Loyola鈥檚 Health Outreach Baltimore program to celebrate 5 years serving families at Mercy Medical Center
Health Outreach Baltimore, a partnership program between 樱花动漫 and the Mercy Medical Center, will host a five-year anniversary celebration on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2020, at 6:30 p.m. in 4th Floor Program Room.
The Health Outreach Baltimore program consists of six leaders and 25 students鈥攔eferred to as 鈥渁dvocates鈥濃攚ho come from Loyola to provide supportive services to families at Mercy Medical Center. With its motto, 鈥淏eyond the Scope,鈥 Health Outreach Baltimore aims to teach students about the medical and social impacts of healthcare.
鈥淥ver the years, Health Outreach Baltimore advocates have continued to expand on the reflection and professional growth that goes into constantly challenging oneself and setting ambitious goals to secure the best possible client outcomes,鈥 said Maiju Lehmijoki-Gardner, Ph.D., director of Pre-Health Programs and National Fellowships. 鈥淭he program offers leadership, internship, independent study, and research opportunities鈥攁ll these are hallmarks of quality and prepare Loyola students for their future medical careers.鈥
Most students participating in service-learning stay with the program for two to three years. Since the program started in 2014, students have volunteered nearly 8,500 hours and provided aid to more than 1,500 clients. Support services include food and employment resources, childcare, and cribs for Mercy Medical Center鈥檚 Advanced Fetal Care department, Emergency department, Family Physicians Unit, and Mother-Baby Unit. Nearly 50 advocates have graduated from Loyola and most have gone on to study medicine and work in other health professions.
The anniversary event will feature a keynote address by Joshua Sharfstein, M.D., vice dean for public health practice and community engagement and professor of practice in health policy and management at Johns Hopkins University. His lecture, How to Get More Health out of Healthcare, will focus on how to improve healthcare and provide positive outcomes for patients and society.
鈥淎t a time when life expectancy is on the decline, we have to ask how health care can be more of a contributor to greater health, not just less sickness,鈥 said Sharfstein.
Following the presentation, a panel discussion will be held featuring as panelists Michelle Hammack, a social worker at Mercy Medical Center; Nick Musacchio, 鈥17, a medical student at the University of Maryland and former participant in the Health Outreach Baltimore program; and Kristina Burns, 鈥20, a Health Outreach Baltimore advocate.
For more information about the upcoming five-year anniversary celebration, contact Gardner at mlehmijokigardn@loyola.edu.