ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē

Nurses inspire nurses: ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē health care students step up during time of crisis

By College Relations | April 8, 2020
   

Jodi Kemp, ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē Practical Nursing student
Jodi Kemp, ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē Practical Nursing student

ā€œThe community needs us.ā€

Itā€™s a statement that has become a rallying cry for a class of ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē practical nursing students who are only weeks away from completing their studies and joining their teachers on the front line.

And like many other ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē health care students and grads, their actions are speaking even louder than their words in the face of COVID-19.

Jodi Kemp is one of those students who is stepping up in a big way to support her community, her profession and the nurses she is training alongside at Kelowna General Hospital this month.

The Kamloops native and veteran health care worker is letting nothing stand in the way of becoming a nurse and providing the care she knows is needed in her community now more than ever.

ā€œIā€™ve got one shot at this, so Iā€™m determined to get it done,ā€ says Kemp, who embraced the challenge of going back to school after a 20-year career as a care aid. It has already been a path not without sacrifice ā€“ for now, it means living hours away from her husband and son who remained back home in Kamloops.

ā€œIā€™ve always been passionate about health care and about helping people. This has been a dream of mine for a long time,ā€ she says. ā€œAnd in light of whatā€™s going on the world right now, Iā€™m more convinced than ever I made the right choice. I want to make a difference in someoneā€™s life ā€“ in many peopleā€™s lives.ā€

Kemp is on track to step out into the workforce soon as an LPN, although COVID-19 threatened to put that dream on pause last month.

In mid-March, Kemp and 27 of her LPN classmates in two programs learned that the College was faced with having to postpone their preceptorships ā€“ the final stage of their practical training ā€“ out of concern for their safety when COVID-19 popped up and cases began to mount in the Interior Health region.

The students made an impassioned plea to instructors to allow them to continue their training without disruption. They penned a letter to the College, and rallied support from their fellow nurses at KGH, to demonstrate both the need for their skills on the front line, and the profuse safety protocols theyā€™ll be following to minimize risk.

ā€œOur first priority is always the health and safety of our students,ā€ says Yvonne Moritz, Dean of Science, Technology and Health at the College. ā€œWe took the time to consider the matter in great detail with Interior Health. They determined and advised us that the risk to students was low and that as long as proper safety protocols are followed, proper PPE is worn, and all the right steps are taken that our students are very much needed and should be allowed to complete the final stages of their program if they choose to. We also ensured students knew they had the option to say no if they didnā€™t feel comfortable going out on practicum or preceptorship right now.ā€

After being given the go-ahead from Interior Health, the College allowed the PN students to return to their preceptorships to complete the final days of their program. All 28 of them chose to take the step.

Kemp and her peers have high praise for both their mentors from Interior Health and their instructors at ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē for the way in which theyā€™ve prepared students to deal with the added stress of learning and working in a pandemic.

ā€œThe nurses weā€™re doing our preceptorships with have been incredible,ā€ says Kemp. ā€œIt takes a special kind of person to do your job well in a situation like this, while also providing those learning opportunities, taking the time to really prepare us for what weā€™ll soon be doing on our own.

ā€œIā€™m very grateful for the excellent training Iā€™ve received on practicum and at ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē, and now Iā€™m just looking forward to getting out into the workforce and supporting those nurses who need us right now, who need the relief. We need them today and tomorrow theyā€™ll need us, is the way I look at it.ā€

The PN students arenā€™t the only ones stepping up during the crisis. Students in the Health Care Assistant (HCA) program have also stepped forward to continue their practical training if they choose to.

Adds Moritz: ā€œOur students are part of the health care system and for them to be out there at this time is a testament to their dedication to a career in helping others. While health care workers are always needed, now is the time they are needed most.ā€

Itā€™s a message echoed by Interior Health.

ā€œWeā€™re fortunate to have access to well-trained graduates and soon-to-be graduates from ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē to fill the needs for front-line health care professionals. We have scores of ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē alumni working with us, and itā€™s inspiring to hear that those following in their footsteps are equally as passionate and dedicated to providing outstanding care in our communities,ā€ says Mal Griffin, VP of Human Resources at Interior Health.

ā€œThese nursing students are truly an inspiration,ā€ says Maxine DeHart, Campaign Ambassador for the Our Students, Your Health campaign to build a state-of-the-art new Health Sciences Centre at ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē.

ā€œAs a community we are all in awe of our front line health care professionals and to see this same commitment in the students is incredible.ā€

Reflecting on the importance of ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ēā€™s Health Sciences Centre, DeHart says ā€œthe impact of COVID-19 on our community has made me reflect hard on the importance of health care education. Now, more than ever, we need to invest in the next generation of health care workers. This $18.9-million Centre is vitally important to our communityā€™s health. These are challenging times for us all, but I hope the community will continue to get behind our fundraising campaign so we can open the doors in September.

ā€œHelp us train the next generation. These are the people who will care for us. We never know when we will need that support, whoever we are.ā€

To learn more, or to donate, visit .



Tags: Practical Nursing, Health and Social Development, ĀŅĀ×ŗ£½Ē Foundation

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