Edward L. Knuteson
Nikki Jean Koehler
Kazunari and Mary Archer Koike
Robert M. and Kayron D. Kraus
Julie Kuntzendorf
Stephanie B. Lancaster
Sara Ogilvie Leonard
Carol Likens
Tiffany Lindsey
John P. and Jennifer J. Little
Earnestine Logan
Steve and Carolyn Luper
Charisse Renee Madlock-Brown
Randy and Pamela Majerus
Bintu Marong
Gary and Susan Mays
Lynda and Ross McAllister, Jr.
Linda W. and Steve McCadams
Mary C. and Shellie G. McCain, Jr.
Jillian Heather McCarthy
Susan Lynn McConnell
Charles R. and Breanda L. McDaniel
Andrea S. McDuffie
Patrick W. and Tammy R. McEnerney
Lela Blanche McFerrin
Wanda McKnight
Myra M. Meekins
Curtis P. Meier
David and Jennifer Mensi
Carla Garcia Mercer
Amanda Ann Miller
Karen Leigh Miller
Pearlean and Edward Mohlke
Bill H. and Janice C. Murphy
Jason and Ariel O’Brien
Terri Flake O’Neill
Claire Lee Overmyer
Logan Clint Owens
Jill L. Passano and Kevin J. Reilly
Chelsea Nicole Peeler
Geneen Mary Phaneuf
Robert R. and Barbara A. Pickens
Stephen J. Pike and Orli Weisser-Pike
JoEtta Powell
Martin and Melinda Quinn
Jennifer Charlotte Randle
Matthew R. and Donna L. Reed
Charles Remaklus III
Kevin and Jaimie Reneau
Rebecca and Jeremy Reynolds
Lara Tarlan Reynolds
Charles Atlee Robbins, Jr.
Elaine Perry Robinson
James and Mary Rolfe
Marilyn Albright Roofner and Larry C. Roofner
Amir Saran
Michael K. and Cynthia F. Savage
Daniel R. and Renee B. Sechrist
James C. and Yvonne B. Sensenig
Joseph P. and Lisa K. Sessions
Darren and Marcia Sharp
Doris H. and Joseph R. Shelton
John J. and Carol C. Sheridan
Shelley Stapleton
Dion and Coleen Stevens
Randy and Katrina Stevens
Cheryl and William R. Stewart, Jr.
Melyne J. and James S. Strickland, Jr.
Julie Sutherland
Lori A. Thomas
Liese A. and Oswald H. Thomas III
Jane Diddle Thompson
Rebecca N. Tiller
Vanessa S. and M. James Torrence
Frances M. Tucker
Kristin Turnbow
Edward J. and Lori L. Venditti
Wendel M. and Beth A. Wainner
Richard and Kathleen Wallace
CraDale O’Brien Waller
Hal E. and Vera J. Watts
Allison Wegman
Billie Whitney
Dwight and Evit Willett
Destinee R Williams
Wendy L. and Jerry L. Williams, Jr.
Vicki Davidson Wiman
Chris and Jenny Withem
Melissa Wright
Kelly Rene Yeager
Anne H. and Michael S. Zachry
We are grateful to the following Sustaining Partners for their consecutive gifts through FY22.
FOUNDATION PARTNERS (20 YEARS+)
Richard J. and Christine L. Kasser
Kevin and Jaimie Reneau
CORNERTONE PARTNERS (10-19 YEARS)
Janice E. Beard
Carol Sue Bloomquist
Loretta L. Bunn
Walter E. and Delilah C. Clark
Barbara Lynn DuBray-Benstein
Gail P. and C. Thomas Fennimore
Cheryl D. Gunter and Mr. Paul A. Rabe
Steve Hoelscher
Sheila R. Littleton
Orgill, Inc.
Regina and Charles Remaklus III
Marilyn Albright Roofner and Larry C. Roofner
James C. and Yvonee B. Sensenig
Liese A. and Oswald H. Thomas III
Joe Wayne Walker, Jr.
