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  • State of the Science Congress, Digital Health Tools Assisted Interventions to Support Family Caregivers: An Updated Systematic Review, Washington DC (September 2022) 4th Annual Ignite Aging Symposium, Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Older Adults Perceptions and Beliefs about Brain Health., Washington DC (October 2021) 47th Annual Transcultural Nursing Society Conference, A synthesis and analysis for critiques of cultural frameworks to understanding health and healthcare including

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  • Services & RequestsListed below are some of the services and support provided by Instructional Technologies. Use the tabs at the top to access: Topics – Topical listing of services; click the Topic to expand it A-Z – Services listed alphabetically Search – Enter one or more keywords Make a Service Request To get assistance with services we provide, click the button below to create a Help Desk ticket. You’ll need an active PLU ePass to create a ticket. Create a Help Desk TicketTopicsA

  • invisibility and the horizon of hope. Disability Studies Quarterly, 40(4). https://doi.org/10.18061/dsq.v40i4.6959 Reports and websites CDC. (2023, May 8). Health risks of social isolation and loneliness. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. https://www.cdc.gov/emotional-wellbeing/social-connectedness/loneliness.htm Office of the Surgeon General (OSG). (2023). Our epidemic of loneliness and isolation: The u. S. Surgeon general’s advisory on the healing effects of social connection and community. US

  • PLU graduates’ tremendous performance on the nursing national licensure exam. Smith came to PLU from the College of Nursing at East Tennessee State University, where she was the Associate Dean for Academic Programs and a Professor of Nursing. Previously, she served as a department chair and assistant dean of the College of Nursing and Health Sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, where she led the department’s pre-licensure programs, evaluation efforts and strategic initiatives. Her

  • Color (SOC)For Students of Color interested in exploring their racial and ethnic identities. With a commitment to creating more spaces where Students of Color can connect with one another, Students of Color (SOC), in the Diversity, Justice, and Sustainability (DJS) Learning Community seeks to honor, celebrate, and uplift the stories and experiences of residents. The SOC community will focus on the cultural wealth Students of Color bring to the Pacific Lutheran community by celebrating their

  • WelcomeWelcome to the Clubs List! Click a tag below to find clubs matching your interest! For a more updated, simpler clubs list, click here! Academic / Honor Societies Get your study on! With these clubs, pursue your academic interests! Econ Club, Chem Club, and more! View Clubs Performance and Creative Interest These clubs focus on performance! Drama, Improv, and music! View Clubs Diversity, Justice, and Sustainability Be the change you want to see in the world. Get active in your communities

  • video, David Ward, Dean of the College of Health Professions, discusses the different types of careers MFT graduates go into.The Value of Pursuing a Graduate DegreeChoosing a graduate degree allows you the opportunity to study within a field that speaks to your passion. In this video, David Ward, Dean of the College of Health Professions, talks about the value of pursuing a graduate degree.A Supportive EnvironmentPLU’s Marriage and Family Therapy program has an onsite training clinic that has two

  • , promoting wellness and recovery through the body’s innate self-healing capabilities.PLU and PNWU DO programSince 2010, approximately 32 PLU alumni have successfully graduated from the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine program at PNWU, establishing PNWU as the primary medical school choice for PLU graduates. Starts in the fallFour-year programAccepts 144 students for each new class Over the past 11 years, 32 PLU graduates went on the the DO Program at PNWU.PNWU College of Osteopathic Medicine (COM) ranks

  • in considering graduate school or seminary, and in thinking about how your major prepares you for whatever career you choose. Where Will a Religion Major Lead You? The study of religion prepares you for fields requiring critical, contextual and creative thinking, ethical decision-making and working with people. It allows you to learn and practice the interpretive approaches of several disciplines during your university career. As the diversity and pluralism of our world become more intensely part

  • – virtually all persons – form part of an interdependent web in which life and health are sustained and supported: “A cobbler, a smith, a peasant — each has the work and office of his (sic) trade, and yet they are all alike” (“To the Christian Nobility,” 1520). As one contemporary philosopher writes, “The test for vocation was not ‘Are you doing something religious?’ but ‘Are you serving … the real needs of your neighbor?’ ” (Tom Christenson, Who Needs a Lutheran College?). Lutheran higher education takes