TurningPoint Cloud Upgrade

To all Current and Potential Users of TurningPoint Technologies (clicker technology). 

Action is required. 

During the week of June 27th to July 1st, UTHSC podia was updated to TurningPoint Cloud. Information Technology Systems (ITS) also replaced receivers and updated the podium computers with Windows 10 and Microsoft Office 2016.

Faculty and Students must be ready to use TurningPoint Cloud prior to the first day of class.  The Teaching & Learning Center (TLC) will provide training, tutorials, an up-to-date website, ongoing communication and support in the use of TurningPoint Cloud.

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Team 6 of the MIFA/UTHSC Healthcare Challenge – CHIPS

The CHIPS Team is composed of medicine, dentistry, and pharmacy students. The team’s advisor is Dr. Melody Cunningham.

CHIPS: Community Health Initiative Program for Seniors.

The target population is senior companions working with MIFA, even though the team hopes that the MIFA clients will experience a secondary benefit. Components of CHIPS include:

  • quarterly newsletter (contributors to include students, community leaders and content would include Q&A section, community resource guide, mental exercises, pictograms)
  • intensive training on social, emotional, and physical aspects
  • advisory board to guide the program

It was noted by the judges that NONE of the team members were born in the 1970s when the show “CHIPS” was running! Thank you, team and judges, for the engaging discussion about your project at the end of your presentation!

5th team – Team POMP – MIFA/UTHSC Healthcare Challenge 2012

Team members of Team POMP were from medicine, pharmacy, graduate health sciences, occupational therapy. Their faculty advisor was Dr. Stuart Caplan. On the title slide is the saying: Leaves are supposed to fall. People aren’t.

The goals of Team POMP’s proposal were to address fall prevention and home safety. The team recommended a fall prevention seminar for the senior companions. The information from the seminar would provide the senior companion with information beneficial to them as well as to the clients that the senior companions serve.

Judges talked about the opportunities for this program to fit in with the existing MIFA programs. All the teams had great interactions with the judges – it was so great that the judges, students, and advisors gave up some of their Saturday for this worthwhile program!

Team 4 of the MIFA/UTHSC Healthcare Challenge 2012

ICE (In Case of Emergency): Personal Health Records

Team members composed of nursing, pharmacy, and medical students. Drs. Steve Nace and Linda Pifer were the team advisors.

The team is interested in addressing the issue of polypharmacy, which is an issue common to an older adult population, such as MIFA’s Senior Companions. The team touched on health literacy, poor patient-provider communication, and health records. Their program objectives were to provide medication reconciliation, improve functional health literacy, and create an ICE Folder.

The team’s logo was a UT along with the green person portion of the MIFA logo, with the words surrounding the icons of Uniting Communities, Education, Research, Clinical Care, Public Service. Clever idea.

The team described horizontal and vertical sustainability and laid out a timeline. They clarified some of the obstacles and answers that were important to address in initiating such a program.

The judges raised some good questions that team members answered quite well.

Team 3 of the day – CHIC – UTHSC/MIFA Health Care Challenge 2012

Team CHICCollaborative Health, Interprofessional Care

Team members are from medicine, dentistry, pharmacy. Faculty advisors were Drs. Chris Peters and Chastity Shelton. The students met with some seniors in the community and obtained information from MIFA to identify their focus. Ultimately, they decided to focus on the social determinants of health. The project’s purpose is to provide a broad foundation in healthcare education and to increase medical literacy and provide a forum for discussion. A goal is to have the MIFA senior companions share the knowledge they gain with their clients. A variety of class topics were identified. The plan is to have each college at UTHSC involved, with each college taking the lead on 2 classes.

The students conducted a brief “class” – including a pretest, brief session on nutrition, and a posttest. The team had a focus on a “win-win” with MIFA senior companions learning more to improve their health, as well as learning content to help improve the health of their clients!

The judges discussed the importance of the social aspect of the team’s proposal and noted that the team’s presentation showed their sensitivity to the senior companions. “It’s not about winning … it’s about making a positive change.

Team 2 – UTHSC Health Care Challenge 2012 – PASS

PASS = Promoting an Alliance of Students and Seniors

Dr. Stokes and Rosemary Batorski were the faculty advisors of this team that has medical, dentistry, and pharmacy students.

The team’s overall goal is to engage senior companions with students to improve quality of life. MIFA was recognized as being uniquely able to assist with social and financial difficulties, with UTHSC being uniquely qualified to contribute to senior companions’ healthcare.

The purpose of the team is to become health advocates for senior companions. Interdisciplinary teams of UTHSC students will work together with senior companions (one team per one senior companion) to either have a friendly relationship with students or to partner together to overcome healthcare barriers. Proposal to meet quarterly after an initial baseline assessment as the companion enters the program.

The main goal of PASS is to keep the companion engaged as a companion to serve MIFA clients. The team described potential benefits to MIFA companions as well as to the students – both interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary benefits. The team has reached out to the Christian Mobile Dental Clinic and have considered partnering with students in the Southern College of Optometry to further integrate healthcare.

Great quote by Oscar Wilde to end the presentation: The only thing to do with good advice is to PASS it on. It is never of any use to oneself.

Great judge questions and comments about literacy levels, companions feeling “overwhelmed” with a large number of students, team makeup to reflect diversity.

Team 1 of UTHSC’s Health Care Challenge 2012

Project SAFE – 1st team to present – Dr. Leslie McKeon (faculty advisor) – team members from medicine, dentistry, pharmacy

Discussed the importance of treating periodontitis for senior companions – aim to reach 80% of senior companions.

Recommendations: A 4-step project called STEM (screen, treat, evaluate, monitor)

In the screening step, would also provide education on prevention, symptoms, proper brushing habits & techniques. Want to reinforce proper behaviors that MIFA senior companions already do, along with informing them about new behaviors that could be helpful to introduce.

Christian Mobile Dental Clinic – the UT College of Dentistry already has an agreement with the CMDC, a project of Bellevue Baptist Church, in place for students to practice in an outreach setting. There is already an agreement in place between the Christian Mobile Dental Clinic, UT College of Dentistry, and the Dental Hygiene program in the College of Allied Health Sciences.

Resources needed include: students, faculty, toothpaste/toothbrushes/floss, fluoride treatment, personal protective equipment (PPE), BP cuffs, flashlights, mobile dental clinic.

Thanks to the judges who were very engaged in the presentation and who asked some excellent questions.