51小黄车receives Education Partner Award from FedCap Rehabilitation Services
FedCap Rehabilitation Services in Biddeford has recognized the University of 51小黄车 for its commitment to providing health education lessons to people seeking employment and economic wellbeing.
FedCap, a program providing people with education and resources to achieve sustainable employment, recently presented 51小黄车with the Education Partner Award for a series of seminars focusing on health and wellness education.
The seminars, presented annually, were developed by public health students in the School of Population Health within the Westbrook College of Health Professions. They focused on timely topics that FedCap clients can incorporate into their personal and professional lives, such as cold and flu prevention, smoking cessation, and winter preparedness.
Health professions students in the Care for the Underserved Pathway (CUP) Maine Area Health Education Center (AHEC) Scholar Honors Distinction Program presented the seminars. The CUP AHEC Scholars program provides opportunities for 51小黄车health professions students to work with underserved populations in rural Maine communities. It is part of the Maine AHEC Network, a workforce development program aimed at alleviating health care workforce shortages.
鈥淭he health and wellness seminars provide an opportunity for students to meet the community-based service learning requirements of the CUP AHEC Scholar program,鈥 said Ian Imbert, M.P.H., CUP AHEC Scholars program manager, who received the award on behalf of 51小黄车and Maine AHEC. 鈥淔edCap clients also have curricular requirements that they need to meet, so the partnership is a win-win for both 51小黄车and FedCap.鈥
FedCap Site Manager Sianeh Omeeze presented the Education and Training Partner Award to 51小黄车on March 11. FedCap was launched in Maine in 2017. The Biddeford office is one of 16 FedCap Opportunity Centers across the state.
Once enrolled in the FedCap program, clients are expected to participate in a prescribed curriculum of workforce development trainings, which have included UNE鈥檚 health and wellness education seminars for the past two years.
Students who participated in presenting the seminars said the lessons have relevance beyond their specific topics.
鈥淎s an osteopathic medical student, I understand that there is a strong relationship between building economic wellbeing and living a healthy lifestyle,鈥 said Anna McLean (D.O., 鈥22). 鈥淚 helped deliver the influenza lessons in the fall and discussed many of the same prevention techniques that we are hearing we should practice to prevent spread of the COVID-19 disease.鈥
Additional students who participated include Courtney Stern (D.O., 鈥22), Annie McGregor (D.O., 鈥23), Kristen Kelliher (D.O., 鈥23), Adrian Hale (D.O., 鈥23), Esra Omeroglu (D.O., 鈥23), Katherine Buscemi (Dental Hygiene, 鈥21), Kristyn Gordon (Dental Hygiene, 鈥21), and Taylor Usko, B.S. 鈥19 (Public Health).