ICA Update No. 109 | Page 16

ICA Update CNA – Courtesy of Jewish Senior Living Magazine/Alain McLaughlin Vanessa Munoz takes Michelle Paz's pulse as she demonstrates her skill to instructor Arlene Jech at the certified nursing assistant program. High school students train as certified nursing assistants Monica Clark '61 SAN FRANCISCO – On a foggy Saturday morning in the city’s Outer Sunset district, Cassandra Raul, 16, boarded the first of three buses that would take her across town to the Jewish Home of San Francisco. It was 6:30 a.m. She had to arrive by 8 a.m. to join nine other juniors from Immaculate Conception Academy who also travel there each week for their clinical practicum to become certified nursing assistants. The 10 students formed the first cohort of the certified nursing assistant program at the all-girls Cristo Rey school. The program is not part of the regular academic/workstudy curriculum that is required at all Cristo Rey high schools. Rather, it is an addendum offered to a select group of students who have good academic standing and keen interest in becoming nurses or other health care professionals. 16 Summer 2016 The program, launched in June 2014, is the brainchild of Jesuit Fr. Timothy Godfrey, a registered nurse and assistant professor in the School of Nursing and Health Professions at the University of San Francisco. A second cohort of 12 girls is now in the program and a third will begin forming in February. “I wanted to help those in our lowincome and minority communities to prepare for careers in health care by giving them opportunities while in high school to develop the necessary skills to succeed in college,” Godfrey said. With strong support and encouragement from the administration at the Jesuit-run University of San Francisco, Godfrey approached administrators at Immaculate Conception Academy. They were equally enthusiastic. “It is such a wonderful opportunity for our girls,” said Dominican Sr. Diane Aruda, president of the school. “It helps them clarify areas in the medical field they want to pursue.” With funding from an Immaculate Conception alumna and the alum’s husband, Godfrey hired Arlene Jech, a retired nurse with years of experience in both hospitals and skilled nursing facilities. Jech developed a curriculum that would meet all the requirements of the state licensing board and prepared to resume certified nursing assistant teaching, which she had done at Rogue Community College in Grants Pass, Ore. For five weeks during the summer of 2014, the first 10 students, including Raul, spent four full days each week in the Immaculate Conception Academy science classroom, studying patients' rights; the laws regarding certified nursing assistants and their roles and responsibilities; and anatomy, physiology and nutrition. Every Friday, they traveled to the university’s nursing school simulation lab to practice making beds, taking vital signs, and learning how to feed, bathe and move patients. Raul described the lab as “Super fun. I had never seen anything like it before. There were hospital beds, dummies, everything we needed to be able to practice what we’d learned from Ms. Jech.” Some university nursing students were on hand to serve as mentors when needed. Godfrey hosted the girls’ parents at the University of San Francisco lab so they could “see the campus and envision what is possible for their daughters.” Some of the parents, he said, had never been on a university campus. After meeting the required 100 hours of instruction and practice, the students were ready to take their skills to the Jewish Home, selected by Godfrey and Jech because of the