UAA Professor Elizabeth Driscoll and Lisa Zatz, a UAA student who has graduated, examine a child at a rural Alaska Head Start.

UAA Professor Elizabeth Driscoll and Lisa Zatz, a UAA student who has graduated, examine a child at a rural Alaska Head Start.

Nurse practitioner students help rural Head Start kids

  • By TRACY KALYTIAK
  • Sunday, September 4, 2016 1:01am
  • Neighbors

Five years ago, Janet Schultz had a stubborn problem to solve: More than 40 Head Start programs in rural Alaska were in danger of losing funding because they couldn’t meet a federal requirement to give their students comprehensive health-screening exams within 90 days of enrolling.

Schultz, a nurse practitioner and Head Start senior official, knew the program helps kids under the age of five who are growing up in economically disadvantaged homes — especially in isolated places like rural Alaska villages. It helps children learn and thrive, nurturing their health and preparing them for social challenges they’ll face in kindergarten.

“Head Start needed those screenings and nurse practitioner programs have trouble finding placements of students, getting education needed for their students,” Liz Driscoll, an adjunct professor at University of Alaska Anchorage’s School of Nursing, said. “She put the two together in the middle of the night — aha! — a mutually beneficial partnership.”

Schultz cold-called the UAA School of Nursing in December 2012 and spoke with UAA’s Professor Dianne Tarrant and Assistant Professor Naomi Torrance about engaging the family nurse practitioner students in a project that would keep those rural Head Start programs open.

“It’s a big deal if the Head Start center loses its funding,” she said. “They put together a conference call with UAA and the Head Start grantees in Alaska.”

Those grantees often couldn’t comply with the required health screenings because they couldn’t transport — fly — the children to a clinic in a larger village or town, timing the trip with an often-temporary visit from a healthcare provider.

Out of that conversation grew Project Partnership for Alaska’s Kids — better known as Project PAK. Since its start in 2013, four UAA faculty and about 15 students have traveled to Head Start locations in Allakaket, Fort Yukon, Grayling, Hooper Bay, Kwethluk, Nunapitchuk, Pilot Station, Tok and Venetie.

“In their first clinical semester, they’re in their pediatric rotation and this is a pediatric opportunity,” Driscoll said. “We can take three or four: We’re limited by the small size of the planes and the funding. One trip is on the road system — to Tok. All the rest have been remote.”

 

‘The kids really

took to us’

The biggest challenge has always been finding the $3,000-$5,000 needed to pay for each trip, Driscoll said.

“The cost depends on how many places we go, whether it’s a regularly scheduled flight or charter,” Driscoll said. “We always sleep in the Head Start building itself and bring all our own food — sleeping bags and a cooler of food. When we go to some of these remote villages, the Head Start center may be one of four or five public buildings. The Head Start buildings always have running water, bathrooms and a kitchen.”

A grant paid for equipment that tests for lead exposure and anemia “which are two requirements for Head Start because they greatly affect brain development,” Driscoll said, “but money is also needed to buy tongue depressors, reflex hammers and other supplies needed to provide the physicals.

“The basic things you need to do a well-child physical,” she said. “It ends up being 50 pounds of equipment. We have to have gloves, lancets to prick the finger and get a drop of blood, a variety of colorful bandaids with cartoon characters on them for the children to choose from.”

The one treatment they provide is dental fluoride varnish for teeth, “otherwise, we are only doing well-child visits,” she said. “If we do identify a concern — an active ear infection or rash — we make a referral to whoever is the healthcare provider to that child.”

Nunapitchuk was a favorite place to visit.

“It’s a much slower pace than Anchorage and everyone there knows everyone else because it’s such a small place,” she said. “The kids there really took to us. After we spent the day seeing the kids at the Head Start center, we went for a walk after dinner and they just were eager to show us all over the village — where they like to play, showed us the school. They were really welcoming, and excited we were there.”

Palassa Beans manages Pilot Station’s Early Head Start.

“What [the UAA instructor and NP students] do is they have the staff set up appointments for them, set up a schedule,” said Beans, whose grandchild has received an examination from UAA students. “The Early Head Start home visitors and the family advocate are there to help. They really do let us get caught up with our requirements. It helps. And they’re really friendly.”

 

‘I was immediately

interested’

Monica Perez-Verdia is a family nurse practitioner pursuing her master of nursing science degree at UAA. She’s originally from Mexico City, but lived and attended school in Texas for many years. While working in Texas, she got to know some traveling nurses who were coming to Alaska for summer work.

