Community Corner

Speech-Language Pathologists & Dietician Offer Free Screening To Local Children

Free screenings will be held by the international team of students and faculty from Universidad Santa Paula and West Chester University.

December 16, 2019

Speech-Language Pathologists & Registered Dietician Coordinate International Team of Students/Faculty to Offer Free Screening to Local Community Children & Others for Health Disorders

Find out what's happening in West Chesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

As a first of its kind at West Chester University (WCU), international students and
faculty will be brought to campus to join WCU students and faculty in the offering
of free health screenings to those in the local community via a team-based approach
on December 18 through December 20. Upon their arrival to the U.S. this week, a team
of health profession students and faculty from Universidad Santa Paula (USP) in Costa
Rica will join WCU Speech-Language Pathologists Liz Grillo and Patricia Swasey Washington,
as well as WCU Registered Dietician Patricia Davidson and their students in an “interprofessional
collaborative care” project that will take them into the heart of the community to
provide screenings and recommended care plans to community members for disorders related
to communication, swallowing, feeding, hearing, ambulation problems, limitations with
activities involved in daily living, and nutritional concerns.

Free screenings will be held by the international team of students and faculty from
Universidad Santa Paula and West Chester University at:

Find out what's happening in West Chesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

  • West Chester YMCA of Greater Brandywine, 1 East Chestnut Street in West Chester, for
    children, who will be accompanied by their parents and/or guardians, on December 18,
    9-10 am, 11 am – 12 pm & 1:30-2:30 pm
  • Community Volunteers Medicine (CViM), 300B Lawrence Drive in West Chester, for clients
    on December 19, 9-10 am, 11 am – 12 pm & 1:30-2:30 pm
  • West Chester University’s Speech and Hearing Clinic, 201 Carter Drive in West Chester,
    for caregivers, families, and clients on December 20, 9-10 am, 11 am – 12 pm & 1:30-2:30
    pm

Following the results of the screenings, the team will offer recommended care plans
to each individual.

Prior to the screenings, Grillo, Swasey Washington, Davidson, and faculty members
in WCU’s College of Health Sciences will teach the Costa Rican/U.S. team of 22 students
and faculty the principals of interprofessional collaborative care (IPC). IPC is a
model preferred by the American Public Health Association and is based on the premise
that patient care improves when health care professionals work together in a collaborative
manner. As part of the IPC training, Grillo, Swasey Washington, and Davidson will
teach ways to form an effective interprofessional team and the essentials needed to
develop a comprehensive screening protocol to assess clients’ health needs.

The team, which will be trained on IPC practices on December 16 & December 17, from
9 am - 5 pm at 201 Carter Drive, Suite 400, West Chester, is comprised of seven students
and three faculty from Universidad Santa Paula’s professions of occupational therapy,
physical therapy, and speech-language pathology together with three WCU registered
dietician students and three WCU speech-language pathology graduate students.

The critical work provided by the international team comes with the support of the
University’s College of Health Sciences and the community, including Wegmans' Downingtown,
Community Volunteers Medicine, and Timothy's Restaurant.

More about West Chester University’s Partnership with Universidad Santa Paula (USP),

Costa Rica

West Chester University and Universidad Santa Paula, Costa Rica have had a longstanding
relationship. Since 2015, West Chester University students have been participating
in a study abroad at Universidad Santa Paula, Costa Rica under the program founder
and leader, Patricia Swasey Washington, in which they provide speech-language services
to the local community of San José, Costa Rica. Swasey Washington created the program
as a component of the Bilingual Emphasis in the graduate Communication Sciences and
Disorders program, to prepare future bilingual speech-language pathologists for global
engagement.


This press release was produced by West Chester University. The views expressed here are the author’s own.