International Service Learning: Experiential Education
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2534345/fan_mail/new] Organ donation sounds simple until you see what it actually requires: a family facing the worst day of their lives, a hospital balancing end-of-life care with dignity, and teams flying in from across the country to recover and transplant organs on a tight clock. We sit down with Shelby, a former student of mine who just got a medical school acceptance call minutes before we record, to unpack what happens behind the scenes in transplant medicine and why this work changes you. Shelby shares what she learned working with an organ procurement organization and now as a certified transplant preservationist supporting heart, lung, liver, and kidney logistics. We talk about the language we use, the teamwork it takes to coordinate operating rooms and visiting surgical teams, and the small details that protect organ viability during transport and preservation. We also spend time on the human moments, including honor walks and how trained coordinators help families understand and carry out a patient’s final wishes. Then we zoom out to the bigger theme: building a healthcare career through experiential education. Shelby walks through Teach for America during COVID, research supporting multilingual learners, and the Nicaragua service learning trip that helped her decide medicine was the right path. If you’re searching for real-world insight on organ donation, transplant coordination, pre-med gap years, or international service learning, this conversation delivers both practicality and heart. Subscribe for more stories from the field, share this episode with someone considering healthcare, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you’re carrying forward. I also want to thank our listeners for joining us as it is our goal to "share the voices of international service" with you! As a 50+ year nurse that has worked in quite a variety of clinical roles in our healthcare system, taught healthcare courses for the past 20 years at the university level, and has traveled extensively with students on international service-learning trips, I can easily attest to the fact that it is the hands-on experiential experiences that are most meaningful in life! I hope that by hearing these voices you too can become involved in service, whether it be locally, nationally, or internatioally. Feel free to check out our website at www.internationalservicelearning.org, follow us on Instagram @islmedical, or send me an email at DrH@internationalservicelearning.org [DrH@islonline.org] if you wasnt to learn more about international opportunities for yourself, your school, your church, or any other cohort!
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