Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 101, No. 103, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 3, 2016 Page: 2 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Page 2 — Weekend Edition. July 3.2016. Sapulpa Daily Herald
! Ill S\l’l I P\ l>\M1 III KM I)
Community
Email your new* to: editor#»apulpaheraldonline.rom
WILLS • TRUSTS • ESTATE PLANNING
• PROBATE • GUARDIANSHIP
mark McCullough
ATTORNEY AT LAW
918-224-4449
20 N. Water Street
Sapulpa
01) medical ‘speed dating’ for health
Hickerson law Office
NOW OPEN
IN SAPULPA
There is no substitute for experience!
Criminal Defense • Personal Injury
• Divorce • Probate
day For A FREE Consultation
Call
Sfea 0. Mfctorsea
Trial Attoraay
•18-230-2843
710 E. Dewey St
OlsndhickarsonQgmail com
r 8** Pi*VT Of me mKWINu fcOvc rev ic#u*
Bible Study
Every Thursday
Evening 7 p.m.
at
515 E. Dewey
Beginning Sunday, June 5th
Services will start at 11:00 a.m.
pi*
* C H U R C H
Undenominational
Pastor Dave Self
918-248-2226
Contact Your Advertising Rep
today!
Bob, Lyn or Becky
SPECIAL TO THE HERALD
“Hi, I'm Nancy. I'm
studying to be a doctor."
"I'm Jim . I'm going to be
a pharmacist.”
It’s not your typical speed
dating encounter. While the
activity starts much the same,
these sessions are not about
meeting your future spouse.
Instead, they locus on meet-
ing future colleagues across a
variety of health professions.
It's all part of an inter-pro-
fessional training program at
the University of Oklahoma
Health Sciences Center. The
goal is to enhance education
for students who plan careers
in health, to advance care and
to empower patients.
“We are somewhat unique
here at the OU Health
Sciences Center with so
many health profession stu-
dents of many different disci-
plines training on the same
campus. This allows us to
pull students together for this
very important training." said
Dale Bratzler. D.O., M.P.H.,
professor and associate dean
of the OU College of Public-
Health. Bratzler also is part
of the core faculty for the
interprofessional training
programs at OU.
Peggy Wisdom and the
Wisdom Family Foundation
played an important role in
the development of the inter-
professional training pro-
gram at OU.
“I am reminded that we
learned in the 20th century
that it takes a village to raise
a child. Now. in the 21 st cen-
tury. we are learning that it
takes inter-professional
teams of health care profes-
sionals to keep us well when
we are still healthy, keep us
safe when we are acutely ill
or guide us in getting well
when we become unhealthy."
Wisdom said.
Inter professional training
at OU launched several years
ago with a small pilot project
called EPIC - Empowering
Patients through Inter-profes-
sional Collaboration. Based
on the success of that project,
the effort has expanded sig-
nificantly. Now, it provides
hundreds of students from
diverse health professions
with the opportunity to par-
ticipate.
“Traditionally, health pro-
fessions education has been
SUBMITTED PHOTO
LAURIE RAY, STUDYING TO become a physicians assistant and medical studen
Dalton Fazekas discuss patient care This pair was among hundreds of students
meeting with future colleagues in the medical professions at the University of
Oklahoma s Health Sciences Center.
provided in discipline-specif-
ic silos w ith limited opportu
mties for students to interact
or learn about and from other
disciplines with whom they
will need to interact in prac-
tice," said Bratzler.
It’s been more than I0
years since the Institute of
Medicine's committee on
health professions noted that
while health professionals
are often asked to work
together in interdisciplinary
teams to manage patients
with complex health condi-
tions, they are seldom edu-
cated together or trained in
team-based skills. For the
past three years, though,
Bratzler and a team of core
faculty at the OU Health
Sciences Center have worked
to change that.
Faculty from the OU
Colleges of Medicine,
Nursing. Pharmacy. Public-
Health. Allied Health. Social
Work, and Dentistry worked
together to create inter pro-
fessional learning opportuni-
ties that would allow students
to work in teams similar to
the healthcare teams in which
they would work during clin-
ical , 'actice. To date, some
ol its biggest proponents
have been the students them-
selves.
"I think having a common
ground with people from
other professions allows you
to work more closely and to
greater effect than you would
if you did not participate in
this training." said Preston
Scaburg. a participant in a
pilot version of the program.
“It was probably the most
valuable education experi-
ence I had in my whole med-
ical training."
Students like Seaburg also
helped faculty refine the
training and expand it
"During the two years of
the EPIC pilot, we were able
to develop the educational
content that did lend itself to
training a large segment of
the student body here."
Bratzler said.
Gathering more tnan 850
students from a variety of
health professions was one
thing. Intioducing them to
one another was completely
another. And that's where
speed dating comes in. This
time, though, the speed-dat-
ing exercise is designed to
allow students to learn more
about each other's health
professions and to begin
gaining an appreciation for
the work they each will per
form to keep their patients
healthy and safe.
“This is a communication
experience as well as a leam-
ing-about-one-another expe
r i e n c c
This is an early exercise in
helping the team' develop
effective communication
skills," said Martha Ferretti.
PT. MPH. FAPTA. who also
was a leader in developing
the inter-professional train
ing program at the OU
Health Sciences Center.
Bratzler said it's clear that
inter professional training is
here to stay and that it is
becoming increasingly
important
"I think it is becoming
much more common, and
many of the health profes-
sions accrediting programs
now require this type of
activity to be a part of the
educational curriculum." he
said.
BUMP UP
CD SPECIAL
23-MONTH CD
11-MONTH CD
■J///s/United
SPEND LIFE WISELY
Sapulpa Dewey
315 East Dewey Avenue
Sapulpa. Oklahoma 74066
918 224 5151
Sapulpa Main •
Ji15 South Mam Street
Sapulpa. Oklahoma 7406b
918 227-3030
firstunitedbank.com/0KC
1.. T ---r |— r - • »««■» > •• Mr. ™n» * Imn* C01 » * mw 1m
jM>MA>MA«inaM«,iRlkWNa«MNk< MmMB mbbm< tm* ■ tlOflg • mm mom/ NAMkknuki
mt mm *« ■"» 'w «m um «m • tMW mm a mm**, m> a im* «•> t. *» «n>
OR |B I»H—P BP fB itxbpM Ml MBmI EMfeV RE
New Cancer treatment
SPECIAL TO THE HERALD
The prognosis for men suffering from Prostate cancer
has changed momentously for the better over recent years.
An estimated 2.850,139 men are living with prostate can
cer in the United States, according to recent studies. They
are “lucky" victims, one might say, because of break
throughs that may potentially allow doctors to stop the dis-
ease in its tracks, according to the Association of Mature
American Citizen.
One treatment. Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy
(SBRT). for example, is reported to have a nearly 99 per-
cent cure rate. Dr. Raquibul Hannan. Assistant Professor of
Radiation Oncology at the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, led a study that
revealed just how effective this new means of pinpointing
radiation delivery is.
“The high cure rate is striking when compared to the
reported five-year cure rates from other approaches like
surgery oi conventional radiation, which range between 80
to 90 percent, while the side effects of this treatment are
comparable to other types of treatment.”
100% Gas B8 No Ethanol
91 Octane - Premium
Watch: News • Weather • Sports - While You Fuel At The Pumps
~ There’s Only One ~
POP ShoppC Dell 2020 S. Hickory, Sapulpa
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Brock, John. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 101, No. 103, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 3, 2016, newspaper, July 3, 2016; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1508397/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.