Tag: nurses

  • Great Oaks notes Career Technical Education Month

    Great Oaks notes Career Technical Education Month

    Each year, thousands of southwestern Ohio students enroll in career-technical education (CTE) classes that lead to professional credentials in a career field by the time they finish high school.  These students become nurses, aviation technicians, website designers, veterinary assistants, personal trainers, dental assistants, fire fighters, and more.  Some take CTE classes in their own high school; others go to a regional career center serving their school district.  About half continue on to college, often with credits earned in high school.

    Great Oaks Career Campuses President/CEO Harry Snyder

    The research shows that CTE works.  American high school students in career-technical education (CTE) programs are more likely to graduate, according to the U.S. Department of Education.  Other studies show that those students are more likely to be satisfied with their education and earn higher wages when they graduate.  Adults who earn shorter-term CTE credentials can out-earn bachelor’s degree holders.  

    “CTE students have an impact while they’re still in school, and they make our community successful throughout their lives,” said Great Oaks Career Campuses President/CEO Harry Snyder.  He said that local experts, business owners, and other community leaders are graduates of CTE programs, including those offered at the four Great Oaks campuses.

    • Area businesses see value in CTE.  Over 1400 local leaders serve on Business and Industry Advisory Councils at Great Oaks, helping educators choose curriculum, purchase equipment, and share their knowledge with students.
    • CTE instructors are required to be experienced in their fields.  Computer programming courses are taught by accomplished computer programmers; practical nursing programs are led by veteran nurses; culinary students learn from local chefs.
    • CTE students learn using the equipment and tools they’ll use in their career field.  Aviation students at the Laurel Oaks Career Campus work on airplanes in a hangar in Wilmington; engineering students program robotic manufacturing equipment, and cosmetology students learn in fully-equipped salons at the school.
    • More than 200 Great Oaks students are currently on placement in local businesses, practicing skills from computer repair to automotive refinishing while still in school.
    • More than 90 satellite programs allow high school students to have unique experiences in Great Oaks classes without leaving their high school.  For instance, engineering students in Project Lead the Way, a Great Oaks satellite program at Milford High school, have designed and built prosthetic arms, devices to hold hockey sticks and violin bows, specialized masks, and other equipment to help children accomplish tasks and do more in their lives.
    • Cincinnati Zoo Director of Construction Management Gary Gilbert is a graduate of Diamond Oaks Career Campus. He’s one of 32 Distinguished Alumni of Great Oaks, a list that includes inventors, a fire chief, police chiefs, business owners, an Olympic gold medal winner, an Emmy nominee, and numerous educators.

    February is CTE Month each year, and local schools use that time to share facts about career-technical education.  For instance:

    “Career-technical education is so much more than the vocational classes of the past,” said Snyder.  “CTE graduates have professional credentials and options for great careers, pathways to college, and success in whatever they choose to do.”

  • Coronavirus death toll surpasses 100 in Ohio prisons

    Coronavirus death toll surpasses 100 in Ohio prisons

    Belmont Correctional Institution. Source: ODRC

    More than 100 inmates and workers in Ohio’s prison system have died from COVID-19, state data shows.

    Jake ZuckermanJake Zuckerman is a statehouse reporter. He spent three years chronicling the West Virginia Legislature for The Charleston Gazette-Mail after covering cops and courts for The Northern Virginia Daily.

    Five prison workers (three corrections officers and two nurses) and 96 inmates have died from the disease that has clobbered the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction since late March when it was first detected in the system.

    Nearly 6,200 inmates have contracted COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, though the figure is likely an undercount. After mass testing at Marion and Pickaway correctional institutions detected infections in 80% of inmates, ODRC shifted its strategy away from blanket testing and toward symptom-based testing.

    An ODRC spokeswoman said 461 inmates with COVID-19 have been admitted to the hospital, but those people may have been admitted for other causes.

    The dead inmates were 66 years old, on average.

    At Marion, nearly 2,000 inmates have been infected, 12 of whom died.

    At Pickaway, nearly 1,400 inmates have been infected, 35 of whom died.

    The two prisons are the third and fourth largest COVID-19 clusters in the nation respectively, according to data from The New York Times.

    The virus hit prison workers in force as well, though with much lower morbidity rates. More than 1,100 prison workers were infected, and the union representing them alleged workers were provided insufficient protective equipment.

    Gary Daniels, a lobbyist for the ACLU, said there’s more than just a death toll. As more information emerges about long term damage from COVID-19, including “long haulers” who report debilitating symptoms even six months after infection, he questioned the health services ODRC is providing.

    According to the CDC, coronavirus infections can cause myocarditis (heart inflammation) among other long term symptoms. While the science is still emerging, the heart damage could explain reported long-term symptoms like shortness of breath, chest pain and heart palpitations.

    “How many people in Ohio prisons face this right now?” he said. “You’ve got these 100 people who have died, but that’s nowhere near the whole story.”

    The ACLU has pushed for a broad decarceration that would remove people convicted for drug possession or parole violations — at least temporarily.

    In February, there were nearly 49,000 inmates in Ohio prisons, which were populated well beyond their design capacity even before the pandemic. That figure decreased to slightly above 45,000 by August.

    “It does appear to have plateaued,” Daniels said. “Whether that continues, who knows. Our concern is that after a certain amount of time, we’re going to see that population rise.”

    In mid-May, four inmates filed a class action lawsuit in federal court seeking the forced depopulation of Ohio prisons.

    U.S. District Judge Edmund Sargus Jr., in a ruling last month, rejected motions to dismiss the lawsuit. In a blow to the inmates, however, he also struck down a request for a preliminary injunction. He has not ruled on the issue at large.

    Though it amounted to a loss for the inmates, Sargus signaled some sympathy for the conditions inside.

    “This Court agrees with the other district courts across the country who have found COVID-19 to be an objectively intolerable risk of harm to prisoners when it enters a prison,” Sargus wrote.

    Prisons and jails are near ideal places for the coronavirus to spread given the overcrowding, poor sanitation, and preexisting health complications inside.

    In April, the Ohio Supreme Court dismissed a lawsuit from an HIV-positive inmate who sought release due to COVID-19.

    At the time there were only 272 inmate infections. However, Justice Michael Donnelly wrote in an opinion that Ohio needs to take drastic action to prevent “catastrophe” looming down the line.

    “The whole of Ohio’s government needs to take serious, unprecedented steps to prevent the catastrophe of unmitigated spread of COVID-19 to the tens of thousands of prisoners in Ohio as well as to the tens of thousands of people who are prison employees along with those living in the households of prison employees,” he said.