Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Internship in Public Health | With comments by Breanna Sneed


Breanna at a conference in April.

The Public Health Initiatives team at the Wichita State University Center for Community Support and Research (CCSR) continues to expand its reach and scope, impacting a variety of individuals, communities, and systems across the State. At the individual level, the team works closely with students from various programs at WSU, including those working to complete their degrees in Health Service Management and Community Development. 

“My internship experience at [CCSR] was a great experience for me”, writes Breanna Sneed, who joined CCSR in her final semester in the program. “It opened my eyes to things that I was not aware of in Public Health.”

At the community level, the CCSR Public Health Initiatives (PHI) team supports initiatives like the Visioneering Health Alliance in the Wichita Metropolitan Statistical Area and Project 17, representing 17 counties in Southeast Kansas. The Visioneering Health Alliance recently held a forum at the Kansas Leadership Center focused on community efforts to improve healthy eating behaviors.

Of the many speakers at this forum, Breanna writes, “I was ‘wowed’ by Mim McKenzie, of the Greater Wichita YMCA, and her information about the YMCA’s efforts to improve the community and outreach to young people.”

To support Project 17’s efforts to develop a regional Health Improvement Plan that will be used to work toward their goal of using regional cooperation to improve the quality of life for their communities, Breanna assisted in gathering research data from the public health systems in Southeast Kansas. “With this project, I was able to develop multiple core competency skills including leadership and communication.”

In addition to supporting the Kansas Department of Health and Environment in the roll-out and support of a new initiative within the KanCare system, called “Health Homes”, and other system level initiatives, CCSR’s PHI team is partnering with the Kansas Association of Local Health Departments to develop prioritized funding recommendations that aim to improve the public health emergency preparedness system across the state.

“This project allowed me to demonstrate leadership and system thinking as I assisted in putting together questions for those participating in the emergency preparedness planning so that, when we came together, it would open the door for better discussion.” Breanna Sneed writes, “By doing my internship at CCSR, it has helped me grow and my leadership and public health skills have greatly improved.”

In keeping with the CCSR mission, the PHI team will continue to work with individuals, communities and systems to strengthen Kansas. This will include working with students like Breanna Sneed and others, who are essential to our success.

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