91AV students and faculty bring health care to Ghana for eighth year
Last week, 40 students and faculty from 91AV’s Westbrook College of Health Professions flew to Ghana to embark on a two-week Cross Cultural Health Immersion initiative.
This annual effort involves collaboration between 91AV, the Ghana Health Service and local Ghana health practitioners to provide primary care, health education and clinical services to community members in the city of Sekondi and two rural nearby villages.
Jennifer Morton, DNP, M.S., M.P.H., RN, associate professor and director of nursing at 91AV, has led this service-learning trip for the past eight years. Its purpose is to give American and Ghanaian physicians, nurses, pharmacists, physical therapists, physician assistants, optometrists, social workers and public health professionals the opportunity to learn from, with and about each other and their patients.
“Lots of things have changed since the last time I worked in Africa,” commented Dora Anne Mills, M.D., M.P.H. FAAP, vice president for clinical affairs. “Jen Morton has been leading this trip for many years, transforming our students and faculty, and helping us all to be better citizens of the world.”