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VU Health Watch Wednesday for February 3, 2010

COLD STRESS

Overview
Workers who are exposed to extreme cold or work in cold environments may be at risk of cold stress. Extreme cold weather is a dangerous situation that can bring on health emergencies in susceptible people, such as those without shelter, outdoor workers, and those who work in an area that is poorly insulated or without heat. What constitutes cold stress and its effects can vary across different areas of the country. In regions relatively unaccustomed to winter weather, near freezing temperatures are considered factors for "cold stress." Whenever temperatures drop decidedly below normal and as wind speed increases, heat can more rapidly leave your body. These weather-related conditions may lead to serious health problems.

Types of Cold Stress
Hypothermia  | Frostbite  | Trench Foot  | Chilblains

Hypothermia
When exposed to cold temperatures, your body begins to lose heat faster than it can be produced. Prolonged exposure to cold will eventually use up your body's stored energy. The result is hypothermia, or abnormally low body temperature. A body temperature that is too low affects the brain, making the victim unable to think clearly or move well. This makes hypothermia particularly dangerous because a person may not know it is happening and will not be able to do anything about it.

Symptoms
Symptoms of hypothermia can vary depending on how long you have been exposed to the cold temperatures.

  • Early Symptoms
    • Shivering
    • Fatigue
    • Loss of coordination
    • Confusion and disorientation
  • Late Symptoms
    • No shivering
    • Blue skin
    • Dilated pupils
    • Slowed pulse and breathing
    • Loss of consciousness

    First Aid - Take the following steps to treat a worker with hypothermia:
    1. Alert the supervisor and request medical assistance.
    2. Move the victim into a warm room or shelter.
    3. Remove their wet clothing.
    4. Warm the center of their body first-chest, neck, head, and groin-using an electric blanket, if available; or use skin-to-skin contact under loose, dry layers of blankets, clothing, towels, or sheets.
    5. Warm beverages may help increase the body temperature, but do not give alcoholic beverages. Do not try to give beverages to an unconscious person.
    6. After their body temperature has increased, keep the victim dry and wrapped in a warm blanket, including the head and neck.
    7. If victim has no pulse, begin cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).

VU Health Watch Wednesday for January 13, 2010
Vincennes University students and employees seeking an H1N1 vaccination should go to the Knox County Immunization Clinic at 701 Dubois Street in Vincennes.  For more information, please visit their website at http://www.knoxcountyhealth.com/

Seasonal flu vaccines are now available at local pharmacies - if your student would like further information regarding price and hours the flu vaccinations are offered, you may contact the Health Office at (812) 888-4277.

VU's Health Office is located in Harrison Hall, to the left of the main lobby. Staffed with three registered nurses and administered under the supervision of consultant physicians from the Medical Center of Vincennes, this cooperative venture better serves your needs and decreases the cost of medical services. 

Nurses are available to assess your illness or injury on a 10-minute appointment schedule. They may provide over-the-counter medications, initial care and follow-up care of injuries, tetanus injections following an injury when indicated, and screening for tuberculosis.

This medical program is included in the room and board fee for residence hall students. Off-campus students may enroll in the program by completing an application form and submitting the per semester fee to the Health Office prior to the end of the first week of classes.

If you need to see a physician at the Medical Center, you will be responsible for only a $5 co-payment to the Medical Center of Vincennes. Following an assessment in the VU Health Office, the nurse will schedule an appointment if needed, with a physician at the Medical Center of Vincennes.  If referred to a physician, you will be given a follow-up form to be returned to the Health Office and stored in your medical file.

The Health Office is responsible for processing and maintaining student health/immunization records in compliance with Indiana College Immunization Law.

