SAN MARCOS – Several academic programs at Texas State University enrich students’ learning experiences through partnerships with local medical facilities and healthcare agencies, many of which have been affected by the current outbreak of COVID-19.
As healthcare providers face a shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) during a worldwide pandemic, Texas State departments have come together to donate their available PPE to partners across Central Texas.
The Department of Physical Therapy on Texas State’s Round Rock Campus has donated 150 surgical masks to Austin State Hospital, 150 surgical masks to St. David’s Georgetown Hospital and four boxes of exam gloves to Dell Seton Medical Center and Hope Thrift.
Karen Gibbs, a professor in the Department of Physical Therapy, said her colleagues had no hesitation about donating PPE.
“We partner with healthcare facilities all over the state who routinely provide clinical education opportunities for our physical therapy students and many of our past graduates serve as clinical instructors,” said Gibbs. “We’re all family, and at a time like this, we wanted to give whatever supplies we had that could be of benefit.”
In a similar spirit, the Clinical Laboratory Science Program (CLS) came together with the Department of Physics to donate PPE to Austin-based Clinical Pathology Laboratories, which has been testing for COVID-19 since March 10.
Clinical Pathology Laboratories is a long-time partner of the CLS program and has provided clinical laboratory rotations for several Texas State students.
Upon hearing of Clinical Pathology Laboratories’ PPE shortage, CLS donated face shields, three cases of gloves and three cases of disposable lab coats.
The Department of Physics contributed 5,600 Nitrile gloves, 100 lab coats, 3,000 face masks and 500 N95 face masks.
Other community partners that received donations from Texas State departments include Ascension Seton Williamson Medical Center, which received 12 boxes of gloves and 910 boxes of N95 masks from the Respiratory Care Department, and Central Texas Medical Center, which received gloves and disposable lab coats from Clinical Laboratory Science and gloves from the Biology Department.
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The abbreviation for Texas State is TXST not TSU
TSU has also been used as an abbreviation for the university in recent years.
Sorry. But someone beat you to it. Texas Southern University has been known as TSU since June of 1951.
We will make a note to avoid using in the future. And we've changed the headline to avoid confusion. Thanks, Lila, Tori!
Sorry about what?
Abbreviations are not trademarks. Likewise, neither are the intitials of your own name.
For example, the initials "FBI".
By this you say the feds somehow 'beat you' to using the initials of your own name,
the initials of your own business, or even the initials of another state agency?
.
Texas State University System = TSUS
TSUS Texas State University System
(unless you're a college graduate obsessed and unhappy unless telling others what to think upon matters of which you've no real understanding) . Good luck with the job apps.....supervisor's position is it?
Thanks for all the reporting you’ve been doing. The paper editions are always 1-2 days behind. I appreciate you keeping us all informed.
Stay safe!
Lila,
You are very welcome, and thank you for reading! It is our job to give our readers the most accurate and current information as we possibly can, and it is something we love to do.
Again, thank you for reading.