Alyssa Price, a junior-to-be at Kentlake High School, works on reviving a CPR manikin patient during Nurse Camp at Tacoma General Hospital last week. MARK KLAAS, Reporter

Alyssa Price, a junior-to-be at Kentlake High School, works on reviving a CPR manikin patient during Nurse Camp at Tacoma General Hospital last week. MARK KLAAS, Reporter

Students getting a hands-on opportunity, a real-life look

MultiCare’s annual Nurse Camp inspires future medical professionals

Nothing could have prepared Chloe Knox for what she was about to see in the intensive care unit.

Sedated, unconscious patients, thronged by quick-thinking doctors and nurses working to save their lives.

For a teenager on a job-shadowing adventure at a local hospital, it was real, up close and powerful.

“Going in, I thought they would be in bad shape or in a lot of pain, but I didn’t really realize that a lot of them would be in such life-threatening situations, on the edge of life,” said Knox, one of 114 area high school students who participated in the MultiCare Nurse Camp, July 9-13. “That kind of shocked me.”

But it also engaged and inspired Knox to explore the career possibilities in nursing or the demand for specialists allied with the health care profession.

Nursing takes a certain kind of person. Knox, a junior-to-be at Auburn Riverside High School, says she could be that person, working in an emergency room, helping doctors treat and save lives.

“Where you can make your own decisions but still be a nurse,” she said, “and without having to make the big decisions that doctors and surgeons have to make.”

Nurse Camp, now in its 15th year, provides a glimpse of what it’s like to perform in the wings of hospitals and clinics.

Knox and other students tried out medical devices and performed “Skittlectomies” on mannequins. They toured operating rooms, emergency departments and patient rooms at five of MultiCare’s hospitals in Western Washington: Tacoma General Hospital; Mary Bridge Children’s Hospital; Good Samaritan Hospital; Allenmore Hospital; and Auburn Medical Center.

Students rotated among hands-on stations such as IV starts, intubations, infection control, CPR and crutch training. They toured the OR, learned about high-tech surgeries, suturing and sterile techniques, joined the emergency department at work stations to monitor cardiac rhythms, the airways, backboard/c-spine, forearm fiberglass splinting, wound irrigation/stapling, alcohol awareness (students wore “beer goggles”), a medic unit (students toured the inside of an ambulance), and other emergency preparedness.

“It’s been amazing, an awesome experience to expand my knowledge of the medical field … and see all these opportunities and see where you can go,” said Alyssa Price, a junior-to-be at Kentlake High School.

Like Knox, Price wants to be an ER nurse.

“It’s constantly moving, constantly going,” Price said. “You never know what’s going to come through the door.”

Price got to interact with patients and job-shadow a nurse in ICU, where she watched doctors jolt the heart of one patient to reestablish a normal cardiac rhythm and observed another man fighting infections and the onset of kidney failure.

Tiffany Nguyen, who will be a junior at Kentridge High School, said her family has always encouraged her to enter the medical field.

At the age of 16, Nguyen wasn’t sure what that meant, so she came to Nurse Camp to find out.

“This camp gave me the opportunity to see what nursing is like,” Nguyen said.

With a week’s worth of hands-on activities and highlights, one activity stood out as Nguyen’s clear favorite: “The Skittlectomies, because we worked as a team using the camera,” she said. “I liked the cooperation, and using the candy was fun.”

Diana Che, a senior-to-be at Tahoma High School and a Running Start student at Green River College, is well on her way to becoming a nurse.

“Since I was a kid, it was always what I wanted to,” she said. “It was pretty inspiring, seeing nurses making others feel better and healthier.”

MultiCare, which held its first Nurse Camp in 2004 with 30 students, has long recognized the need to encourage greater ethnic-and-racial diversity in health care. Indeed, a growing number of young men are pursuing careers in nursing, a trend MultiCare Nurse Camp leaders encourage and support.

“I was very excited to have such a diverse group of high school students eager to learn about nursing and allied health professions,” said Sheri Mitchell, Nurse Camp program coordinator and community outreach liaison for the MultiCare Center for Healthy Living. “It is our hope by the end of the camp that the students will be inspired and motivated to pursue a career in health care.”

Nurse Camp students shared their experiences throughout the week on social media, using the hashtag #nursecamprocks.

– MultiCare contributed to this story.


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website http://kowloonland.com.hk/?big=submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

Courtesy Photo, King County
Prolific tagger faces charges for damage to Kent water tower

Man one of dozens who reportedly tagged properties across King County, including West Hill tower

t
Federal Way man charged in Kent I-5 crash that killed passenger

Documents state that evidence reportedly showed he was the driver, but he blamed the passenger.

The Kent Police Department went all out with their “Moana” themed display - even Maui showed up. Photo by Bailey Jo Josie/Sound Publishing.
The Hogwarts Express pulls into Battle of the Badges | Photos

The 2024 Battle of the Badges took over the Renton Technical College on Dec. 14.

Kent Police Chief Rafael Padilla. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent Police
City of Kent crime numbers drop in 2024 compared to 2023

Vehicle thefts, commercial burglaries and robberies see big decreases

Courtesy Photo, Kent School District
Kent School District says it ‘will do better next time’ with school closures

Late notifications issued about closures after Dec. 18 windstorm

t
Kent Police arrest pair for downtown robbery of pedestrian

Reportedly used pepper spray to attack Kent man, 56, as he walked on sidewalk Dec. 16

Meeker Middle School, one of six schools closed Wednesday, Dec. 18 in the Kent School District due to power outages from a windstorm. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent School District
Windstorm causes closure of six Kent schools due to power outages

Four elementary, two middle schools closed Wednesday, Dec. 18; couple of city roads closed

Volunteers wrap gifts during the 2023 Toys for Joy program. COURTESY PHOTO, Puget Sound Fire
Puget Sound Fire puts out plea for more Toys for Joy donations

Toys needed for children ages 9 to 12; more bikes, scooters requested; deadline is Dec. 20

t
Kent man, 19, faces multiple charges after pursuit near Wenatchee

Driver reportedly fails to stop for state trooper, crashes stolen vehicle along State Route 97

Kent School District Board Director Awale Farah, left, and Superintendent Israel Vela at a high school graduation last summer. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent School District
Awale Farah resigns immediately from Kent School Board

Says because of ‘family commitments’ he cannot fulfill rest of his term that expires in November 2025

t
Kent’s Lower Russell Levee project receives John Spellman Award

City, King County Flood District and other partners recognized for historic preservation

Northwood Middle School, 17007 SE 184th St., in unincorporated part of King County in Renton and part of the Kent School District. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent School District
Calls about man trying to access Northwood Middle School causes lockdown

Deputies arrest man for investigation of resisting arrest, obstruction at Kent School District property