Recently Professor John Richards of Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada and his graduate student Ms Afifa Shahrin completed a study of nutritional status of women from low-income households in urban and rural areas of Bangladesh. John is a founding director of the Bangladesh Health Project and also a member of IUBAT's overseas advisory committee. Ms.Shahrin, a former instructor in BRAC University and recent graduate of SFU, engaged IUBAT College of Nursing students for some of the surveying. See http://www.theindependentdigital.com/index.php?opt=view&page=5&date=2012-08-31 for more on this. IUBAT has taken a pioneering role in the country's higher education sector by supporting researchers, practitioners, and academics to undertake practical research on the policy problems facing Bangladesh (http://www.iubat.edu/cpr/). Several students and faculty from Canadian and US universities have completed research studies through IUBAT, providing College of Nursing students with an excellent exposure to research methods and academic expectations.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Thursday, August 2, 2012
IUBAT students inspire
Sam Simpson visited IUBAT during the fall trimester 2011. She writes, “Since volunteering in the Nursing Program, I have had Bangladesh ‘under my skin’. I suspect that it will remain there for the rest of my life. The sheer number of people, how hard they work, the poverty, the noise, the climate and the pollution all made indelible impressions. And the nursing students took a chunk of my heart and continue to inspire me with their spirit and determination.
It is challenging to compare my experience in Bangladesh with my incredibly comfortable life in rural British Columbia. How does my experience there inform my life here? How can I integrate these diametrically opposed realities? Several months after my return, I gave two presentations to friends and neighbours and the general public. Organizing these helped me to focus on the important parts of my time at IUBAT. Presenting my slide shows has not resolved my dilemma of cultural/economic adjustment but has certainly assisted me. And the modest Canadian dollar donations to the Bangladesh Health Project will translate into many more taka!”
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
VCC students learning and teaching at IUBAT
This summer, Christine Jhoan Eugenio and other senior students from the Vancouver Community College BSN program completed preceptorships at IUBAT. In the photos, Christine is shown with her classmates, Anastasia Vlasova and Josh Gardiner. Christine writes, "My colleagues and I did a presentation on HIV/AIDS for the junior nursing students. The presentation mainly focused on the stigma attached to HIV and the importance of providing compassionate care to ALL patients. We used the Bangladesh Nursing and Midwifery Council Code of Ethics to discuss the professional responsibility of nurses, especially to vulnerable populations such as HIV+ patients. A puzzle activity called How to provide care to HIV+ patients helped the students understand nurses' responsibility to provide competent, ethical care. In a group activity, we asked the students to develop a teaching strategy (a skit, a comic, or a poster) to increase awareness about HIV/AIDS and reduce stigma. By developing values such as compassionate nursing care, IUBAT graduates will be able to practice in ways that foster positive images of nursing in Bangladesh. The students' comments showed that they enjoyed and learned from our presentation. One wrote, "It was the best presentation that I had ever seen. I really liked how you involved us and made it so very interesting. The puzzle and drama helped to make us creative and knowledgeable." I am glad that I was able to share my nursing knowledge to influence other future nurses. It was great working with and learning from the IUBAT students. I was impressed by their enthusiasm and creativity and I appreciate how they welcomed us in their classroom and treated us as their peers.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Canada Bangladesh learning exchange
Helen Jiang, (seated in photo) is a recent BSN graduate from Vancouver Community College who completed a preceptorship at IUBAT last month with support from an Irving K. Barber BC Scholarship. Helen writes: “My Bangladesh preceptorship allowed me to re-examine who I really am and my core values. The experience also provided an opportunity to strengthen my empathy, leadership and adult-teaching skills. As a senior student, I was blindly trusted by the IUBAT students. Their trust, their leadership, their willingness to learn, and their notion of moving forward as a team motivated me as a role model. Unexpectedly, this Bangladesh trip also assisted me to integrate my own immigrant experience in my interactions with the local students. In short, my Bangladesh learning experience helped me to really understand nursing and caring.”
Saturday, June 2, 2012
Rotary Club of Olds supports BHP
The Rotary Club of Olds, Alberta, Canada recently donated $4000 to the Bangladesh Health Project. In this photo, Club President Greg MacIntyre (right) and Publicity Director Mary Turner (2nd from left) are shown with the contribution. We are very grateful for this support from the Rotary members, as well as businesses and the Olds community at large, We have a strong Rotary connection in Bangladesh: Dr. Alimullah Miyan, Vice-Chancellor of IUBAT, has held senior positions in national and local Rotary organizations; local Rotary clubs support the annual polio immunization campaign held on the IUBAT campus. In future, we hope to develop further projects in cooperation with Rotary International. The Rotary Club of Olds describes itself as “FUN . . . with a Purpose.” Rest assured we will make purposeful use of this generous donation. Thank you.
Friday, June 1, 2012
Learning global health theory in context
Jen Preston travelled to IUBAT with her husband and daughter in early 2012 to complete her final year practicum for a BSN through Selkirk College/ University of Victoria. She writes, “It is incredible that so many topics I looked into here have tied together: food security, gender issues, breastfeeding, culture, politics and economics. This has been an excellent learning experience. I am finding that while we focus on one seemingly small assignment, endless questions surround each issue. The time that we are here seems to speed up as if we are going to run out of time and not be able to research everything that we observe. I have started to make a list of everything I am interested in, so after this practicum I can continue to explore these issues.”
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
IUBAT students as nursing leaders
Visiting faculty member Susan McNeill of Vancouver Community College Nursing Department writes: “Today I checked in on our practicum and internship students at ICDDR,B and left feeling proud and inspired. They are taking on leadership roles and tactfully modelling quality care with compassion. Shahed Chowdhury (BSN 2012, wearing blue in this photo) is a teaching assistant at IUBAT who is dedicated to staying in Bangladesh and changing the perception and quality of nursing. Although the number of grads may be small, they have the potential to ‘punch above their weight’ and make a real difference.”