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  • McQueary College of Health and Human Services

Innovating hands-on learning

April 28, 2023 by Jonah Rosen

Nursing students work in the simulation lab in the O’Reilly Clinical Health Science Center.

Investing in resources to give students hands-on learning opportunities is a top priority for MCHHS.

One of the resources is the Simulation (SIM) Lab located in O’Reilly Clinical Health Sciences Center.

The SIM Lab is a controlled hospital environment with real machines and mannequins used to simulate a real-life health care experience.

“The main purpose of the SIM Lab is to give students going into health care professions a chance to interact with the health care environment before they are thrown into their profession,” said Alexis Curran, MCHHS simulation coordinator.

“We create a scenario where it may be something they will see in the hospital. This will help prepare them for patient care.”

How the lab operates

Students use the SIM lab starting in their junior year. Faculty members monitor and control the lab.

The lab has a control room. Faculty and lab techs will sit inside and observe. They’ll also control the mannequin and the cameras.

“The lab uses a recording system so students can watch in a different room and help critique each other.”

The lab has several hospital rooms to replicate different scenarios. They include:

  • Medical surgery room.
  • Clinical room.
  • Intensive care unit (ICU).
  • Maternity room.
  • Pediatric room.

Continuing to evolve

To give students more real-life scenarios, the SIM Lab continues to be upgraded and used in different situations.

“Last fall, we also started using simulated patients (SPs), which are human actors who take on a patient profile to make the scenario seem more realistic,” Curran said.

“Our students don’t perform skills like catheters or NG tubes on our SPs, but they have been a great asset for helping our students learn communication skills, and students have reacted positively to working with a live person.”

The goal for the future of the lab is to have departments within the college collaborate to give students more diverse experiences that are as realistic to the patient care setting as possible.

Learn more about MCHHS resources

Filed Under: Nursing Tagged With: MCHHS Spotlights, McQueary College of Health and Human Services, Spotlights, students

2022-2023 MCHHS faculty promotions

April 11, 2023 by Jonah Rosen

Students celebrated Fountain Day on April 11, 2023. Jesse Scheve/Missouri State University

This year, McQueary College of Health and Human Services (MCHHS) recommended 12 faculty members for promotion. All 12 have been approved!

“Achievement of tenure and/or promotion takes a great deal of sustained effort and commitment. I’m proud to offer congratulations to those who have reached this important milestone,” said Dr. Letitia White-Minnis, MCHHS associate dean.

Faculty promotions

These faculty were promoted:

  • Jill Layman: Anesthesia, tenured and promoted from assistant professor to associate professor.
  • Nicole Gorley: Biomedical sciences, promoted from instructor to senior instructor.
  • Kimberly Ireland: Communication sciences and disorders, promoted from clinical assistant professor to clinical associate professor.
  • Jennifer Pratt: Communication sciences and disorders, promoted from clinical associate professor to clinical professor.
  • Kathryn Patterson: Nursing, promoted from clinical associate professor to clinical professor.
  • Shelley Carter: Nursing, promoted from clinical assistant professor to clinical associate professor.
  • Natalie Allen: Public health and sports medicine, promoted from clinical assistant professor to clinical associate professor.
  • David Carr: Public health and sports medicine, promoted from associate professor to professor.
  • Allan Liggett: Public health and sports medicine, promoted from clinical associate professor to clinical professor.
  • Jaime Gnau: Public health and sports medicine, promoted from clinical instructor to clinical assistant professor.
  • Dana Paliliunas: Psychology, tenured and promoted from assistant professor to associate professor.

Learn more about MCHHS

Filed Under: MCHHS News Tagged With: MCHHS Spotlights, McQueary College of Health and Human Services

Celebrate Occupational Therapy Month

April 11, 2023 by Strategic Communication

OT students pose for Spirit Week, faculty-student swap day.

If you hadn’t heard, April is Occupational Therapy (OT) Month and the whole department at Missouri State University has been going all-out to show their pride! 

“OT month encourages students to be educated on the importance of OT and the difference OT professionals can make in someone’s life,” Sarah Bolton, class of 2023, said. 

Students and faculty have been excited to celebrate everything OT-related and are appreciating their field of study. Events range from Spirit Week, which recently concluded, and the OT Open House, coming up on April 24. 

Dr. Ashlea Cardin, OT associate professor, passionately believes in everything occupational therapists can accomplish. 

“Someone once said OT is where science, creativity and compassion collide – what a perfect description for the profession I love,” Cardin said. “Occupational therapists are highly skilled and expertly trained practitioners who also seek to connect with clients through creative and meaningful problem solving.” 

Calling all sports fans!

Spirit Week 

Beginning the month with Spirit Week, OT students dressed to the nines to show who had the most spirit. 

