Issue 25 Vol 81

Page 2

The Quinnipiac Chronicle

2|News

meet The Staff

Students promote importance of occupational therapy

Editor-in-chief Michele Snow SENIOR MANAGING EDITOR Anna Brundage Senior Managing Editor Samantha Epstein MANAGING EDITOR Matt Eisenberg NEWS EDITOR Katherine Rojas ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR Daniel Grosso

photo courtesy of ryerson stinson

Ryerson Stinson, a student in the Masters of Occupational Therapy program, took it upon himself to sovle any misconceptions people may have about occupational therapy by producing the film “Scott MacDonald’s Journey.” By kim green

CO-ARTS & LIFE EDITOR Catherine Boudreau Co-Arts & Life Editor Christine Burroni ASSOCIATE ARTS & LIFE EDITOR Shannon Corcoran SPORTS EDITOR Joe Addonizio ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR Kerry Healy PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Katie O’Brien COPY DESK CHIEF Cassie Comeau SENIOR WRITER Phil Nobile WEB DEVELOPER Marcus Harun SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGER Bryan Lipiner CARTOONIST Dakota Wiegand ADVISER Lila Carney The Quinnipiac Chronicle is the proud recipient of the New England Society of Newspaper Editors’ award for College Newspaper of the Year in New England for 2011-12. Mailing address Quinnipiac University 275 Mount Carmel Avenue Hamden, CT 06518 THE CHRONICLE is distributed around all three university campuses every Wednesday when school is in session except during exam periods. Single copies are free. Newspaper theft is a crime. Those who violate the single copy rule may be subject to civil and criminal prosecution and/or subject to university discipline. Please report suspicious activity to university security (203-582-6200) and Lila Carney at adviser@quchronicle.com. For additional copies, contact the student media office for rates. Advertising inquiries can be sent to advertise@quchronicle.com. Inquiries must be made a week prior to publication. SEND TIPS, including news tips, corrections or suggestions to Michele Snow at editor@quchronicle.com LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be between 250 and 400 words and must be approved by the Editor-in-Chief before going to print. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit all material, including advertising, based on content, grammar and space requirements. Send letters to editor@quchronicle. com. The opinions expressed in this paper are those of the writers and not necessarily those of the Chronicle.

April 25, 2012

Former News Editor

Scott MacDonald describes himself as many things: a triathlete, road racer, professional poker player, an employee of the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs and a paraplegic. One word he does not identify with is handicapped. Ryerson Stinson, a student in the Masters of Occupational Therapy program at Quinnipiac, took it upon himself to solve any misconceptions people may have about occupational therapy by producing the film “Scott MacDonald’s Journey,” which is posted on the occupational therapy website, BrOT. He said his goal was to make a video with his friend Alex Birsh, a 2011 Quinnipiac alumnus, to answer one difficult question: what really is occupational therapy? “It bothered me that people work with OTs or know an OT, but they do not know what they do,” Stinson said. “What OT means to me is helping someone through their everyday occupation. An occupation is something meaningful to someone’s life like a leisurely activity or activity of daily living like going to sleep, getting dressed, showering and taking care of yourself.” Stinson said he turned to his professor, Tracy Van Oss, who put him in contact with MacDonald, whom she described as someone she often turned to as a source of assistance for her students. MacDonald said since his accident, he has been speaking on behalf of spinal cord injured persons as a mentor to new patients and students. He believes it is his duty as someone with a spinal cord injury to teach others what life is now like for him. “When I met Scott he was so articulate and his attitude and overall knowledge was incredible,” Stinson said. “He knows the

purpose of therapy and knows the misconceptions. The whole experience of watching him in his story and his triumphs through all his difficulties, I mean, how can you not be drawn to that?” After a visit with his family in Connecticut in November of 1998, MacDonald was returning home to Virginia, where he was stationed in the military, when he passed a severe accident on the New Jersey Turnpike. After stopping and offering his assistance, MacDonald said he was high on adrenaline, but that adrenaline wore out. When he was seven miles away from the Chesapeake Bay Bridge, MacDonald fell asleep at the wheel and was ejected out of the passenger side window of his vehicle. He broke seven vertebrae and became a paraplegic. After the accident, MacDonald said he knew he could eventually get through his daily life with enough training, but was fearful of not being able to do what he loved to do. “Occupational therapy changed my life because here I was thinking I am going to be dependent, I don’t know who is going to take care of me, and what I am going to have to do,” MacDonald said in the video. “By the time I got out of the hospital, I was like, I want to live by myself, I can be by myself, I can take care of myself. Without the occupational therapist coming there and telling me I am going to teach you how to live, and smile about it, there is no way I could be smiling right now that’s for sure.” One of MacDonald’s greatest successes, he said, was getting his driver’s license, which gave him a sense of independence. “The first time I got in the car I couldn’t go over 50 mph on the highway because I was terrified, but I was free and no one could tell me I couldn’t go somewhere,” MacDonald said. Stinson looks to MacDonald as more than

