ÐãÉ«app

Health

Jeremy Jarzembak explains a simulation mannequin's vitals to students

Technology and computers have always interested ÐãÉ«app College of Nursing Senior Lecturer Jeremy Jarzembak, RN, who co-coordinates the Olga A. Mural Simulation Lab and teaches informatics at both the undergraduate and graduate level.

Student/Teacher conversation animation

What do you do if a student in class or at work starts showing up distracted, less talkative or stops showing up at all? Ignore it? Ask about it? But how do you start that conversation?

GSNA students with donator

The Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) program at ÐãÉ«app Geauga Campus is a rigorous academic environment that requires serious discipline, study, practice, and testing. It’s also an intimate environment of friends, instructors, and mentors who support each other from one challenge to the next, and inspire one another to reach out for the benefit of others. As a student association, they give back to the community through fundraising, strengthening the nursing program for future students and charitable outreach throughout the region.

Occupational therapy assistant is a growing career field.

Targeted at widening students’ educational opportunities in preparing them for a career in occupational therapy, the ÐãÉ«app at Ashtabula Occupational Therapy Assistant (OTA) Technology program recently announced the creation of a hybrid model, combining online learning with more convenient on-campus laboratory sessions.

A woman sits at a table with small children eating healthy food.

A ÐãÉ«app researcher with a background in safety training models — and a very personal motivation — has devised a method to help some children with food allergies stay safe, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) just granted him the funding to test it.

A man in a chef's hat shows young children how to make food.

Science is complex, and it’s difficult to discuss it with children under the best circumstances; it’s even more difficult when they are hungry. Two ÐãÉ«app researchers may have cooked up a way to solve both of those problems, and the National Science Foundation just awarded them a three-year, $1.3 million grant to determine if their recipe works.

Shannon Gardiner is one of 400 volunteers from 40 nations who staff the Africa Mercy in Guinea, West Africa.

Kent State alumna Shannon Gardiner, BSN ’09, RN, CCRN, always knew she wanted to help people, but also longed for a career that would provide flexibility along the way. After a few years working in Akron Children’s Hospital’s pediatric Intensive Care Unit, followed by some time as a traveling nurse, a Google search for volunteer opportunities led her to Mercy Ships, who own and operate the largest non-governmental hospital ship in the world.

Associate Professor of Dance Joan Meggitt teachers a class for Parkinson's disease sufferers.

A ÐãÉ«app professor is conducting a collaborative research project to study how ballroom dance can help to manage the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease.

This summer, ÐãÉ«app will host faculty from the Center for Koru Mindfulness for a three-day teacher certification workshop at its Kent Campus.

This summer, ÐãÉ«app will host faculty from the Center for Koru Mindfulness for a at its Kent Campus. This training, which will take place from Aug. 1-3, will equip trainees with the skills that they need to teach Koru Mindfulness, an evidence-based curriculum specifically designed for emerging adults.

Sharon Ware and Jasmine Long

Jasmine Long and Sharon Ware grew up in different neighborhoods, but their connection transcends residential blocks. Broken barriers now build the dreams to change their communities for the better.