Hospital Volunteer at Dayton Children’s

My experience as a clinical hospital volunteer at Dayton Children’s Hospital in the summer of 2017 critically influenced my career trajectory. For the duration of the summer, I trained to assist doctors, nurses, and patients in the Surgery Department as well as the Emergency Department.

In the Surgery Department, I reported to the recovery area for patients undergoing an outpatient procedure before they were released to the care of their parents. In this role, I often prepped the rooms for a new patients, wheeled the unconscious patients in their beds into a recovery room, checked in when the doctors were not present, transported the patients out of the hospital to their cars via wheelchair after discharge, and then cleaned their room and any toys they may have used during their stay.

While assisting in the Emergency Department, my roles were largely the same though less defined. I would often spend my time sterilizing toys for the rooms and in the waiting room, directed patients to their rooms and from the emergency room to other departments or the pharmacy, and observed the interactions of doctors or nurses with the patients. Different from the surgical duties, I frequently entertained the kids and their parents alike while they waited for the doctors’ attention, which we all know can be a testy task in a crowded emergency room. Because of the high turnover of ill individuals in this facility, I felt that even my work to sterilize equipment was well received and necessary for optimal patient care.

When I am home during the school year and over the various breaks, I spend a few hours at the hospital to remind myself of the unseen work that contributes critically to the operation of healthcare.

Enlighten Anti-Human Trafficking

Enlighten mobilizes college students to confront human trafficking in Central Ohio through community events, narrative-based awareness, and direct civic engagement. Enlighten strives for a global culture of compassion in which the realities of human trafficking are not only known but actively challenged and ultimately eradicated.

Our founders became inspired to fight human trafficking after hearing a survivor, Theresa Flores, share her story with us at a speaking engagement in the spring of 2017. Since, we have brainstormed ways to join this struggle for freedom and autonomy for all in the Columbus area. We have collaborated with local non-profits, performed direct engagement with the survivors themselves, spread awareness on campus, and our scope continues to grow.

We hosted a Save Our Adolescents from Prostitution (SOAP) event on campus, which labeled over 1,000 bars of soap with information about human trafficking to be distributed in hotels and motels in high-risk areas. We later took a group of interested students to the Ohio Statehouse on Human Trafficking Awareness Day in January to hear from keynote experts from the Columbus community.

In February, we attended the Arnold Sports Festival in Columbus, Ohio alongside the founder of SOAP and human trafficking survivor Theresa Flores. Annually, the “Arnold Classic” brings thousands of bodybuilding enthusiasts to our area, and with it, the instance of trafficking skyrockets. Our members visited over 30 hotels in one day to distribute materials about human trafficking and distributed information about missing young girls from the community who may have fallen prey to trafficking. Amazingly, one of the hotel clerks actually had recently recognized one of the girls, and the authorities were contacted. Theresa Flores later spoke to a large group of students back on campus, sharing her personal story and motivating us to be enthusiastic in our fight.

In collaboration with a local non-profit and survivors, we created 200 informational flyers outlining the potential signs of human trafficking and resources to find assistance, and we travelled downtown to the specific streets where trafficking was known to have occurred to hang them.

Most recently, we hosted a public screening of “I Am Jane Doe,” a documentary that chronicles the battle that several American mothers are waging on behalf of their middle-school daughters who were victims of sex trafficking on Backpage.

Organizationally, we have elected an executive board, recruited multiple individuals from a diverse skill set in the anti-trafficking community to our advisory board, filed as an official student organization, and restructured our focus. Instead of strictly focusing on an educational curriculum to prevent trafficking, we have three main areas of focus: outreach with local survivors, legal advocacy for survivors, and educational events for the campus and community.

In the coming years, we hope so expand our recruitment to more students and find novel ways to approach this issue from the student perspective with outreach, legal advocacy, and public awareness.

 

Clinton Global Initiative University 2017

In October of 2017, I was fortunate enough to attend the Clinton Global Initiative University conference in Boston at Northeastern University. CGIU offers the opportunity for undergraduate and graduate students alike with measurable, sustainable, and impactful “Commitments to Action” that will genuinely confront a social issue in their communities.

I applied with our Eminence service project, Enlighten, and spent 3 days hearing the experience and advice of world class humanitarians, public servants, entrepreneurs, non-profits, and social issue advocates on the importance of civil engagement and the methods to maximize organizational capacity. We then returned back to Columbus and implemented some of the key ideas into our mission as a student organization. Speakers ranged from former President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Madeline Albright to public health pioneer Dr. Paul Farmer and olympic athlete Ibtijah Muhammad. I personally was so inspired by the words of Dr. Farmer that after reading his biography and account of his work in public health abroad Mountains Beyond Mountains, I significantly altered my career path to a public health focus, and even picked up a minor!

I am so excited to return to CGI this upcoming fall at Chicago University with Enlighten as returning attendees and continue to expand our scope and provide mentorship to younger organizations.