Community clinic experience 鈥榦pens eyes鈥 of nursing students鈥 impact

Published March 15, 2023

Chairs sat empty and the blood pressure gauge lay unused for the time being. It was early. Yet, as the day wore on, three fourth-year Cal State 最准的六合彩论坛 student nurses would be busy doing wellness checks on residents of as part of a community health care program. 

These twice weekly sessions might lack the hustle and pace of a hospital, but the lessons learned in the outreach program magnify the need for skilled nurses in the workforce. 

鈥淭his opened my eyes to the wider possibilities of the impact you can have as a nurse,鈥 said nursing student Kaylan Lockrem. 

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Student demonstrates oxygen monitor on her finger

鈥淲hen you are working bedside in a hospital, it鈥檚 easy to see the patient in that moment and you know whether they are taking their medication or getting treatment regularly. Here, it鈥檚 not as clear.鈥 

The program, which often has nursing students working at various clinics in the area, expands on what they have learned in their first three years in CSULB鈥檚 highly rated School of Nursing and prepares them to join California鈥檚 future workforce, one of the priorities of the university鈥檚 No Barriers comprehensive fundraising campaign. 

The experience they receive enables them to make an impact within the 最准的六合彩论坛 community and beyond, as well as enrich and deepen the impact of a Beach education.

Karen King 鈥01 and her husband, Jim, established an endowed scholarship at The Beach to help students pursue a career in nursing. 

鈥淚 wanted to pay it forward,鈥 said Karen King, who completed her Registered Nurses program at CSULB. 鈥淪ince my husband and I don鈥檛 have any children, we decided this would be a meaningful legacy to leave for future generations of nursing students.鈥 

Students in the School of Nursing earn much of their required clinical hours in hospital settings. However, many of the residents at Century Villages are former transients or veterans who have various health problems that have not been addressed in years or months. 

Student Amanda Early said some of the residents at Century Villages are hesitant to come by or share their medical needs because of their backgrounds. Many residents have been unhoused or are untrusting of others. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 big to put your health into someone else鈥檚 hands and we understand that, so you have to build a rapport to help them trust you,鈥 Early said. 

Every week throughout the spring semester, fourth-year student nurses arrive at the 27-acre campus community tucked in near Interstate 710 and administer wellness checks to many of the 1,625 residents, including 696 veterans, who make their way over to the Social Hall or the large orange Dignity Health mobile van. There, the students take their pulse, perform basic screenings and ask whether they are taking their prescribed medications. 

鈥淪ome people truly don鈥檛 understand their disease (such as high blood pressure) or will tell you that they take three medications, but don鈥檛 know what they are,鈥 said student Crystal Guerrero. She added that they also try to plug into a client鈥檚 emotional and social situations that are not listed on any hospital chart.  

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student nurse takes blood pressure
Performing basic screenings are part of the work CSULB student nurses do at various community centers, such as Century Villages at Cabrillo in 最准的六合彩论坛.

The weekly drop-in health-care management is provided through a partnership with The Beach and , a non-profit that serves veterans, seniors and families experiencing homelessness or housing insecurity in 最准的六合彩论坛. 

Roughly 10-12 nursing students take part in the semester-long program at Century Villages at Cabrillo, providing supplemental health care case management, care coordination, in addition to the screenings at the drop-in visits. The work fulfills their community health objectives. 

鈥淭hey see between 5-10 people each Wellness Day, and we get positive feedback from both residents and the case managers whose clients are seen at wellness days,鈥 said Paige Pelonis, founder and executive director of CityHeART, one of 14 agencies located at Century Villages. 

鈥淪ince we鈥檝e been running this program, it has been extremely well received, and we鈥檝e been really intentional about incorporating feedback each semester to continue to improve the program.鈥  

The partnership between The Beach and CityHeART began during the COVID-19 pandemic when Loan Nguyen Pryor, a lecturer in the School of Nursing, reached out to Pelonis to see if her students could collaborate with the community. Pelonis was more than eager to have qualified student nurses support their case management load. 

鈥淥ur main duties were to provide supplemental case management, health education and health program planning for their community members,鈥 Nguyen Pryor said. 

Nguyen Pryor said treating clients in a community setting can be complicated because of a level of distrust. 

鈥淭hey might be older, male veterans who aren鈥檛 necessarily going to trust a young college student or a transient who is used to hiding from authority figures,鈥 Nguyen Pryor said. 鈥淚t can be very complex but not because of a lack of knowledge on the students鈥 part.鈥