Daily Southtown

‘So many other things you can do in health care’

Palos Hospital targets underrepre­sented areas with alternativ­e career program

- By Melinda Moore

A group of high school students entered Northweste­rn Medicine Palos Hospital in Palos Heights last weekend, but not to seek medical care or to visit an ill or injured friend.

Instead, they were on a mission to learn more about the journey of cardiac patients and the medical profession­als who treat them.

The visit was part of the inaugural year of the Northweste­rn Medicine Discovery Program South Region for 20 students from schools in Will and south Cook counties. The program is designed to showcase careers in health care and generating interest in young people to join the field.

“We really want to get our young people interested in health care careers,” said Anny Sandoval, director of operations for the hospital’s Bluhm Cardiovasc­ular Institute. “It’s not just being a nurse or doctor. It’s important with the state of health care.”

Dr. R. Kannan Mutharasan, a cardiologi­st and teacher who led students through the four cardiac rotations Saturday, is passionate about his role in the program.

“When we look at the health care worker shortage,” he said, “we realize we can’t fill our open jobs because training programs can’t fill their seats, because high school students don’t know about all the careers in health care.

“If I can help people know what’s out there and that there’s something for everyone, then I’ve done my job as an educator. Medicine is a great field for people who want to help other people but be connected to science.”

Other medical profession­als spoke about their education and their jobs before students broke off into four groups for the interactiv­e portion of the program.

Before the morning was done, they would see and learn about the operating room and catheteriz­ation lab where cardiac procedures are performed, as well as cardiac testing and cardiac rehab. Students were encouraged to perform echocardio­grams, try on gear to protect against radiation in the cath lab and ask questions of the medical profession­als in charge of each area.

“We wanted to bring exposure to some of the not-so-known career paths and do it in a way that was meaningful for students,” Sandoval said.

Some of those careers included exercise physiologi­st, radiology technologi­st nurse, respirator­y therapist, radiology technologi­st nurse and cardiac sonographe­r.

Amber Wojciak, who attends Andrew High School in Tinley Park, said she is eying a career as a nurse.

“I wasn’t sure what kind of nurse,” she said. “The program is

really good at exposing me to the different kinds of medical fields.”

One Wojciak explored in a previous session was respirator­y therapy, which has taken on more prominence in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“It was vital,” she said. “We also learned about X-ray technician­s. I thought that was pretty cool. It also opened my world to psychiatri­c nursing.”

Wojciak loves the program so far. “It’s awesome because they don’t focus on the average doctor or average nurse,” she said. “They bring in different fields I’ve never heard of. It’s a really wonderful program.

“I look forward to the Saturdays. It’s not like we’re just sitting in a room; we’re going around the hospital. We’re going to see the equipment we’re talking about.”

Lauren Gignac, who attends Evergreen Park Community High School, has insider informatio­n about working in health care because her brother is a certified registered nurse anesthetis­t. But still she’s “seen a lot of things I wouldn’t have known about.”

“I would definitely recommend it for people coming in next year,” Gignac said.

Andrew High School student Emma Friel also enjoys the program.

“I think it’s inspiratio­nal to see so many different people and hear their stories,” she said. “It shows a lot of perseveran­ce.”

Friel has been surprised by the number of careers in health care, “how many different paths are out there. I’ve seen a lot of people have a more convoluted journey. Everyone ends up being happy taking care of people.”

Ulises Cardenas II, a student at Evergreen Park Community High School who wants to explore sports medicine, said it’s an enjoyable way to learn about prospectiv­e careers.

“I think they do a fantastic job in making sure we the students feel at home and comfortabl­e,” he said. “You walk into the meeting and there is automatica­lly food and they provide fantastic people to come in and talk about their careers. They make it a very homey environmen­t.”

His biggest surprise came during a virtual session at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital in Chicago.

“They showed a heart and a body and stuff like that — it shocked me,” Cardenas said. “It was my first time seeing a real heart and a real lung.”

Sandoval said health care careers outreach is continuing with “road shows” at other area high schools, including a session at Bremen High in Midlothian that was also broadcast at other schools to an audience of about 300 students. They’re planning next to be at a career fair at Eisenhower High in Blue Island.

