黑料社

Empowering wellness: Graduate student brings health education to Zimbabwe community

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Shannon Smith, a graduate student in 黑料社鈥檚 , is pioneering a transformative health and wellness education initiative in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe. Smith鈥檚 six-month community wellness program consists of health and wellness education for a cohort of 20 women. Participants receive education on diet, exercise, and mental health to ultimately become 鈥渨ellness ambassadors鈥 for their sub-communities.

Shannon Smith. Photo provided

The idea for this program came after Smith visited friends in Victoria Falls, where she saw a banner for Pathways鈥揂frica, a nonprofit organization with a mission 鈥渢o empower and assist the people of Africa through the mutual development of sustainable resources for community planning, education and health services.鈥 Smith connected with the organization director via email, and together they identified the community鈥檚 health education gap. 鈥淚 offered to [host] a couple of workshops, and it turned into this pilot program we鈥檙e trying to build,鈥 Smith said.

The pilot program began earlier this year, when Smith facilitated an in-person workshop as the foundation for the content in the program. The cohort meets once a month for five months to discuss how they鈥檙e using the information, making changes, and sharing what they鈥檝e learned. 鈥淎t the end of the program, they鈥檒l be more informed, have healthier lives, and be seen as leaders in their communities when it comes to wellness.鈥

Smith鈥檚 experience in Victoria Falls has strong connections to her current studies in the Kinesiology Program in the . Her programming directly ties to health promotion, the concept of exercise as medicine, and to previous collaborations with George Mason kinesiology professor .听

Smith and members of the program. Photo provided

鈥淚 helped Dr. Stroiney with some 鈥' activities last semester and am really looking forward to continuing to work in this space of exercise and food as medicine, whether it鈥檚 for an athletic or general population.鈥

Smith has advice for anyone who wants to serve in their community. 鈥淒o it! Locally, it may be easier to find an organization or resources to start a small project. You鈥檒l be able to see a direct impact close to home, which is always nice.鈥

For those who are interested in serving abroad, she advised, 鈥済lobally, there are more factors at play, but the reward can be much bigger if the country doesn鈥檛 have the same resources.鈥 She said that flexibility is the key to overcoming cultural, language or resource barriers.

Overall, Smith encourages anyone interested in service to get involved: 鈥淭here鈥檚 always something to learn, you鈥檒l make good connections, impact lives, and you鈥檒l have fun, too.鈥