Jeanette Nisly Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/jeanette-nisly/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Mon, 07 May 2018 20:00:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Independent biology research takes 黑料正能量 junior to Guatemala to collaborate with alumna /now/news/2018/independent-biology-research-takes-emu-junior-to-guatemala-to-collaborate-with-alumna/ Wed, 02 May 2018 12:43:08 +0000 /now/news/?p=38104 Planes, buses, and taxis, sure 鈥 but the connections that landed 黑料正能量 junior Maria Yoder in Guatemala for a spring break research project were also of a different kind.

What follows is a tangible story of 黑料正能量鈥檚 global perspective: A current student connected through a faculty member to an alumna for a meaningful research experience.

Nurse Jeanette Nisly ’96 MSN ’14, speaking to an 黑料正能量 cross-cultural group in 2013, with cross-cultural leader and nursing professor Ann Hershberger to the right.

Last year, as a sophomore on a semester cross-cultural to Guatemala, Yoder jumped at an invitation from leader and nursing professor Ann Hershberger to learn about an 黑料正能量 alumna鈥檚 ongoing work there with , an international organization that in part trains villagers to become their own health-care providers.

That invitation was 鈥渢he seed,鈥 Hershberger said, for the biology and psychology double major鈥檚 biology independent research project this year.

The alumna, Jeanette Nisly, had also traveled on cross-cultural to Guatemala 鈥 two decades ago. After graduating in 1996, she returned there to stay. She is married to an architect restaurant owner, homeschools their children, teaches online nursing classes for 黑料正能量, and volunteers with Concern America. Nisly lives and works in Pet茅n, the department of Guatemala that makes up one-third of the country鈥檚 area but less than five percent of its population. Read more about her work in this 2013 article.

As part of her graduate nursing studies through 黑料正能量, Nisly had already assessed the effectiveness, safety and affordability health promoter services in area clinics. But she wanted to take another look, this time specifically focusing on diabetes control, to establish baseline data for continued evaluation when she hopes to enter 黑料正能量鈥檚 new doctor of nursing practice program next year.

Yoder could aid in the design, collection and evaluation of that research.

Diabetes in Pet茅n

In what Nisly described as 鈥渁n amazing learning activity,鈥 she and Yoder visited clinics to explore variables impacting the treatment of diabetes at clinics and evaluate patient access to care and knowledge about their disease, information that will prove useful to Nisly in her future studies.

Maria Yoder’s 2017 cross-cultural semester in Guatemala and Colombia was the impetus for her return, as the same experience was for Jeanette Nisly, who has lived there for 22 years.

The duo was particularly interested in diabetes, a disease on the rapid rise in Pet茅n. One theory is that its spread is a direct result of infrastructure development outpacing of health education, Yoder said.

Improved transportation 鈥渉as its goods and evils,鈥 Yoder said. 鈥淚f someone鈥檚 having a health emergency and they need to get to somewhere quickly, it鈥檚 really helpful that transport is so much easier. But then in a weird way, it鈥檚 causing this chronic disease.鈥

Better roads and transportation options mean increased access to the city 鈥 and increased consumption by rural residents of nontraditional foods such as sodas, chips and cookies. Knowledge about diabetes and its management is slower to arrive, leaving people vulnerable to the ill effects of processed, unhealthy foods.

鈥淗ealth education is just so crucial,鈥 Yoder said, 鈥渂ecause if people aren鈥檛 learning about what is diabetes and how to care for it at a young age, then it just doesn鈥檛 make quite as much sense when you鈥檙e older and trying to learn about it, when you already have the disease.鈥

Takeaways

The spring break trip gave Yoder a taste of research methodology, and Nisly said that she performed 鈥渋n a very sensitive manner, continuously evaluating how her work could best support our work.鈥 It also provided Yoder a chance to observe 鈥渢he challenges that affect marginalized populations in a developing country,鈥 Nisly said 鈥 and gave her a glimpse of Concern America鈥檚 model of healthcare.

Jeanette Nisly traveled to Guatemala for her cross cultural over two decades ago, and returned there after graduating in 1996. Her husband is Gullermo, and their daughters are Alyssa (left) and Jessica. (Courtesy photo)

It鈥檚 鈥渁 functioning, effective health program built with community volunteers who have little formal education,鈥 Nisly said, one that is so different from the U.S. medical model that 鈥渋t is difficult to understand and appreciate without really seeing it first hand.鈥

Yoder called it 鈥渞eally sustainable in practice,鈥 since as Guatemalan health promoters learn more 鈥 and teach others more 鈥 broader health know-how expands and spreads. More difficult care still relies on licensed physicians and hospitals, but the number of international health workers in Pet茅n has decreased, Yoder said, as local health promoters gain efficacy.