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Nursing Staff
Peggy Milligan, RN, BSN Coordinator
Sharon Arnold, RN, Staff Nurse
Terri Vieck, RN, Staff Nurse

Health Office Hours:
Monday - Thursday  7:30 am -  5:30 pm
Friday   7:30 am - 4:30 pm
 
Contact the Health Office:
Vincennes University
Health Office - HH 82
Vincennes, IN 47592
 Phone 812-888-4277    Fax 812-888-5524
pmilligan@vinu.edu

 

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Civil War Era Newspaper Collection Now Available

March 9, 2010

VINCENNES, IND. - The Vincennes Civil War newspaper digitization project at VU's Lewis Historical Library is now available on the VU campus system, the Knox County Public Library, and area schools, according to an announcement from VU’s Lewis Historical Library.  The database holds thousands of pages of newspapers from the Lewis Library newspaper collection.

It is available on the VU Libraries Find Articles page along with other library electronic resources and is titled:  Vincennes Civil War Era Newspaper Collection, Accessible Archives (full text).

Lewis Library digitized newspapers include News of the Day (1855-56), Old Post Union (1862), Stars and Stripes and Old Post Union (1862), Vincennes Courant (1855-56), Vincennes Weekly Courant and Patriot (1855-56), Vincennes Gazette (1855-69), Weekly Vincennes Gazette (1857-59), The Vincennes Times (1865-66), and Vincennes Western Sun (1856-69).

The collection is an excellent source for student writing assignments about the period, genealogy research, and anyone interested in primary sources about the history of the area and the Civil War period.

Both text files and the original newspaper pages may be displayed.  For more information or assistance, contact reference librarian Richard King, rking@vinu.edu.

For more information, please contact Duane Chattin, Director of Public Information, 812-888-4164 (office), 812-887-6397 (cell) or dchattin@vinu.edu

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Student Government Association Receives U.S. Flag and certificates of appreciation from Operation Care at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan

Operation Care 1The Vincennes University Student Government Association (SGA) is the recipient a U.S. Flag and certificates of appreciation from Operation Care at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan.  They were sent by U.S. Air Force Maj. Langdon Root, a Knox County native who until recently was a volunteer with Operation Care while he was stationed in Afghanistan.  Langdon's sister, Precious Rhea (3rd from right in the first row) delivered the flag and certificates to the SGA.  With the support of the community, the SGA donated 60 boxes that included 4,277 items ranging from clothing, toiletries, and school supplies.  Quoting from the certificate, "Your humanitarian efforts have greatly improved the quality of the life for the people of Afghanistan and the future of their nation."  Operation Care has distributed more than 60 tons of humanitarian supplies to thousands of needy Afghans.  The U.S. Flag that the SGA received flew in combat over Afghanistan on Dec. 22, 2009, aboard a U.S. Air Force F-16C Viper 14 in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.

Operation Care 2From left, Vincennes University Student Government Association President Lindy Martin receives a U.S. Flag from Precious Rhea in appreciation for the SGA's efforts to support Operation Care in Afghanistan, a voluntary humanitarian effort that Rhea's brother, U.S. Air Force Major Langdon Root, helped organize.  VU was one of the leading U.S. campuses in sending humanitarian supplies to Operation Care.

The certificates, pictures and the flag from Operation Care will be on display in the Beckes Student Union Grand Hall.

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VU Alumni Mixer is March 15

March 8, 2010

VINCENNES, IND. - Vincennes University alumni are invited to a mixer on March 15, 6:30 p.m. (EST), at the Vincennes Golf Club, 1364 N. Hillcrest Rd., Vincennes.  Alumni are invited to enjoy good music, fellowship, and meet members of the Alpha Chapter of the VU Alumni Association, sponsor of the mixer.

The Alpha Chapter also reminds the public that members are accepting donations for a spring Trash and Treasure Sale.  Donations are accepted every Saturday from 10:00 to 11:30 a.m. at 18 N. 2nd Street in Vincennes.  Proceeds from the spring sale will support scholarships to VU.  For more information call 812-888-4354.

