ETSU Audiology students, faculty volunteer at RAM clinic

0
ETSU Audiology students and faculty who volunteered their time and expertise through the Remote Area Medical Clinic. Pictured top row, left to right: Dr. Saravanan Elangovan, Rachel Hudson, Dr. Marc Fagelson, LeaAnna Baker, and Becky Jurius; bottom row, left to right: Nancy Yang, Hallie Sealey and Karee Diem.

Audiology faculty and students from East Tennessee State University have recently donated more than $60,000 in services and discounted hearing aid devices to patients who attended the Remote Area Medical (RAM) clinic that took place in Gray last November.

RAM is a major nonprofit provider of free pop-up clinics. Students, faculty and staff from several ETSU colleges and programs assist annually at clinics held throughout the region. Volunteers from ETSU’s Doctor of Audiology program attended the Gray clinic in November and tested 40 patients for hearing aids. Of those patients, 28 were identified as persons who could benefit from hearing aids.

Those individuals were invited to come, free of charge, to ETSU’s Center for Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology at the Nave Center in Elizabethton in order to be fitted for hearing aids in January and February.

“We were pleased to fit 49 hearing aids this year,” said Dr. Shannon Blevins Bramlette, clinical assistant professor. “Through this collaborative effort between our faculty and students, we were able to donate more than $60,000 in services, including the testing, fitting and education for these hearing aids. The patients did contribute to some of the cost of the devices, but we were able to get the hearing aids at deeply discounted rates from the manufacturers and provide them at cost to the patients.

The community outreach is also beneficial to the first-, second- and third-year doctor of audiology students who volunteer and gain valuable clinical experience as a result.

“Volunteering for Remote Area Medical is easily the highlight of my graduate school career,” said Becky Jurius, a clinical graduate assistant in ETSU’s Department of Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology. “Coming together with my classmates to donate our time and energy to help people from all walks of life is so inspiring.”

Jurius also serves as vice president of ETSU’s chapter of the Student Academy of Audiology (SAA), the national student organization of the American Academy of Audiology.

To learn more about ETSU’s Doctor of Audiology Program, visit etsu.edu/crhs/aslp/audiology.

Share.

About Author

Comments are closed.