Wichita State students helps Shockers learn COVID-19 health precautions

 
  • A capstone group project aimed to educate students about COVID-19 using Public Health Sciences students as leaders.
  • Senior Ya-Aida Sillah developed a quiz that helped reveal and correct misconceptions about health precautions.
  • The social media team created graphics and messages advising students to wash hands, socially distance and wear a mask.

There is no shortage of information about the COVID-19 pandemic. The way that information is delivered can make a big difference.

ā€œI had to be careful in the way I approached a person, being the person who would direct them in the right way,ā€ said Ya-Aida Sillah, a Ā鶹“«Ć½ senior.

Sillah, a health management major from Wichita, took a lead role in ā€œMask Up!ā€ The Department of Public Health Sciences capstone group project is designed to help students understand COVID-19 and health protection.

Sillah wanted to reach students in peer-to-peer health engagement and created an online quiz about COVID-19 precautions that served as the eventā€™s centerpiece. Students administered the quiz outside the Rhatigan Student Center earlier this fall. They monitored the quiz while a participant answered questions and offered correct information when needed.

ā€œStudents chose to do a peer-to-peer engagement about reducing risk for exposure and spread (of COVID-19),ā€ said Dr. Amy Drassen Ham, clinical professor in Public Health Sciences. ā€œIt became a point of intervention for the students to talk to that peer right there at that point. We know that peer-to-peer engagement is pretty good for this kind of information.ā€

Answers revealed four areas commonly misunderstood, Drassen Ham said.

  • Some students did not know that fleece and gaiter-style masks are not recommended for preventing the spread of COVID-19.
  • Some students assumed a personā€™s vulnerability to COVID-19 would be visible. In many cases, a personā€™s vulnerability to the virus may be hidden.
  • Some students were unaware that nausea and vomiting are potential symptoms.
  • Some students did not know that monitoring for fever and other symptoms daily is recommended.

The groupā€™s social media team created graphics and social media messages as part of the larger project. The graphics used the acronym Ā鶹“«Ć½:

  • Wash your hands
  • Stay at least 6 feet apart
  • Use a mask.

ā€œThe most helpful thing was being able to see students know what they misunderstood,ā€ Sillah said. ā€œSome people who took the survey would not really get the whole thing about the fleece-style mask. They would think that would be a safe style to wear. But itā€™s not really recommended.ā€

Drassen Ham said teaching students that vulnerabilities are not always visible is one of the most challenging aspects of education.

ā€œThereā€™s all of this talk about vulnerability and underlying conditions,ā€ she said. ā€œStudents thought that they could see another personā€™s vulnerability. We donā€™t know, as a generalization, who is at risk for really poor outcomes related to COVID, or even dying from COVID, just by looking at them. Itā€™s hard to teach our Shocker community that vulnerability is not always visible, which is why itā€™s so important to consistently follow social distancing standards, mask-wearing standards and good hand hygiene standards.ā€

Participants generally understood many prevention strategies, such as avoiding large gatherings, asymptomatic transmission, mask wearing, social distancing and COVID-19ā€™s increased transmission indoors and in crowds.

Sillah wants to work in human resources, a field in which she knows the ability to communicate and educate is vital.

ā€œI learned how to be a pro-active person when it comes to giving someone else the correct information,ā€ she said. ā€œIt was different for me. If they missed it, you donā€™t want to say, ā€˜You didnā€™t get it right.ā€™ I wanted to educate them.ā€


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