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Drum Enchanted Evening is March 25 at VU

March 5, 2010


VINCENNES, IND. - The Vincennes University Department of Music will present “Drum Enchanted Evening” on March 25, 7:30 p.m. (EST), at the Red Skelton Performing Arts Center.  The event is free and the public is invited to attend.  The Skelton Center is located on the VU campus at 20 Red Skelton Blvd.

Under the direction of Professor Susie Jackson, the VU Percussion Ensemble featuring 14 percussionists will play a variety of traditional and innovative percussion instruments.  The group will perform various musical styles including jazz/fusion, classical, and the more contemporary novelty tunes performed in the “stomp” style which involves the use of unique or unusual objects as percussion instruments combined with visual performance.

On March 27, the Department will host a Day of Percussion at the Skelton Center.  The event will include clinics as well as performances by various percussion ensembles.  Participating collegiate ensembles include Ball State University, Indiana State University, Purdue University, and Vincennes University.  Dr. Marc Wooldridge, Indiana Wesleyan University, will be doing a clinic performance of four of his multimedia compositions that incorporate film, visual art, and aerial photography with live and recorded percussion.  Dr. Erwin Mueller, Ball State University, will have a session on making and repairing mallets.

The featured clinician will be Dr. Elliot “Ellie” Mannette, recipient of the 1999 National Endowment for the Arts and a 2003 Percussive Arts Society (PAS) Hall of Fame inductee.  Recognized by many as the “father of the modern steel drum,” Dr. Mannette has devoted his life to the development of the steel drum art form.  He is also the founder of Mannette Steel Drums, Ltd., an instrument manufacturing company located in Morgantown, West Virginia.  Steel drums, also known as “pans,” came into existence on the island of Trinidad around the time of World War II, and are considered to be the only truly new acoustic instrument created in the 20th century.  In 1946, Dr. Mannette was the first person to fashion his “pan” from the now-standard 55 gallon steel drum.

Dr. Mannette will present two sessions on the steel drum, one on the history of the instrument and the other on the construction and tuning.

The Day of Percussion is free, and the public is invited to attend.  Registration will begin at 8:00 a.m. with ongoing performances and clinics beginning at 9:00 a.m. and ending around 6:00 p.m.  For information about the Day of Percussion, Prof. Jackson may be reached at 812-888-4435.

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VU Blazer Bowlers’ 3-peat earns 17th NJCAA National Title

March 6, 2010  

 

 
The Vincennes Blazer Bowlers came from behind Saturday to claim the 2010 NJCAA Bowling National Championships at AMF Thruway Lanes in Cheektowaga , NY .
 
The title was VU’s 17th and third in a row.
 
VU won the event with a big second day. After the second five-man game on Friday, the Blazer Bowlers trailed Erie Community College by more than 100 pins. But a huge third game vaulted by VU and Hudson Valley past Erie to take over the top spots going into Saturday’s action.
 
VU turned in the best five-man total of 6,778 pins to win the crown, pulling away. The Blazer Bowlers’ total of 693 in the first set of Baker competition pushed them 700 pins ahead with six games remaining. VU finished with a total of 15,088 to edge runner-up Hudson Valley ’s 14,343 pins.  Erie was third with 14,161.
 
Sophomore Gerod Qualls set an NJCAA record with an 826 set Saturday morning. The All-American had games of 269, 279 and 278. He earned the Helmer Award as the all-events champion for the second consecutive year.
 
Qualls edged teammate Jack Sullivan by 56 pins.

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VU Health Watch Wednesday Continues

 VU Health Watch Wednesday began with two e-text messages that provided H1N1 wellness tips and reminded subscribers to visit the VU Health Office web page

Vincennes University students and employees seeking an H1N1 vaccination should go to the Knox County Immunization Clinic at 701 Dubois Street in Vincennes.   Visit their website for more information.

Updates will be posted each Wednesday (or sooner if the situation warrants).  The webpage includes links to the Center for Disease Control flu pages, preventative tips, and campus information. 

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