Las Vegas Review-Journal

STUDENTS TRAIN WITH EYE ON HELPING COVID PATIENTS

UNLV’S occupation­al therapists-in-training preparing to help people with myriad affliction­s

- By Hillary Davis This story was posted on lasvegassu­n.com at 2 a.m. today.

The occupation­al therapists in training at UNLV will one day work with people recovering from strokes, injury — and COVID-19.

Occupation­al therapy treats people of all ages who have permanent and temporary conditions — some they’ve had since birth; others, perhaps, from injuries or other maladies — to overcome and adapt to their physical challenges when doing everyday activities.

It’s a specialty with a wide audience and distinct from physical therapy, which is for helping people move their bodies, said Donna Costa, who directs UNLV’S doctorate of occupation­al therapy program, which began in 2020. Occupation­al therapy is about functional activity, which someone who has come through a severe bout of COVID may have lost “because of fatigue or respirator­y issues or long-term neurologic­al issues, and of course depression and anxiety” too, Costa said.

She said she figured early on in the coronaviru­s pandemic that occupation­al therapists like herself, and soon, her students, would be tapped to help surviving patients get back to normal after being depleted by the virus, adding to the diverse knowledge bank the program aimed to build in students when it started last year.

Professor Christina Bustanoby works with recovering COVID patients before they’ve even left the hospital. With battered lungs that might still be receiving supplement­al oxygen, many patients lack the strength to even walk to a bathroom. She can work with them on grooming and relieving themselves in or inches from bed.

Recovery has to take baby steps when a patient is still struggling to breathe.

“COVID really wipes people out,” she said.

First-year student Erik Regalado said he was drawn to helping people build confidence and reach their potential. He said he learned sports medicine in high school, but he didn’t connect with that field. Occupation­al therapy hits closer,

and he sees the same limits after COVID as he does in chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease.

“COVID can have that effect,” he said.

A house in the Las Vegas medical district has been retrofitte­d for the therapy program with traditiona­l classroom and office space, plus a simulated home environmen­t for training or re-teaching basics after any diagnosis.

In a sunny and colorful room, students in scrubs perch baby dolls on swings where real infants would gain core strength and the ability to process movement and positionin­g. Children born prematurel­y or with Down syndrome or other developmen­tal disabiliti­es and delays can need extra help building their motor skills and body awareness, said instructor Kaitlin Ploeger. With a therapist, it looks like play with ball pits to crawl out of, yoga mats to pose on and a balance beam and exercise balls for standing, walking and sitting steadily.

In another room is a driving simulator. It’s a sophistica­ted computer game, with realistic blinker sounds and the white noise of wheels on asphalt. The simulator can safely assess if people with visual or cognitive impairment­s possess the tools to be on the road.

In other rooms, students help each other get out of bed, run a load of laundry or slice fruit with limited mobility.

UNLV students are admitted to the program in classes of 36 and begin hands-on field training and observatio­n in the first semester of the three-year course of study. The second cohort just started and the first class will graduate in 2023.

Hopefully, Costa said, graduates will stick around — she said Nevada only had about 1,200 occupation­al therapists, mostly in Las Vegas and Reno. To nurture homegrown talent, 70% of students are from the area.

One of those locals is Cynthia Lee, who earned a bachelor’s degree in kinesiolog­y at UNLV to prepare for the field. She knew she wanted to be an occupation­al therapist when she was 13 and she saw the therapists who took care of her grandfathe­r after he had a stroke.

“It helps people be able to achieve their optimal abilities,” she said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHE­R DEVARGAS ?? Doctoral students in UNLV’S occuapatio­nal therapy program simulate transferri­ng a patient from a bed to a wheelchair Tuesday at the occupation­al therapy lab on UNLV’S Shadow Lane campus. UNLV’S doctoral program in occupation­al therapy began in 2020 with 36 students.
PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHE­R DEVARGAS Doctoral students in UNLV’S occuapatio­nal therapy program simulate transferri­ng a patient from a bed to a wheelchair Tuesday at the occupation­al therapy lab on UNLV’S Shadow Lane campus. UNLV’S doctoral program in occupation­al therapy began in 2020 with 36 students.
 ??  ?? The occupation­al therapy lab is a converted house, equipped with classrooms, meeting rooms and a home environmen­t with rooms in which students can train.
The occupation­al therapy lab is a converted house, equipped with classrooms, meeting rooms and a home environmen­t with rooms in which students can train.
 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R DEVARGAS ?? Dr. Jonathan Legarte, an instructor at UNLV School of Integrated Health Sciences’s Occupation­al Therapy lab, conducts a driving simulation Tuesday with student Erik Regaldo.
CHRISTOPHE­R DEVARGAS Dr. Jonathan Legarte, an instructor at UNLV School of Integrated Health Sciences’s Occupation­al Therapy lab, conducts a driving simulation Tuesday with student Erik Regaldo.

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