The Columbus Dispatch

COMMUNITY

- Jviviano@dispatch.com @JoAnneVivi­ano

small groups of OSU students with various agencies, where they work with staff members to define needs, develop and implement programs to address those needs, and then evaluate the programs’ success. It’s all designed to help them learn the value of addressing health disparitie­s by taking on the responsibi­lities of caring for not just individual­s but also communitie­s.

“We are using this as a servicelea­rning approach toward community engagement,” said Dr. Mark Troyer, who directs the program. “We feel that this is a skill set that the medical students need to use later on in their lives to be effective doctors, not just with individual­s but with individual­s within a population.”

For example, students have created projects to address hepatitis B among the Asian population, evaluate methods used to reach HIV/ AIDS patients, reduce smoking in pregnant women and help senior citizens navigate the health-care system.

At Focus Academy, medical students have formed SHINE — Somali Health Initiative for Nutrition Education. They teach lessons each Friday, and the Ohio State University medical student Rana Elgazzar, left, discusses an answer with seventh-grader Koureysho Ahmed, 12, right, and other students in the SHINE program at Focus Learning Academy of Northern Columbus. middle schoolers eventually visit the College of Medicine. That trip helps give the youngsters hope that they can go to college, said secondyear medical student Mubarik Mohamed of Columbus. (And, he said, on a recent trip, the youngsters saw a heart dissection.)

Nearly all of the roughly 500 students at the K-8 charter school in the Northland area are of Somali descent. Some have parents who can’t read and write in their own language, or speak English, so higher education might seem out of their reach, said Principal Travis Budd.

The medical students, he said, serve as powerful role models.

Seventh-grader Sukeyna Jama remembers lessons on the five senses and bacteria and

viruses. The 12-yearold said students once were asked to design a healthy dinner plate on a budget, and another time they played a game with a hula hoop. She also learned a song that she sang to her parents.

Madonna Enwe, a second-year OSU student form Maryland, said SHINE has helped her learn how to make complicate­d medical topics understand­able, and she said it has helped cement her desire to work with young people.

“Being able to teach them and seeing them light up when we teach them a new concept — they’re actually learning something they’re going to apply in their lives,” she said. “This really affirms what I want to do with my life.”

Rana Elgazzar, a second-year

OSU student from Tennessee, said medical students know that patient education and preventive medicine are important, but getting to practice those things makes a difference.

“It really allows us to see the value in putting in the time, making sure that we dedicate the time in our future practice to give back to the community,” she said.

The medical school admits about 200 students each year, and Community Health Education can lead to them collective­ly making a significan­t difference during their careers, said Dr. K. Craig Kent, dean of the medical school.

“We’ve taught every one of our 200 students each year that they have an obligation in their communitie­s,” he said. “We’ve taught them how to think about the community, and then hopefully, over the next 30-plus years of their careers, they’ll go out and contribute in that way.”

Dr. Daniel Clinchot, the medical college’s vice dean for education, said that he was taught in medical school in the 1980s that patients in certain situations needed to be referred to services, so they might have received a handout or a visit from a social worker. Today’s students, knowing the challenges that patients might face in getting those extra services, are learning to engage with patients in a different way.

Troyer said community-based programmin­g had long been seen as the domain of public health, and bringing it into a medical-school curriculum — integratin­g lectures on population health with community-service requiremen­ts — is unusual.

“This is a skill set,” Troyer added. “We’re not trying to make doctors who are epidemiolo­gists; we’re not trying to make doctors who are social workers. But we’re trying to make better doctors. And better doctors are ones who understand the spectrum of how patients interrelat­e with their population­s and how to help them navigate.”

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