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Delivering Care to the Disenfranchised in Durban, South Africa

South Africa panel
Alumna Dr. Christine M. Bruzek-Kohler moderated the South Africa panel that also included faculty Drs. Keen, Blunt and Bruderle, senior Beth Fijal and alumna Ali Spicer.

 

Traveling nearly 9,000 miles from Pennsylvania to Durban, South Africa, 奶糖直播 College of Nursing students have since 2008 provided care to individuals in a province that records the highest prevalence of HIV/AIDS in the country 鈥 about 39.5 percent of those seeking care at a clinic in the KwaZulu-Natal province have been diagnosed with the disease that has overwhelmed the nation鈥檚 healthcare system.

鈥淚 saw how health is a product of systems 鈥 such as education, poverty or race,鈥 Elizabeth Fijal, a senior BSN student, said during a panel discussion, 鈥淒elivering Care to the Disenfranchised, Durban, South Africa,鈥 at the College of Nursing鈥檚 60th anniversary conference. 鈥淚 saw how apartheid and race relations impacted health. I saw how education impacted health 鈥 there was so much stigmatism and misinformation about the diagnoses of HIV/AIDS.鈥

Fijal was one of four panelists who spoke during the discussion, the others being Alison Spicer, 鈥11 BSN, RN, Assistant Professor Elizabeth Blunt, PhD, RN, APN, BC, and Clinical Assistant Professor Elizabeth Bruderle 鈥90 MSN, PhD, RN. During the panel, Assistant Professor M. Frances Keen, DNSc, RN, the interim director of the College鈥檚 Center for Global and Public Health, gave an overview of the South Africa program, and Rear Admiral (Ret.) Christine M. Bruzek-Kohler 鈥74 BSN, MA, EdD, RN, FACHE, a Board of Consultors member, served as the moderator.

鈥淲e gained in every aspect of our being,鈥 Dr. Bruderle said. 鈥淲e get so much more than we give鈥 You are really pushed beyond your comfort zone. It confirms and affirms why you are a nurse.鈥

The two students said it was especially moving to see nurses working at the Hillcrest Respite Center for HIV/AIDS patients, and both said their work as nurses in the U.S. has been dramatically impacted by the time they spent in South Africa.

鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing how many times I look back and realize how much I learned from what they鈥檙e doing there and their resilience and resourcefulness,鈥 Spicer said.

 

 

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