just the subject of his video, but as something greater. “When he is in a chair, I look up at him,” Stinson said. “If I had to sum up our relationship, I’d say he is a role model. He is a successful person regardless of what he has accomplished in his wheelchair.” The greatest challenge for OT and PT students is that they need to work together and realize they both have valuable jobs, MacDonald said. Without the physical therapist, the occupational therapist cannot succeed and visa versa. “The real thing that it all boils down to is mastering your independence,” Stinson said. “You don’t understand how important it is until it’s gone.” Stinson’s definition of occupational therapy may be difficult to understand, as it is an umbrella for everything a person does in their life, he said. “The way we think of it is very holistically and that a person is not just a bunch of parts,” Stinson said. “People are unique and you have to approach everyone completely differently. Scott, for example, isn’t just a spinal cordinjured person, but a person with a spinal cord injury.” The reward of the video is priceless, Stinson said, and reminds him of why he has endured this long education as it is all to help people achieve happiness. Van Oss said the video will be helpful to those in and entering the field of occupational therapy. “I think the video helps to make our profession widely recognized and helps to facilitate people in understanding what we do and the power of occupational therapy,” Van Oss said. Stinson’s role in the film was directing, while Birsh filmed and edited the project, which he completed over a few months during evenings and over weekends, while he was not working at his current job with Major League Baseball Productions. “I made sure the quality of the video was up to the quality of our subject, which was tough to do as Scott and his story deserve the best,” Birsh said. Birsh, who was a journalism student, said he never grasped the impact of OT until he witnessed it firsthand when he met Scott. He said the experience gave him a new outlook on the profession, as well as in life. Stinson said that they are not looking for a certain number of YouTube views or royalties for their video, but something greater. “Our greatest collective wish is to have the video reach as many people that need it,” Stinson said.

‘Be The Match’ event raises awareness of bone marrow diseases By robert grant Staff Writer

More than 30,000 people are currently diagnosed with life-threatening diseases for which a bone marrow transplant may offer a cure. 56 members of the Quinnipiac community attempted to decrease that number by participating in Kappa Alpha Theta’s second “Be The Match” event. On Thursday, April 19, students had the opportunity to get a cheek swab and enter the bone marrow registry. The event was co-sponsored by the Student Programming Board and the women’s ice hockey team. “We didn’t expect the overwhelming response,” said Kayla Cristoferi, a sister of Kappa Alpha Theta and the event’s coordinator. “It was nice to have all of the support.” More than 150 people registered in last year’s bone marrow drive, run by junior Kappa Alpha Theta sister Chelsea Fritzson. Cristoferi says Fritzson inspired her to share her own story. Cristoferi’s sister, Jennifer, passed away at 9

years old due to Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL). The disease occurs when abnormal white bloods cells begin to grow in the bone marrow, according to the National Marrow Donor Program. The bone marrow loses its healthy blood cells which then weakens the immune system. Cristoferi was born after her sister passed away. “I never got to meet my sister,” Cristoferi said. “It’s a weird feeling. You know your siblings inside and out, but I never got that.” Cristoferi held the event and entered the registry in honor of her sister. The cheek swabs were put on file waiting for a match. If there is a match, the registry contacts the potential donor to see if they will donate. The procedure is painless as the patient is given anesthesia; however, slight discomfort and side effects vary from person to person according to the National Marrow Donor Program. “That little bit of pain is nothing compared to what the person you’re helping is going through,” Cristoferi said. “It’s a small sacrifice

lesly alvarez/chronicle

Sophomore Nichole Cherenzia swabs her cheek and enters the bone marrow registry.

for someone’s life.” “This is a cause that we care about,” Kristin Cagney, SPB’s traditions and community chair, said. “Something like this affects more people than you know.”


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