Vicki Davidson Wiman
ARCHWAY PARTNERS (5 – 10 YEARS)
Rhonda K. Allen
Ashley Nations and David C. Bradford
Jacque Lynn Bradford and Jeremy Lynn Bradford
Tamika D. Catchings
Barbara H. and Michael J. Connolly
Sheila L. Criswell
Judith Gayle Davis
Jerry J. and Margaret H. Faerber
Jami E. Flick
Ren S. Hammer
Ashley Harkrider
Lee C. and Jamie L. Henwood
Kathleen McLoughlin and William Dell Kenwright
Knoxville Downtown Sertoma Club
Nikki Jean Koehler
Kazunari and Mary Archer Koike
Stephanie B. Lancaster
Sara Ogilvie Leonard
Carol Likens
Jillian Heather McCarthy
Myra M. Meekins
Curtis P. Meier
Terri Flake O’Neill
Kevin Joseph Reilly and Jill L. Passano
Stephen J. Pike and Dr. Orli Weisser-Pike
Rebecca and Jeremy Reynolds
Charles Atlee Robbins, Jr.
Elaine Perry Robinson
Gary D. and Debra W. Salansky
Darren and Marcia Sharp
Dion and Coleen Stevens
Randy and Katrina Stevens
Jane Diddle Thompson
Vanessa S. and James M. Torrence
Amber L. and Jeromey S. White
Kelly Rene Yeager
Anne H. and Michael S. Zachry
We are grateful to the following Lifetime Partners for their generous support through the years.
Jeffrey and Sally Jo Baerman
Tamika D. Catchings
Barbara H. and Michael J. Connolly
Denise P. Descouzis
Barbara Lynn DuBray-Benstein
Jerry J. and Margaret H. Faerber
Cheryl D. Gunter and Paul A. Rabe
Bill and Peg Helms
Michael W. and Michelle L. King
Knoxville Downtown Sertoma Club
Knoxville Scottish Rite Foundation
James Douglas Lewis
Memphis Health Information Management Association
Orgill, Inc.
Dr. Rebecca and Mr. Jeremy Reynolds
Sidekick
Anne H. and Michael S. Zachry
Thanks to the CoHP Advisory Board!
The College of Health Professions Advisory Board was launched in 2020 to assist Dean Alway in developing opportunities that are consistent with the missions of education, research, clinical care, and public service. This work ties directly into the dean’s priorities and strategic plan for the college. We are grateful for the time, talent, and financial support provided by our advisory board members.
• Ashley Nations Bradford (DPT, ’09)
• Kim Coffey (BS, ’77; BS Physical Therapy, ’78; MEd, ‘87) physical therapist and owner, Pediatric Physical Therapy Services
• Denise Higdon (BS, ’91) WorkSite Consultants
• Barbara DuBray-Benstein (PhD, ’03) professor emeritus, UTHSC
• Mary C. McCain (BA ’69, MPA ’82) professor emeritus, UTHSC
• Damaris F. Cook (BS, ’01, AUDD ’05)
• Logan C. Owens (DPT ’09) District Operations, Results Physiotherapy
Thank you to our Legacy Society Members!
Mr. Curtis and Mrs. Leigh Chesney Barnes
Ms. Linda A. Caldwell
Estate of Sharon Diane Carney
Dr. Brenta G. Davis
Dr. Denise P. Descouzis
Dr. Barbara Lynn DuBray-Benstein
Dr. William R. Frey
Miss Judy W. Griffin
Mrs. Denise F. Harvey
Estate of Judy Duane Haston
Estate of Mary L. Luper
Estate of Charles S. and Lucille H. Moon
Estate of Raymond Skinner
Estate of Dr. Tyler Young
Office of Development and Alumni Affairs
62 S. Dunlap, Suite 500 Memphis, TN 38163
CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED
SAVE THE DATES
COLLEGE OF HEALTH PROFESSIONS ALUMNI WEEKEND
November 10
Alumni Awards Dinner and Program | Hilton Memphis
November 11
Class Reunions for Classes of 1983, 1993, 1998, 2003, and 2013 | Locations and Times TBD. Want to volunteer as a class reunion chair? Contact Blair Duke at bduke@utfi.org.
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY ALUMNI AND STUDENT MIXER
July 20 | 6:00–8:00 PM
Owen Brennan’s | Memphis, Tennessee Registration Details Coming Soon
2023 GOLDEN GRADUATE HOMECOMING
October 25-29
Honoring the 1973 College of Health Professions graduates.