鶹ƽ State students helps Shockers learn COVID-19 health precautions

  • A capstone group project aimed to educate students about COVID-19 using Public Health Sciences students as leaders.
  • Senior Ya-Aida Sillah developed a quiz that helped reveal and correct misconceptions about health precautions.
  • The social media team created graphics and messages advising students to wash hands, socially distance and wear a mask.

There is no shortage of information about the COVID-19 pandemic. The way that information is delivered can make a big difference.

“I had to be careful in the way I approached a person, being the person who would direct them in the right way,” said Ya-Aida Sillah, a 鶹ƽ State University senior.

Sillah, a health management major from 鶹ƽ, took a lead role in “Mask Up!” The Department of Public Health Sciences capstone group project is designed to help students understand COVID-19 and health protection.

Sillah wanted to reach students in peer-to-peer health engagement and created an online quiz about COVID-19 precautions that served as the event’s centerpiece. Students administered the quiz outside the Rhatigan Student Center earlier this fall. They monitored the quiz while a participant answered questions and offered correct information when needed.

“Students chose to do a peer-to-peer engagement about reducing risk for exposure and spread (of COVID-19),” said Dr. Amy Drassen Ham, clinical professor in Public Health Sciences. “It became a point of intervention for the students to talk to that peer right there at that point. We know that peer-to-peer engagement is pretty good for this kind of information.”

Answers revealed four areas commonly misunderstood, Drassen Ham said.

  • Some students did not know that fleece and gaiter-style masks are not recommended for preventing the spread of COVID-19.
  • Some students assumed a person’s vulnerability to COVID-19 would be visible. In many cases, a person’s vulnerability to the virus may be hidden.
  • Some students were unaware that nausea and vomiting are potential symptoms.
  • Some students did not know that monitoring for fever and other symptoms daily is recommended.

The group’s social media team created graphics and social media messages as part of the larger project. The graphics used the acronym WSU:

  • Wash your hands
  • Stay at least 6 feet apart
  • Use a mask.

“The most helpful thing was being able to see students know what they misunderstood,” Sillah said. “Some people who took the survey would not really get the whole thing about the fleece-style mask. They would think that would be a safe style to wear. But it’s not really recommended.”

Drassen Ham said teaching students that vulnerabilities are not always visible is one of the most challenging aspects of education.

“There’s all of this talk about vulnerability and underlying conditions,” she said. “Students thought that they could see another person’s vulnerability. We don’t know, as a generalization, who is at risk for really poor outcomes related to COVID, or even dying from COVID, just by looking at them. It’s hard to teach our Shocker community that vulnerability is not always visible, which is why it’s so important to consistently follow social distancing standards, mask-wearing standards and good hand hygiene standards.”

Participants generally understood many prevention strategies, such as avoiding large gatherings, asymptomatic transmission, mask wearing, social distancing and COVID-19’s increased transmission indoors and in crowds.

Sillah wants to work in human resources, a field in which she knows the ability to communicate and educate is vital.

“I learned how to be a pro-active person when it comes to giving someone else the correct information,” she said. “It was different for me. If they missed it, you don’t want to say, ‘You didn’t get it right.’ I wanted to educate them.”


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