天美传媒

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Health is top priority at Adelphi, and students and the Division of Student Affairs are leading the way, with collaboration from faculty and the Center for Health Innovation.

天美传媒 has long been a health leader, from the , the oldest nursing program on Long Island, to the cutting-edge founded just five years ago. Health on campus has long been a priority as well. The is especially proactive in supporting mental and physical well-being. Faculty, staff and students also regularly work together to promote a healthier Adelphi. But this year campus health is at the forefront like never before thanks to the Healthy Campus 2020 Initiative.

, a list of laid out by the American College Health Association, outlines objectives for everything from reducing the number of students who say lack of sleep is harming their academic performance to increasing the number of students who report eating five fruits or vegetables a day. Mental health, violence prevention, fitness鈥攖he goals run the gamut, and Adelphi is pushing toward all of them in exciting new ways.听


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天美传媒 is taking a comprehensive approach to health in support of the national Healthy Campus 2020 initiative.

Students Take the Lead

In 2017, Adelphi鈥檚 (SGA) will roll out a new 鈥淗ealth Week.鈥 Every weekday will have a theme: Healthy Meal Mondays, with $5 healthy-meal deals; Take Care Tuesdays, focused on self-care, with activities like meditation and painting for stress relief; Workout Wednesdays, with new campus fitness offerings; Trust Your Instinct Thursdays, focused on safety and preventing sexual assault; and Financial Fridays, with events related to financial health and career navigation. In every area, students are calling on the expertise of faculty and staff to round out their offerings.

The Health Week concept was developed by a Health and Wellness Council of the SGA and has generated a lot of enthusiasm already. 鈥淓verybody seems to be into it,鈥 says SGA President Samantha Herskowitz 鈥18. 鈥淧resident Riordan, our deans and provosts鈥e have a lot of faculty support.鈥

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Jacqueline Cartabuke, director of Health Services within the Division of Student Affairs, has worked with her team to convert the Health Center into a medical office that provides primary care to students.

Health, at Your Fingertips

Jacqueline Cartabuke, director of within the , feels that same enthusiasm for the direction campus health is headed. 鈥淭his is a wonderful time to be part of the campus culture and have the ability to be change agents,鈥 she said.

When Cartabuke arrived at Adelphi in 2008, she converted the into a medical office that now provides primary care to the student body, and all along Health Services鈥 efforts have aligned with Healthy Campus 2020 goals, she said. But Adelphi鈥檚 reaffirmation of its commitment to Healthy Campus 2020 this year under is making a significant difference.

鈥淏ringing Healthy Campus 2020 to the forefront will assist all of the amazing offices on campus that already do so much and help to publicly display our work and collaborate to make our outreach even bigger to the campus community,鈥 said Cartabuke.

One aspect of Healthy Campus 2020 in which Adelphi is already shining is Health IT. Through Adelphi鈥檚 Health Center and Health Portal on , students can see their medical records, schedule their appointments and send and receive secure messages with their health providers. That鈥檚 accessibility perfectly in line with Healthy Campus 2020鈥檚 goals.

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The Division of Student Affairs supports student mental health through the many programs and services of the Student Counseling Center.

Helping Hands

Students, faculty and staff at Adelphi aren鈥檛 just working to make it easier for individuals to improve their own health. They鈥檙e working to create a community that helps one another and meets Healthy Campus 2020 goals along the way.

This past September, Carol Lucas Ph.D. 鈥13, director of Counseling and Support Services within the , and Greta S. Tiberia, M.S.W. 鈥05, coordinator of Substance Abuse Counseling within the , were awarded the for their efforts to support students who are coping with drug and alcohol addiction issues. As just one small part of this work, the offered an Opioid Overdose Prevention training in October, teaching attendees how to administer the reversal agent Narcan. Similar Opioid Overdose Prevention trainings are set to take place for nursing students this December and again in February.听

Adding to the ways to help, the Student Counseling Center also offers a bystander training for suicide prevention throughout the spring and fall semesters, teaching attendees how to 鈥渜uestion, persuade and refer鈥 someone who might be suicidal.

Students are training for larger-scale emergencies too. In early November, undergraduates enrolled in participated in a disaster simulation with Meghan McPherson, assistant director of Adelphi鈥檚 Center for Health Innovation and part-time faculty member in Adelphi鈥檚 Emergency Management program. Over the course of the evening, the 60 students played roles as triage rescue crews, victims, observers or evaluators in a train wreck, a bombing and a car crash on the Southern State Parkway, gaining experience they can call on in real-life emergencies.听

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Jessie Klein, Ph.D., associate professor, collaborates with the Center for Health Innovation on Creating Compassionate Communities, an outreach program aimed at eradicating bullying.

Reaching Past the Gates

While Healthy Campus 2020 limits itself to the health of students, faculty and staff, as a research university and a regional partner for health, Adelphi also clearly looks beyond its own community.

Faculty and students from the School of Nursing and Public Health, the and the Gordon F. of Advanced Psychological Studies are deeply engaged in healthcare issues in Suffolk and Nassau counties, but faculty from other schools are also joining the effort.

In early November, in partnership with , Deborah Little, J.D., Ph.D., associate professor of sociology, and Margaret Lally 鈥82, associate professor of theater, presented 鈥,鈥 a course on exploring disability through theater and spoken word, to 75 guidance counselors, social workers and other local school personnel.

In early 2016, Associate Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice Jessie Klein, Ph.D., in collaboration with the Center for Health Innovation, launched the , which provides empathy training and skill building for teachers, students and caregivers to help eradicate bullying. The program is now in four schools, and the Center for Health Innovation plans to take this program nationwide.

The Center for Health Innovation鈥檚 work stretches on from there, leading the , with the Nassau and Suffolk County Offices of Emergency Management, and much more. But in the end, their work also comes back to students.

The Center for Health Innovation is currently developing The Health Innovations Living-Learning Community for students who have a personal or professional interest in or focus on health innovation.

Elizabeth Cohn, Ph.D., executive director of Adelphi鈥檚 Center for Health Innovation, recognizes a new charge on campus, galvanizing all this work. 鈥淎delphi is very dynamic right now, and that makes it very exciting,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he energy is palpable听in both students and faculty.鈥


For further information, please contact:

Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director
p 鈥 516.237.8634
e 鈥 twilson@adelphi.edu

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