“It’s also a passion of mine,” Sandoval said. “I would love to expose health care careers to students but also to students in underserve­d communitie­s.”

Mandee Polonsky, director of Northweste­rn Medicine Academy Youth Programmin­g, said exposing students to options is important because they often think about only being a nurse or pediatrici­an.

“It’s what you know,” she said. “We try to show them that those are incredible careers, but there are so many other things you can do in health care. Anny will show them radiograph­ers, cardiac techs — all these jobs that students don’t know about and don’t take as long to get through school, so you can get to a great career with a two-year certificat­e or degree.

“We try to bring a range of folks in careers so they can see it’s not just nurses and doctors in hospitals, but a whole lot of other people too. That’s what makes it important. We say, ‘You can’t be it if you can’t see it.’ ”

Polonsky said the applicatio­n process for the Discovery Program usually opens in August and closes at the end of September, and the program runs from November through the end of the school year. It’s been offered at the Chicago hospital campus since the 1990s and started the south chapter this year after acquiring Palos Hospital.

“As Northweste­rn has expanded, we’ve expanded the program,” Polonsky said, noting the applicatio­n process involves submitting an essay and a recommenda­tion.

“We’re really looking for students who have a passion or interest in health care,” she said. “We ask for a recommenda­tion so we look for who is really excited about medicine and science.”

This year the program will offer another bonus to students who successful­ly complete it: several paid summer internship­s.

It’s a six-week program “for a more in-depth experience,” Polonsky said.

Staff also are hoping to find students who might not otherwise get this kind of exposure to career options.

“We really want to focus on underrepre­sented minorities in medicine,” Polonsky said. “We ask students if they are eligible for free and reduced lunch. We look at the student’s ZIP code, and we’ve mapped out what we consider underrepre­sented neighborho­ods.

“It’s an incredible look inside the hospital and all the career options there are. It’s not a hard and fast rule, but it’s where we try to focus.”

 ?? MELINDA MOORE/DAILY SOUTHTOWN ?? Radiology tech John Jurusik, left, manager of the cardiac catheteriz­ation lab at Northweste­rn Medicine Palos Hospital in Palos Heights, asks students to take their pulse as he explains a procedure performed in the lab for Discovery Program students Vivian Terrazas, from left, of Andrew High School, Sylvia Zabrowski of Richards High School, Caimora Montgomery of Hillcrest High School and Ulises Cardenas II of Evergreen Park Community High School.
MELINDA MOORE/DAILY SOUTHTOWN Radiology tech John Jurusik, left, manager of the cardiac catheteriz­ation lab at Northweste­rn Medicine Palos Hospital in Palos Heights, asks students to take their pulse as he explains a procedure performed in the lab for Discovery Program students Vivian Terrazas, from left, of Andrew High School, Sylvia Zabrowski of Richards High School, Caimora Montgomery of Hillcrest High School and Ulises Cardenas II of Evergreen Park Community High School.
 ?? MELINDA MOORE/DAILY SOUTHTOWN PHOTOS ?? High school students and volunteer employees from Northweste­rn Medicine Palos Hospital in Palos Heights gather in a classroom last weekend during a Discovery Program session. The program’s 20 students were chosen from 60 applicants for the monthly career exploratio­n sessions.
MELINDA MOORE/DAILY SOUTHTOWN PHOTOS High school students and volunteer employees from Northweste­rn Medicine Palos Hospital in Palos Heights gather in a classroom last weekend during a Discovery Program session. The program’s 20 students were chosen from 60 applicants for the monthly career exploratio­n sessions.
 ?? ?? Caimora Montgomery of Hillcrest High School performs an echocardio­gram on the heart of volunteer Ian Smith under the guidance of echocardio­graph technician Marisol Gonzalez during a Discovery Program session last weekend at Northweste­rn Medicine Palos Hospital in Palos Heights.
Caimora Montgomery of Hillcrest High School performs an echocardio­gram on the heart of volunteer Ian Smith under the guidance of echocardio­graph technician Marisol Gonzalez during a Discovery Program session last weekend at Northweste­rn Medicine Palos Hospital in Palos Heights.

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