Sports Day

OT students showed their team spirit, decked out in their favorite team’s sportswear. 

OT is their dream job.

Faculty and Student Swap Day 

Students came to class dressed as their faculty members. Faculty dressed up like students. 

PJ Day

You know the drill! Snuggies and pajama pants only, please. 

The height of fashion.

Throwback Thursday 

Outfits ranged from togas that were worn in the days of ancient Greece to layered tank tops and tees that everyone wore in the cringey early 2000s. 

OT Open House 

April 24, 4-6 p.m., O’Reilly Clinical Health Science Center 

Enjoy free food and drinks while learning about current research and networking with OT students and faculty. This event is sponsored by MSU Pi Theta Epsilon. 

Informative and fun 

Occupational Therapy Month is a time for students and faculty to come together and celebrate their profession or future profession. 

“OT month encourages students to share the best parts of the occupational therapy profession and helps others to learn what occupational therapists do,” Jessie Lorts, class of 2023, said.  

“I love helping others who have lost their ability to be independent with daily activities that are often taken for granted.” 

Learn more about the department of occupational therapy

Filed Under: Occupational Therapy Tagged With: McQueary College of Health and Human Services, Spotlights

Best friends work together on writing project

March 31, 2023 by Strategic Communication

What if you had the opportunity to write a textbook alongside your best friend? 

Drs. Danae Hudson and Brooke Whisenhunt, professors in the department of psychology, did just that. 

Hudson (left) and Whisenhunt (right) pose with their first textbook, “Psychology.”

Not their first rodeo 

Hudson and Whisenhunt’s first joint-textbook was “Psychology,” written specifically to be used for introductory psychology classes. 

Over the course of redesigning PSY 121 (Introductory Psychology), Hudson and Whisenhunt built a relationship with Pearson. This led to them being asked to write their first textbook. 

While initially hesitant, the duo saw the benefits of taking on this major project. 

Sole authors, Hudson and Whisenhunt spent many hours and long nights putting together this extensive textbook and swore they’d never do it again. 

Little did they know they’d be collaborating again, just a few years later. 

Inside “Psychological Disorders” 

They wrote “Psychological Disorders” for the “Abnormal Psychology” course.

Whisenhunt (left) and Hudson (right) pose with their second textbook, “Psychological Disorders.”

Hudson and Whisenhunt were already using this textbook for their classes when Pearson asked them to write the fifth edition.  

While textbooks usually go through a revision process every two-to-three years, “Psychological Disorders” hadn’t been updated in almost 10 years by the time it was handed off to Hudson and Whisenhunt. 

The biggest change they made was the title, which was originally “Abnormal Psychology.” 

“It was incredibly important to us that the textbook reflected the best tone and voice for today’s students and educators,” Whisenhunt said. 

“Even changing the title was a huge overhaul because the entire first chapter was devoted to identifying what’s abnormal and what’s not.” 

Standing out 

Both “Psychology” and “Psychological Disorders” are integrated digital textbooks. This means they have interactive elements to create a richer learning experience for students. 

“It was important for us to consider how a student would best learn and understand the material,” Whisenhunt said. “Students don’t tend to read their textbooks or come to office hours, so we tried to find a way around that.” 

To the duo’s knowledge, their textbooks are the only ones in the country that have “adaptive pathways,” which are based around known, difficult concepts. 

If a student is confused on a topic, they’re then directed to a video created and authored by Hudson and Whisenhunt to better explain the topic. This is done through using novel examples to simulate a discussion between a student and their professor.   

Roughly 90% of students who’ve been in class with Hudson and Whisenhunt have expressed that they had a positive learning experience with the integrated digital textbooks. As such, they would like to see more in their future classes. 

Best friends for over 24 years 

Hudson and Whisenhunt have twin careers and have always had a special bond. 

“Doing life and professional work together has been unreal. I can’t imagine doing it with anyone else,” Whisenhunt said. “We have cherished the opportunity to write these two books together.” 

“This is intense work. I don’t think I could’ve done it without my person,” Hudson said. 

They were lucky enough to be side-by-side throughout graduate school, being employed by Missouri State at the same time and even having offices that are next door to each other. 

Bringing back an old tradition 

A long-standing tradition for them in graduate school was getting fried chicken from Raising Cane’s and watching must-see television every Thursday night.  

They’ve decided to celebrate their second textbook’s publication by going to the Cane’s in Springfield and revitalizing their tradition, nearly 20 years later. 

“None of our families or children are invited,” Whisenhunt said. “We’re just going to hang out, eat chicken and watch television together.” 

Learn more about the psychology department

Tagged With: Dr. Brooke Whisenhunt, Dr. Danae Hudson, MCHHS Spotlights, McQueary College of Health and Human Services, Psychology

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