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A Long Island medical school is cultivating the next generation of healthcare workers.
Through its summer “pipeline program,” the Hempstead-based Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell is teaching students considering healthcare professions how to save lives.
Last week, for example, 12 rising first- and second-year college students received hands-on Narcan training, CPR and basic First Aid skills at Northwell Health’s Center for Emergency Medical Services in Lake Success.
These aspiring healthcare professionals are part of the Zucker School’s Medical Scholars Pipeline Program and its College Pipeline Program. These programs are designed to support high school and college students who are from economically disadvantaged and underrepresented areas who are interested in working in healthcare.
“We are proud of the success of our pipeline programs, which have been instrumental in creating a pathway for hundreds of underrepresented in medicine students to realize their dreams – many of whom have gone on to become doctors and healthcare professionals,” Gina Granger, assistant director of pipeline programs at Zucker School of Medicine, said in a statement.
During last week’s training, students learned how to identify a medical emergency and aid those in distress, including bleeding, choking and heart attack victims. The students were taught to tie a tourniquet to stop bleeding, to administer abdominal thrust to clear airways, and to use an automated external defibrillator to restore normal heart rhythm. They also learned how to administer an EpiPen, an epinephrine injection used to treat life-threatening allergic emergencies, identify signs of a drug overdose, and use Narcan Nasal Spray to reverse opioid overdose.
On July 24, the Zucker School of Medicine will welcome one MSPP student and three CPP students into its 2023 entering class. And while medical school is a few years down the road for the current pipeline students, the preparation and EMT training they receive now is designed to jump-start their medical education in a competitive field.
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Adina Genn
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