For example, Yoder learned of an international study exploring the effectiveness of different ways of administering a medicine in alleviating a common insect-caused skin irritation. The study started losing patients, though, because to access the test treatment, study subjects had to travel much more than was convenient.

And besides, health promoters already had a cure that worked for most patients: a hot-water bath.

The connector

Nursing professor Ann Hershberger 鈥 the group leader who introduced Yoder and Nisly 鈥 said that the student-alumna collaboration was an impactful opportunity for Yoder.

鈥淢aria is unique in that she is interested in a wide variety of issues,鈥 Hershberger said. 鈥淪he catches on quickly and is willing to work very hard.鈥

But in the bigger picture, Hershberger said, 鈥渂eing in Guatemala expanded her language and her understanding of the broader social, cultural and historical issues that impact a situation like diabetes, and living with a host family in the city, then several days in a rural indigenous village, along with language and context study, opened her to really understanding more than what a lab test tells her.鈥

Connections? You bet.

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Biomedicine grad students deepen compassion through cross-cultural stints /now/news/2014/biomedicine-grad-students-deepen-compassion-through-cross-cultural-stints/ Tue, 19 Aug 2014 19:36:44 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=21156 Graduate students in the medical field do not usually study abroad as part of their collegiate experience. But the two-year-old program at 黑料正能量 is designed to teach its students to look at biomedicine from a broad, multi-faceted perspective.

鈥淥ur philosophy is very different,鈥 said biology professor , PhD, who directs the program. 鈥淏iomedicine, health and healing need to be holistic. It takes more than biology, math and physic courses to understand the human person.鈥

Early visionaries decided to adapt the undergraduate cross-cultural requirement to biomedicine graduate students, giving it a medical twist. They believed that students needed exposure to the kind of diversity they were likely to encounter as biomedical professionals.

Chris
Chris Dreikhorn at a microscope in rural Guatemala

The result is a three-week summer course titled Cross-Cultural Health Care/Biomedicine in which students examine the鈥渄ifferentiation of resources, social, psychological, and spiritual ideas, contrasting the student鈥檚 personal culture with the explored culture,鈥 according the course description. It also explains that students may study in a variety of different settings, but are expected to keep reflective journals and ultimately write a paper on their experience.

黑料正能量 professors recommend two organizations to biomedical students. One, , works in Guatemala, and the other, , has several locations in Kentucky. Four of the eight students that went on biomedicine cross-culturals this summer went to one of these locations. (One of the leaders in Guatemala of Concern America is 黑料正能量 alumna Jeanette Nisly.) The other four went to Tanzania, Costa Rica, Panama, and West Virginia, as well as to rural Bluefield, Virginia.

The student鈥檚 experiences were 鈥渆ye-opening鈥 said both Matt Tieszen (Guatemala) and Asad Ali (Kentucky) in separate interviews. Both Tieszen and Ali spent most of their time shadowing healthcare professionals as they worked in clinics and hospitals, or did home visits.

鈥淵ou read about development work and the importance of improving things like maternal healthcare, but you don鈥檛 really get to see a lot of it in the States,鈥 said Tieszen, who went to Guatemala (with fellow student Chris Dreikhorn). Tieszen hopes to become a physician鈥檚 assistant and is interested in practicing health work in an international setting.

Ali (along with student David Abraham) traveled to Hazard and Whitesburg, Kentucky. For Ali, who is from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, rural Appalachia was just as foreign as crossing the border. He observed patients who came into the hospital with black lung from working in coalmines and shadowed a home health nurse on her house calls. 鈥淭here were diseases there you just don鈥檛 see in a city,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 thought that small isolated towns didn鈥檛 exist anymore, but the cross-cultural was an eye-opener; it showed me that they do.鈥

Cross-culturals are 鈥渘ecessary for training health professionals because there is such a diversity in healthcare,鈥 said nursing and biomedicine professor , PhD. She added that even though many graduate programs do not require cross-culturals, she believes that the healthcare immersion experience helps students to become more well-rounded, compassionate healthcare providers by exposing them to the kind of variety they are likely to encounter in practice.

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Students Earn Credits Off Campus, Learning in New Ways and New Places /now/news/2013/students-earn-credits-off-campus-learning-in-new-ways-and-new-places/ Wed, 15 May 2013 15:41:22 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=16956 Bekah Enns鈥 great-grandparents would not recognize the way she is pursuing an academic degree in 2013. For one thing, the senior major at 黑料正能量 spent last semester off campus, testing her work skills in her three academic minors鈥, political science, and .

