Hospital News

2006 Press Releases

Reprinted with permission, Courtesy, Asbury Park Press, a Gannett Co. newspaper.
BY MICHELLE GLADDEN
ASBURY PARK PRESS STAFF WRITER

Mentoring Program Explores Medical Field.

LONG BRANCH, NJ, February 22, 2006 - Nahdirah Huff of Asbury Park brought her grandmother Hattie along for moral support when she went to Monmouth Medical Center, Long Branch, on Thursday.

It was the 13-year-old's first time touring a hospital, and she was hoping to see how things were really run, not what she had seen on television.

"I want to be a pediatrician," she said before her tour of the hospital's pediatric unit began. "I want to see what the job entails. I want to actually see what they are doing to help the children."

Nahdirah was one of nine Asbury Park kids to participate in the event, sponsored by Big Brothers Big Sisters of Monmouth County, Eatontown.

"The kids will have an opportunity to learn about careers in medicine and, at the same time, the staff and the community will get to meet the kids and learn about the (Big Brothers Big Sisters) program," said Debbi Heptig, executive director.

"We currently have 100 kids on the waiting list," she said.

Heptig said there are three programs: a school-based program where children are refered by school counselors and teachers; the community-based program for children who come from a one-parent home; and the kids club program, where volunteers work with kids who are waiting to be partnered with an adult.

To qualify, volunteers need only be 21 or older, she said. After filling out an application, the intake process begins: interviews, passing the background and DMV checks and completion of training. The adult is matched with a child based on criteria and compatibility.

"We then get parent approval," Heptig said. "But the child has the final say."

As the tour began, Nahdirah walked alongside her case manger of three years, Sandi Mangino, who acts as a liaison between the child and his or her sponsor.

"I'm there to help foster their relationship," she said. "I'm there to deal with any problems that may arise and to help set up any support services that might be needed."

Through Mangino's help Nahdirah was able to join a gymnastics class and is also learning to play the piano.

But for today, her eyes and ears were on Monmouth Medical Center's material manager, Jason Cummings, as he led the tour of the emergency room's pediatric unit. As Cummings explained the various functions of the machines and equipment in the room, Nahdirah and 14-year-old Darrell Snip of Asbury Park watched with interest.

In Long Branch, Monmouth Medical Center Material Manager Jason Cummings demonstrates to Big Brothers Big Sisters youth how a heart and blood pressure monitor works. (STAFF PHOTO: MICHELLE GLADDEN)

Darrell, who volunteered to be a patient in a mock exercise to show how a blood pressure and EKG machine works, said he hopes to get into the the forensics field some day.

At lunch, Nahdirah met up with her grandmother, who had been volunteering at the Big Brothers Big Sisters of Monmouth County booth in front of Monmouth Medical Center's cafeteria.

As they ate, Nahdirah explained the different things she had learned from Cummings.

 

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