News Release
May 31, 2005
Contact: Jane Shaskan, 860-679-4777
e-mail:
shaskan@nso.uchc.edu
Youth Health Service Corps Wins National Award
UConn School of Medicine and Department of Public Health Share Honor
FARMINGTON, CONN. – The Connecticut Youth Health Service Corps,
designed to recruit high school students into health care careers, is
the first-place winner of the 2005 Linkage Award presented annually by
the Council on Linkages Between Academia and Public Health Practice in
Washington, D.C. The award recognizes exemplary community-based
collaborative activities between public health agencies and academic
institutions.
“Connecticut AHEC and the Department of Public Health are working
together to help students recognize and avoid the pitfalls that can
prevent them from reaching their full potential,” said corps program
co-founder Bruce Gould, M.D., associate dean for primary care and
program director of the Connecticut Area Health Education Center at the
UConn School of Medicine. “We are also addressing the problem of
workforce shortages and the under-representation of racial and ethnic
minorities in the health care professions.”
Martha Okafor, chief of the Family Health Section, Branch of Public
Health Initiative, and program co-founder, said the youth corps was also
part of an innovative strategy that addresses teen pregnancy through
skills building and career development. “Students learn about public
health, personal health, and community service,” she said. “They are
exposed to meaningful ways of spending their time, and they learn about
new opportunities available to them in the workforce.”
Currently, more than 20 high schools and 60 volunteer sites are
participating in the program throughout Connecticut. The schools are in
urban, suburban and rural locations, and the students volunteer at
community health centers, dental clinics, homeless shelters, and
long-term care facilities. Training for the health corps involves a
nine-part curriculum, including courses in infection control methods,
confidentiality and privacy rules, disease prevention, cultural
competency, homeless awareness and CPR. As of March 2005, 116 students
have been trained as volunteers, almost doubling the first-year goal in
the first six months of the program.
"The ability to start and quickly grow the program was possible
because of our regional presence and reputation of working with youth
interested in pursing a career in health care,” said Tricia Harrity,
Northwester Connecticut AHEC executive director and statewide health
careers manager.
A newly constructed database will monitor the number of corps’
students who choose a career in a health related field. “Within two to
four years, the database will tell us the number of corps’ students
entering health professions compared to their non-corps peers,” said Dr.
Gould. “This award shows support and recognition for our efforts and our
program, and, most importantly, for the work of our health service corps
volunteers.”
“The corps is an effective way of providing many young people with a
future and hope,” said Ms. Okafor. “We want them to know they have
choices.”
The corps is implemented through the state’s AHEC program centers in
Hartford, Waterbury, Bridgeport, and Norwich. Other collaborators in the
project include the Connecticut Primary Care Association and the
National Health Service Corps.
The University of Connecticut Health Center includes the schools of
medicine and dental medicine, John Dempsey Hospital, the UConn Medical
Group and University Dentists. Founded in 1961, the Health Center
pursues a mission of providing outstanding health care education in an
environment of exemplary patient care, research and public service. To
learn more about the UConn Health Center, visit our website at
www.uchc.edu.
Note: News professionals are invited to visit the Office of
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www.uchc.edu/ocomm/ for archived news releases and other
information.
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