Her experience reflects the new ways and new places that education takes place these days for 黑料正能量 students, including , , grant-funded research and practicums, and being part of a cohort at a site to which 黑料正能量 faculty come for classes.

Enns, from Winnipeg, Canada, lived in the nation鈥檚 capital at . While taking two courses at the center, she worked at , an interfaith coalition that seeks to end anti-Muslim sentiment in the U.S. As an intern with the organization, she used her experience as co-editor of , 黑料正能量鈥檚 student newspaper, to produce a bi-weekly newsletter, compile fact sheets, and otherwise pitch in on the group鈥檚 various initiatives.

An internship through 黑料正能量鈥檚 Washington center is more than just a taste of real-world work and an opportunity to develop contacts, ideas, and credentials for life after college. It鈥檚 also a launching point for deeper examination of the relationship between faith, values, and career.

鈥淗ow do we as Mennonites engage the state, and how much do we build our alternative systems?鈥 asked Enns, whose great-grandparents were part of the mass migration of Mennonites from Russia to North America during the turbulent years after the Bolshevik Revolution.

What relationship, exactly, should a person of faith hold toward advocacy in a secular environment, she wonders. Doesn鈥檛 faith like hers, one that prescribes action on behalf of 鈥渢he least among us,鈥 require this sort of entanglement with the wider world? But does this very entanglement with the wider world undermine the foundations of her faith?

Enns doesn鈥檛 have answers to her questions yet, but she knows she would like to continue doing faith-based advocacy after she graduates this spring. In fact, her plans at this point are to join .

During her four-year career at 黑料正能量, Enns took advantage of other non-traditional ways of learning.

Soon after she arrived on campus as a first-year student, she took an optional field trip with her Restorative Justice and Trauma class to a penitentiary, where she participated in three days of a Quaker-developed 鈥淎lternatives to Violence Program鈥 with inmates.

In her sophomore year, Enns satisfied 黑料正能量鈥檚 cross-cultural requirement by creating her own semester-long study experience in the African nation of Chad, where her parents were serving with .

For 10 weeks between her junior and senior years, Enns was part of a offered at 黑料正能量 that gives college students a chance to be an intern, mentored by a pastor, in a congregational聽 setting. Her assignment was at .

黑料正能量 offers a variety of other new ways and places for students to pursue their education.

More and more graduate students are taking their courses online, usually studying from their homes. The was the first unit at 黑料正能量 to offer distance learning, and now most of 黑料正能量鈥檚 also offer courses online.

Nurses who are studying for a master鈥檚 degree in nursing leadership and management don鈥檛 have to come to campus very often (or to .).聽 The program is designed for working nurses who need to maintain family commitments and remain on the job. Jeanette Nisly 鈥96, for example, is and raising two children with her Guatemalan husband.

Sometimes the students are surprised to see that online learning actually offers more interaction with class members and professors than a traditional classroom. A faculty advisor provides ongoing support for students and helps with logistics, technology questions, and other issues. Students also receive support from staff, graduate writing tutors, and library staff.

Other non-traditional learning opportunities at 黑料正能量:

  • , which offers a mix of study through the annual Summer Peacebuilding Institute at 黑料正能量 and experiences in the students鈥 home countries. The first group, in 2012, included 12 women from Africa and the South Pacific. They were selected from more than 100 applications. Funds for the program are provided by USAID and the German development organization, EED/Bread for the World.
  • . The latest example, announced in February, is a $20,000 grant from the United Service Foundation that will send eight undergraduates to foreign locations (Colombia and Iran in 2013), supervised by an 黑料正能量-linked mentor. The grants are for peacebuilding and development majors, who are required to complete off-campus practicums.
  • . Many of the students enrolled in 黑料正能量鈥檚 programs run from Lancaster, Pa., don鈥檛 actually go to classes at the center鈥檚 facility in a business park. Students in the pastoral studies program, for example, attend classes this spring at Lancaster Mennonite Conference offices or sites in Philadelphia, Hatfield, and Morgantown. The three-year program, called , is for new pastors or prospective pastors.
  • Taking trauma courses all over the world. In the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, established a program to help community leaders deal with the trauma of disasters and conflict. Called , the program has trained more than 7,000 people worldwide. The training seminars take place at 黑料正能量, across the United States, and all over the world in places like Lebanon, Haiti, and Mexico.
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This Nurse Hopes to Work Herself Out of a Job in Guatemala /now/news/2013/this-nurse-hopes-to-work-herself-out-of-a-job-in-guatemala/ Tue, 05 Mar 2013 20:03:35 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=16162 Even though Jeanette Nisly fell in love with Guatemala on a cross-cultural with 黑料正能量 (黑料正能量), she never would have dreamed that she would return four months after she graduated, marry a Guatemalan, have two children, and remain for 17 years.

