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Bess Fleischman Sofia Montgomery Danielle Hutcher Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Spring 2016 Final Presentation

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Page 1: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Bess FleischmanSofia MontgomeryDanielle Hutcher

Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Page 2: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

MissionTo promote the health and wellness of the campus community by:

– Empowering all individuals to engage in responsible decision-making by offering educational outreach activities and programming.

– Creating a community support system that fosters active, healthy lifestyles by connecting existing resources on campus.

– Leading the community in adopting health promoting behaviors by sustaining a healthy culture on campus

Page 3: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

History

Founded by Jessica Chu ‘12, Anna Hill-Moses ’12 and Hannah Mitchell ’11 during the 2010/2011 academic year

Proposed during Dr. Harring’s Health Psychology course

Partnership between the Health Center and Public Health Major

Page 4: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

PHAM Today

31 members

E-board

Webmaster: Maya Billig

Public Relations: Hana DeHovitz

Secretary: Abigail Lazofsky

Page 5: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

PHAM General Meetings

Current events

Educational games & Kognito Challenge

Planning interventions and campaigns

Presentation by Emily Reiser from Crime Victims Council

Presentation from Sexual Assault Support System

Page 6: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Social Media

Page 7: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Events from this semester...

Page 8: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Collaborations

Sextival

Big Boo

Susan G. Komen Event Dr.

Colement

Berg Votes

Mental Health

Ursinus Conference

SustainabilitySTI/HIV

Testing

Page 9: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Newsletters

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One Love Pre/Post Test AnalysisPre-Assessment Post Assessment

Question Mean (SD) Percent Mean (SD) Percent

1. College students experience some of the highest rates of relationship violence. 3.82 (0.78)* 66.7 4.41 (0.69)* 88.6

2. I feel comfortable recognizing the signs of a violent relationship. 3.50 (0.88)* 70.2 4.20 (0.53)* 94.3

3. Relationship violence can be prevented. 3.96 (0.80)* 50.9 4.41 (0.74)* 94.3

4. I am aware of the resources on Muhlenberg’s campus to assist with relationship violence. 3.49 (1.08)* 57.9 4.26 (0.81)* 84.9

5. Loving someone who has a temper can fix them and make them a good partner. 1.96 (0.82) 3.5 1.75 (0.89) 5.7

6. Many individuals in violent relationships rationalize, minimize, or even deny the violence every happened.

4.35 (0.81) 91.2 4.54 (0.86) 94.3

7. Talking openly and listening actively about relationship violence can encourage others to feel open and share their experiences.

4.22 (0.80) 84.2 4.49 (0.60) 94.3

Note: ‘*’ indicates statistical significance of p > .01Percentages indicate the proportion of students who responded with “agree “or “strongly agree”.

Page 12: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Consent is Sexy Campaign

Page 13: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Consent is Sexy Goals

Educating students about their sexual health & emotional well-being

Increasing an understanding about consent, respect, & open discussion

Encouraging dialogue on campus Reducing the level of disrespect and abusive

attitudes/ behaviorsReducing the number of sexual assaults on campus

Page 14: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Consent is Sexy Campaign- Tabling

Myth vs FactRed Light Green LightIs this Consent?Pamphlets Consent Condoms

Page 15: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Consent is Sexy Outcomes

Positive Outcomes- Consent is mandatory and important- Different ways of giving consent- Sexual Assault does occur on college campuses

Areas for Improvement- Negative reactions to campaign surfaced- Attempted to address concerns

Page 16: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Health Fair 2016

Page 17: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Student Groups

Muhlenberg College EMS - Taught how to do hands on CPR, with contact information and ways to react in emergency situations

Active Minds - Make your own stress ball and information on stress management

Sexual Assault Support Services - Gave our brochures and fliers with contact and general information. Along with bracelets with the SASS phone number on it

SQUAD - Condom races (with fruit), learning how to put any type of condoms on correctly

MTAC - Gender Neutral bathrooms, handed out information about healthcare services in the Lehigh Valley for transgender patients

PHAM - Played the cold vs flu game to help students recognize when they should be staying home from classes

Student Athlete Mentors (SAM) - Information on concussions and what athletes should do (in terms of school) when recovering from one

Chef Middleton - Farm to table program with sample food that is going to be placed in the dining hall

Page 18: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Outside Vendors

Allentown Health Bureau - STI testing, information about different kinds of condoms

American Lung Association - Effects of marijuana on the lungs

Center for Humanistic Change - Anti-Smoking, Drugs and Alcohol handouts

Dr. Hillman - Eye testing charts

Bradbury and Sullivan - Services for LGBQT in the Lehigh Valley

Planned Parenthood - Wheel of questions

Smoking Coalition - E-Cigarette information and how vaping is still harmful to your body

Turning point - Providing information on domestic violence and safe places for victims of abuse to go

Lehigh County Probation - Drunk goggles

Page 19: Spring 2016 Final Presentation
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For Future Reference...

- More advertisement (x5)

- More interactive booths (x4)

- Inviting more outside vendors to share their information (x4)

- More open (possibly outside?)

- More food

Page 21: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Goals for the Semester (from past interns)

Expanding to other fields such as nutrition, physical health, and mental health

One Love Escalation Workshops

More focus on mental health and nutrition/exercise

Revised “Consent is Sexy” campaign

Smoke-free Campus

Page 22: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Future Plans

PHAM Interns:

Flu Shots

HIV Awareness

Sexual Assault Awareness Program for Freshman

Revised Consent campaign (in future years)

Smoke-Free Campus

Continuing to increase mental health and nutritional/physical healthStep Up

Page 23: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

What did we learn this semester?As we were reflecting, our lists mirrored each other:

Communication

Delegation

Creating interactive & engaging member meetings

Inspiration & motivation

Organization

Adaptability

Conflict resolution

Page 24: Spring 2016 Final Presentation

Questions/Discussion:

How can PHAM collaborate with your department?How can we support your goals?

Thank you for listening!