“I had always wanted to come to Alaska,” she said. “I came for a vacation and absolutely loved it. I moved here the following summer with those nurses. At the end of their contracts, they all left, and I stayed. I ended up going to nursing school here at UAA.”

During orientation to the graduate program at UAA, she learned a select few people would be able to take part in Project PAK. She had never visited rural Alaska, despite the fact that her husband was raised in Barrow and frequently travels to rural areas for work.

“I was immediately interested in the opportunity not only to travel to rural Alaska — which I had always wanted to do — but for additional pediatric experience doing physicals,” she said.

Monica called former students and the faculty to clarify packing needs and clinical preparation.

“We took a small plane, which was actually very fun,” she said. “One of my cohort classmates was with us, as well as two students in the cohort ahead of us. We were accompanied by one faculty member, who has been on numerous trips. Beyond the usual pediatric school-related materials, we watched and read material regarding dental care for this trip.”

Monica says the trip gave her more confidence going into her pediatric rotation.

“I was able to work with a student that was one year ahead of me in the program and who had been on a trip in the past,” she said. “We were able to do exams at a less intense pace than in a clinic. Doing multiple physicals back to back for various age groups was a fantastic way to reinforce learning.”

Project PAK made it possible for Monica and the group to provide small children in rural areas with a head-to-toe physical as they entered Head Start.

“[That] will set them up for success as they enter school,” Monica said of Head Start. “Early learning is such an important part of early education, especially in rural Alaska. Bringing exams to rural areas is really important in areas where it may not have occurred otherwise. I believe we went out there and made a long-term difference for families.”

• Written by Tracy Kalytiak, University of Alaska Anchorage.

More Neighbors

Guy About Town: 30,000 maps of Juneau

Scouts go on 217-mile high adventure trek

Living & Growing: What the Interfaith Council brings to the table

Thank you Juneau for your random acts of kindness

More in Neighbors

Visitors look at an art exhibit by Eric and Pam Bealer at Alaska Robotics that is on display until Sunday. (Photo courtesy of the Sitka Conservation Society)
Neighbors briefs

Art show fundraiser features works from Alaska Folk Festival The Sitka Conservation… Continue reading

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski meets with Thunder Mountain High School senior Elizabeth Djajalie in March in Washington, D.C., when Djajalie was one of two Alaskans chosen as delegates for the Senate Youth Program. (Photo courtesy U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s office)
Neighbors: Juneau student among four National Honor Society Scholarship Award winners

TMHS senior Elizabeth Djajalie selected from among nearly 17,000 applicants.

(Photo by Gina Delrosario)
Living and Growing: Divine Mercy Sunday

Part one of a two-part series

A handmade ornament from a previous U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree. (Photo courtesy of U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree)
Neighbors briefs

Ornaments sought for 2024 U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree The Alaska Region of… Continue reading

(Photo courtesy of The Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska)
Neighbors: Tunic returned to the Dakhl’aweidí clan

After more than 50 years, the Wooch dakádin kéet koodás’ (Killerwhales Facing… Continue reading

The 2024 Alaska Junior Duck Stamp Contest winning painting of an American Wigeon titled “Perusing in the Pond” by Jade Hicks, a student at Thunder Mountain High School. (Photo courtesy of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)
THMS student Jade Hicks wins 2024 Alaska Junior Duck Stamp Contest

Jade Hicks, 18, a student at Thunder Mountain High School, took top… Continue reading

(City and Borough of Juneau photo)
Neighbors Briefs

Registration for Parks & Rec summer camps opens April 1 The City… Continue reading

Easter eggs in their celebratory stage, before figuring out what to do once people have eaten their fill. (Photo by Depositphotos via AP)
Gimme A Smile: Easter Eggs — what to do with them now?

From Little League practice to practicing being POTUS, there’s many ways to get cracking.

A fruit salad that can be adjusted to fit the foods of the season. (Photo by Patty Schied)
Cooking for Pleasure: A Glorious Fruit Salad for a Company Dinner

Most people don’t think of a fruit salad as a dessert. This… Continue reading

Pictured from left to right are Shannon Easterly, Sam Cheng, Alex Mallott, Edward Hu, Leif St. Clair, Peyton Edmunds and Shelby Nesheim. The five students in the middle are the Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé team that won the Tsunami Bowl in Seward on March 22-24. (Photo courtesy of National Ocean Sciences Bowl)
Neighbors: Team of five JDHS students wins Tsunami Bowl

Five students from Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé won the Tsunami Bowl,… Continue reading