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Date: 2/11/2008 PEER EDUCATOR PROMOTES HEALTHY LIFESTYLES TO STUDENTS
The UC Wellness Center provides a variety of health and wellness services for UC students, faculty and staff. It’s likely that the center’s free cold care kits are popular during winter quarter. The center also provides free blood pressure tests, individual or group sessions for smokers who are trying to kick the habit, and Friday Night Live entertainment that provides an alcohol-free alternative to the party scene. The Wellness Center-sponsored events during Wellness Week Feb. 4-8 explored healthy snacks, the dangers of drowsy driving and stress relief through aromatherapy, among other activities. The center also has a staff of six specially trained peer educators, including Caryl Adams, who provide health and wellness workshops for student groups. “Many of these peer educator-driven programs are requested by resident advisors (RAs) and presented in the residence halls,” explains Regan Johnson, program manager for the UC Wellness Center. “Our peer educators are also called to present programs and workshops in classes for First Year Experience (FYE) and Learning Communities,” Johnson says.
A native of Ravenna, Ohio and a graduate of Ravenna High School, Adams says she attended other colleges and pursued other majors before she settled at the University of Cincinnati and says she discovered her niche in health promotions and education after taking an elective course in community health. She has attended UC for the past two years and has worked for the UC Wellness Center for one year. “Transferring to UC has been one of the best decisions I have ever made,” she says. “It was really hard at the time I was making that decision, but I definitely made the right choice,” she says. She says her UC job was the right choice, too, and that she’s interested in working in a campus environment and eventually pursuing a doctoral degree in health education. “I like breaking down barriers and making it comfortable to talk about things that people are uncomfortable talking about,” she says. “I like being able to connect people to resources that they might not know about. I’ve learned a lot. I really like this job.” To schedule a Wellness Center program or workshop, call 556-6124.
For more UC news, go to www.uc.edu/news/
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