Nisly, who majored in at 黑料正能量, is the in-country coordinator for the Guatemala operation of a nonprofit group, . Located in Pet茅n, the country鈥檚 largest department (equivalent to a large U.S. state), Nisly leads trainings that widely impact Pet茅n鈥檚 population of 650,000, 鈥 one that has experienced much violence, including death threats and murders of healthcare workers.

Guatemala, under its current unstable and corrupt political system, is not an easy place for Nisly to work in some respects, yet she is passionate about Concern America鈥檚 philosophy.

鈥淐oncern America trains local populations in health, education, agriculture, and/or environmental health (appropriate technology),鈥 according to its website. From its home base in Santa Ana, Calif., this international development and refugee aid organization aims to help local populations gain the knowledge and skills they need to staff and run their own fully functional systems.

Though she loves her work, Nisly looks forward to the day when she can offer her services elsewhere because Guatemalans are doing her work as well or better, she said in an interview via Skype in early January 2013. 鈥淓verything we do focuses on teaching and empowering other people to do things that maybe they didn鈥檛 realize they could do.鈥

The end of 2012 found Nisly training groups of health-promoting practitioners, who typically have attended local schools through grade 4, and midwives, many of whom are illiterate. These Guatemalans make a four-year commitment to study with Concern America for one week every two months. Between their studies, they put what they have learned into practice, attending to the health needs of some of the most marginalized populations in Guatemala.

The approach of alternating study and practice is one that Nisly herself is pursuing as a current 黑料正能量 graduate student, studying online for her . 鈥淎ll other [nursing master鈥檚] programs I looked at required leaving the country and the work in order to go to school, and I wasn鈥檛 willing to do that.鈥

She also knew that the 黑料正能量 approach to an MSN would be compatible with her own religious beliefs and lifestyle practices. Raised Mennonite, Nisly now works closely with the Roman Catholic Church, with which Concern America partners for its work in Guatemala.

With 500 midwives and health-promoting practitioners trained by the Catholic Church鈥檚 health program in Pet茅n, Nisly has seen basic health care rippling out to almost every hamlet of Guatemala. 鈥淭hey [the health promoters and midwives] provide most of the health care services for their communities,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know where [else] health-promoting practitioners are able to care for such a wide range of complex health issues.鈥

By the end of two years of training, these practitioners are able to attend to common digestive, respiratory, skin, urinary, reproductive, oral, traumatic (including basic suturing and tendon repairs), chronic (including diabetes, cardiac issues, and epilepsy), tropical disease and nutritional issues, says Nisly. 鈥淭hey are able to assist midwives in difficult births, like breech babies and postpartum hemorrhage. Their education includes a strong foundation in physiology, pathophysiology, and pharmacology.鈥

The Pet茅n program is widely viewed as a model one, causing observers from other Concern America projects around the world to visit in the hope of adopting the model to their situations, said Nisly.

The workers trained by Concern America are up against a system that does not work for or with them, Nisly said. For instance, health-promoting practitioners and midwives are taught to refer pregnant women with high blood pressure to a hospital for more care, but sometimes these women are sent home without treatment, where some have died. 鈥淥ne of the big challenges,鈥 she sighed, 鈥渋s not having a referral system that we can rely on.鈥

She leans on this insight once given to her: 鈥淭he only thing that is going to limit you, and what you can do here, is yourself.鈥 As a result, she has learned to tap 鈥渢he resources that are available to me,鈥 rather than 鈥渂eing limited by what I think I know and what I should be able to do.鈥

After graduating from 黑料正能量 in 1996, Nisly worked for a three years with before beginning her work with Concern America. She is fluent in Spanish and the indigenous Mayan language of Q鈥檈qchi鈥. She is the author of the first comprehensive health guide in the Q鈥檈qchi鈥 language, published in 2005. It is similar to the well-known manual 鈥淲here There Is No Doctor.鈥

An 黑料正能量 cross-cultural group led by and Jim Hershberger stopped in Pet茅n in February 2013 to see the work of Nisly and Concern America.

Although she functions in a leadership role, Nisly reiterated multiple times that, 鈥渨e work here as a team鈥 and that her work could not be successful without the help and support of others in the organization.

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