Galena health academy saves lives and communities |
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Adele Stickman from Nulato, center, practices using her sense of touch to assess a medical emergency. William Pilot, kneeling to the right of Stickman, is ready to help. Amber Vaska, Aniak Dragon Slayer and co-instructor, provides guidance.
Jana Demoski, right, and Sean Wolf practice an emergency first responder scenario.
Students "feel the heat" as they practice handling fire hoses with the help of Galena Air Force Base personnel.
Galena Summer Health Academy students and staff: back row, left to right, Angelina Askoak, Andrew Attla, Amber Vaska, Sean Wolf, William Pilot, LeAnn Bifelt, Steven Grundberg, Pete Brown, Candace Kruger and Adele Stickman. Front row, left to right, Margaret Wilson, Mary Turner, Sue Hills, Jon Kangas, Jana Demoski and Vera Mountain. | ||||
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During the camp's three weeks, high school students from Anvik, Galena, Grayling, Huslia, Nulato, Ruby and Russian Mission pretended to rescue babies from burning buildings while blindfolded; learned to perform CPR and emergency first aid; rappelled off a water tower; practiced fire, water and ice rescue techniques; and heard from registered nurses, physician assistants and clinic managers about health careers. The academy, developed by Margaret Wilson of the University of Alaska Fairbanks College of Rural Alaska, was held at the Galena project education residential school June 7-25, 2004, and is part of the school's health education early discovery program. The academy encourages village high school students to seek careers in health-related fields, use their new skills by working with health aides and fire departments in their home villages, and earn college credit.
"I'm from the Interior and I feel more kids need to experience college," said Wilson, a CRA instructor. "Part of my job was to develop a summer academy," Wilson said. "We got one going in Kotzebue last May and in July (2003) I visited Pete Brown's Aniak Dragon Slayer camp. We talked about working together so the kids could get college credit and the program could be more in-depth."
With funding from INBRE, Wilson brought Brown and Dragon Slayers Falina Morris, Mary Turner and Amber Vaska to the Galena academy to teach a week of fire, water and ice rescue skills and help teach a 60-hour emergency trauma training (ETT) course-the same training required of fire and police personnel. INBRE is funded by the National Center for Research Resources at the National Institutes of Health and encourages students in high school and college to consider careers in health and science. "These kids had no idea what they were getting into," Brown said with a chuckle. "They had no idea how intense it would be. They thought it would be three easy weeks. Career options in health During the first week students put in six 10-hour days exploring different health careers.
"As part of the requirements the students wrote a formal paper, for two college credits, comparing a health career with another career they were thinking about and presented that paper to the group," Wilson said. "I wanted them to compare education requirements, credentialing, recertification, working conditions, duties and responsibilities, salary, and overall advantages and disadvantages." Students were graded on their participation in class, the questions they posed to guest speakers and a journal of their thoughts and feelings about the program.
"Cooperation is part of village life. The first question the kids asked after a quiz was 'Did everybody pass?' Not, 'Did I pass?' They really understand team work," Lightfoot said. "We did lots of hands-on training and moulage-practice scenarios where you have a patient to assess and manage appropriately-with fake blood, fake bruises and fake wounds during the second week of the academy," said Lightfoot. Students who passed the 60-hour course earned three college credits through UAF's Emergency Services Program. "These kids were great, easily equal to any adult class I've had," said Lightfoot.
"The Galena Air Force Base fire department helped out by setting fires in their training building and all the kids had to handle the fire hose and feel the heat," Brown said. "We want them to know how to make a difference in their community without a fire department," Brown said. Part of that difference comes from "emphasizing personal responsibility rather than punishment," said Jodie Hettrick, public education coordinator for the Alaska State Fire Marshal's office. Hettrick taught a fire prevention course at the academy. "The teenagers in villages can tell other kids to behave, and the kids listen to them," Hettrick said. "Seventy-five percent of our child fire fatalities in Alaska are two- to three-year-olds playing with matches and lighters," Hettrick said. "We can take advantage of the relationship between teens and other children by teaching teens which fire prevention lessons are appropriate for which ages." "The most important thing that's happening because of the Aniak Dragon Slayers and the Galena Summer Health Academy is that kids learn they can make a difference by learning skills in their own communities. They don't have to go to Anchorage or Fairbanks," Hettrick said. Academy support | ||||||
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Photos courtesy College of Rural Alaska | ||||||
Contact newsroom@uaf.edu for more information. Newsroom | Marketing and Communications Last modified March 28, 2008 by Marketing and Communications Web Developer. | ||||||