CIANJ Commerce Magazine August 2020 | Page 36

HIGHER EDUCATION Nursing Students are Tested by the COVID‐19 Pandemic From the classroom to the ICU, new recruits to New Jersey’s coronavirus battle came from colleges and universities. Compiled by Miles Z. Epstein Editor, COMMERCE On the front lines of the COVID‐19 pandemic, nursing students were called into service in every area of patient care. They had to learn fast and risk their health to help save friends, neighbors and total strangers from a deadly, new virus. Here are their stories, and a look at their journey from learner to essential caregiver. Berkeley College By Eva Skuka, Ph.D., M.D., Dean, School of Health Studies The Berkeley College School of Health Studies comprises many programs impacted by the COVID‐19 crisis, including the Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) to Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN), Patient Care Technician, Surgical Processing Technician, Medical Assistant, Patient Care Technician, Practical Nurse, Surgical Processing Technician, and Surgical Technology programs. COVID‐19 challenged all healthcare professionals and students to work in a totally new context. This was uncharted territory. They faced exhaustion due to heavy workloads and fears of becoming infected and infecting others, while managing work, college and family. A majority of BSN students work in long-term care facilities as LPNs caring for COVID‐19 patients. Some Practical Nurse students work with afflicted patients as nurses’ aides. When surgical procedures were curtailed, Surgical Technology and Surgical Processing Technician professionals trained to assist physicians and nurses as team members caring for COVID‐19 patients in hospital emergency rooms, intensive care units and other departments and facilities. There are many risks encountered by being in the front lines of healthcare. Our students, like many healthcare providers and professionals, demonstrated resilience and professional dedication to overcome difficulties. We salute these professionals’ compassion and kindness, along with their expertise and courage, as we continue to learn how to best thrive within our new circumstances. County College of Morris By Dr. Anthony J. Iacono, President With compassion and courage, nursing students rose to the challenge. CCM graduates are working in healthcare facilities throughout the county and region as nurses, respiratory therapists and radiographers. Included among them are two recent graduates, Jeremy Friedland ’19, of Parsippany, a graduate of the Nursing Program; and Melanie New ’19, of Vernon, a graduate of the Respiratory Therapy Program, both of whom are on the front line of helping COVID‐19 patients at Morristown Medical Center. Another is Cassidy Grady ’19, of Lake Hopatcong, a graduate of the Respiratory Therapy Program, a full-time night respiratory therapist at Saint Barnabas Medical Center. CCM has trained approximately half of the nurses and roughly 90 percent of the respiratory therapists who work in Morris County. County College of Morris is proud to support our healthcare providers. The college also has donated equipment to Morristown Medical Center, including five ventilators, 325 N95 masks and 3,000 gloves. In addition, at the request of Atlantic Health Systems, the college’s engineering lab coordinator is creating face shields on the college’s 3-D printers for healthcare workers. The shields are being created based on specifications provided by Atlantic Health. Montclair State University By Evonna Banko, RN, BSN I didn’t expect to be on the front lines of the coronavirus outbreak. A school nurse in Paterson, I was finishing my final classes in the RN to BSN program at Montclair State, the end of a 20-year journey as an adult learner who returned to school, first to learn English when I moved to the United States from Poland, then earning professional degrees as I advanced in a career I love. But with schools closed and my inbox full of e-mails pleading for volunteers to help, I answered a call to assist at one of the state’s drive-through COVID‐19 testing centers and have since signed on to work at a long-term residential care facility in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. I have to be out there. I have to be helping. There are not enough hands. I am Continued On Page 36 Getty Images/iStockphoto 34 COMMERCE www. commercemagnj.com