Dr. Maha Lund, Director of the Emory Physician Assistan Program, and faculty member Dr. Jodie Guest join students sorting hundreds of pieces of medical scrubs.

Dr. Maha Lund, Director of the Emory Physician Assistant Program, and faculty member Dr. Jodie Guest join students sorting hundreds of pieces of medical scrubs.

In all, the Emory scrubs drive collected over 500 pieces of clothing, which will be sent to a hospital in Sierra Leone.
In all, the Emory scrubs drive collected over 500 pieces of clothing, which will be sent to a hospital in Sierra Leone.
Ebola health care workers in West Africa are faced with a shortage of scrubs because a combination of high temperatures, round-the-clock work and harsh cleaning chemicals means they go through a lot, quickly.
Ebola health care workers in West Africa are faced with a shortage of scrubs because a combination of high temperatures, round-the-clock work and harsh cleaning chemicals means they go through a lot, quickly.
Collecting supplies was a start. Now Jace Crawford is in the early stages of creating a non-profit organization, with tenative goals including sending students on medical mission trips and providing grants.
Collecting supplies was a start. Now Jace Crawford is in the early stages of creating a non-profit organization, with tenative goals including sending students on medical mission trips and providing grants.
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Emory holds scrubs drive for Ebola workers in Sierra Leone

Jan. 28, 2015

When student Jace Crawford arrived on the Emory campus in late Summer 2014 for his first day in the Physician Assistant (PA) Program, he arrived right in the middle of a medical drama grabbing international headlines: Ebola. Media trucks were parked all around the School of Medicine and Emory University Hospital, where several Ebola virus patients were treated.

Meanwhile, Crawford and his fellow students heard from Emory health care providers — doctors, nurses, and others — who were treating the patients, and they also received ongoing email updates with the latest news from West Africa. When Crawford learned that one of the needs in Sierra Leone was medical scrubs — high temperatures, round-the-clock work and harsh cleaning chemicals meant they went through a lot, quickly — he decided to take action, organizing a scrub drive at Emory.

As of late January 2015, he and others at Emory have collected more than 500 pieces of scrubs, which they plan to send to a hospital in Sierra Leone. It was former PA Program faculty member Jeri Sumitani, MMSc, PA-C, who volunteered at that particular West African hospital for six weeks, who had told Crawford about the need for scrubs.

Inspired by Sumitani, and with support of PA Program faculty, Crawford is now in the early stages of creating a non-profit organization. Although it doesn’t yet have a name, the organization’s tentative goals include sending students on medical mission trips and providing grants.