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A safe play - Football players and nurses team up for positioning labs

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Dr. Jen Ross supervises Brittany Wyatt (left) and Ramona Richardson as they pull their linebacker patient Emeke Ndichie onto a bed using a transfer board with the help of classmates Collin Sceski and Francis Cunningham.

 

When a Villanova football player is surrounded by women and men wearing white coats and scrubs, it typically is pretty safe to assume they are in some serious pain.

Last week, however, the athletes being transferred to and from beds thankfully had not sustained any injuries on the field, but instead were lending a hand to the sophomores in a Protective Positions Skill Lab - part of the Practicum in Essentials of Nursing Practice course. During certain lab periods in February, nursing students gained experience in safely pulling up the players – weighing between 200 to over 300 pounds - in bed, assisting them from the bed to a chair, transferring them from bed to gurney and ensuring the “patients” were comfortable.

“It’s good for us to get this hands-on experience, especially with people who are bigger than us,” said student Jacqueline Cembrook. “A lot of the time, we’re working on other nursing students, who are all about the same size. In a real hospital setting, you’ll have to work with men and women who are larger than you.”

Brittany Wyatt, another student, agreed, saying the lab “puts you in an uncomfortable position because you don’t know them - it’s like a clinical experience.”

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Sophomore defensive lineman Jordan Hunter played the part of a patient so nursing students Stephanie D'Eramo (left), Hannah Leinhauser , Collin Sceski and Francis Cunningham could learn how to safely lift a patient using a hydraulic sling as Dr. Jen Ross supervised.

Stressing their team’s emphasis on volunteer work - around the University and in the surrounding community - the seven football players who volunteered for the lab on the final day said they were particularly pleased to be able to assist the College of Nursing, given the nursing students’ support for the football team’s Andy Talley Bone Marrow Donor Drive held annually around March.

“It also helps you to get a perspective on the different academics at Villanova,” said Clay Horne, a sophomore wide receiver. “It makes you appreciate what the other kids are doing here.”

Jennifer Ross, PhD, RN, CNE, an adjunct clinical instructor, said the course’s instructors hope to do more work with the athletes in the future, noting how important it was for the sophomores to gain insight into what the real world of clinical life may be like. The idea to bring the football players on board originally stemmed from Joyce Willens, PhD, RN, BC, and Colleen Meakim, MSN, RN, worked with the athletic department to make it become a reality.

“They were working with someone who replicates a real patient,” Dr. Ross said. “The students usually practice these things on each other, and many of them are women and around 100 pounds. We wanted it to be different.”

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Sophomore linebacker Emeka Ndichie followed the direction of nursing students Ramona Richardson (foreground) and Brittany Wyatt as they roll him onto a transfer board in preparation for shifting him to a gurney. Classmate Collin Sceski looks on.
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Dr. Jen Ross teaches Collin Sceski about the use of transfer boards to move a patient from bed to gurney and back.