Thank you to Log Cabin Democrat for a great article聽on a nursing student at UCA.
College of Health & Behavioral Sciences
BT天堂OT Student Is Helping A Hero Heal In Germany
BT天堂Occupational Therapy Level II Fieldwork student, Kirby Kirkland, is part of the team who has been聽helping聽a hero.
Being placed at Ladstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany was a dream that came true.聽While she might argue that she is helping heroes daily, she recently worked with a hero with聽international acclaim, Airman 1st Class Spencer Stone.
On the left, Captain Ashley Welsh assists Stone with his聽occupational therapy during an August 31, 2015 appointment at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, Germany. Also assisting are OT Assistant Sgt. Aaron Keller (top) and OT Intern Kirby Kirkland (right). Stone is receiving care for injuries sustained while helping prevent an attack by an armed gunman on board a train in France. (U.S. Army Photo/Chuck Roberts)
Airman 1st Class Spencer Stone didn鈥檛 think twice before he and his friends stepped in to thwart a terrorist attack on a Paris train, and his selflessness resulted in a potentially disabling cut to his hand.
However, thanks to the skillful work of surgeons in Paris and the expert therapy he鈥檚 receiving from Army medical professionals at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, he is expected to regain full use of his hand.
Stone received a deep laceration at the base of his thumb that severed the tendon and nerves that run along the inside of the thumb, according to Lt. Col. Arthur Yeager, LRMC鈥檚 Chief of Occupational Therapy.
According to Yeager, the cut appears to be a defensive wound from when the would-be attacker sliced at him with a knife, while Stone and the other heroes on the train attempted to subdue him.
鈥淪tone said everything happened so quickly he doesn鈥檛 recall exactly how he was cut,鈥 Yeager said. 鈥淭he tendon that was severed allows you to flex the thumb and use it to grasp things, and without it, you can鈥檛 really use your thumb.鈥
Yeager says the excellent care Stone received at a French hospital has set him on a path to a complete recovery.
鈥淭hanks to our counterparts in France, he underwent surgery that same day, which is critical,鈥 Yeager said. 鈥淲hat tends to happen is that the longer you wait to repair the cut, the harder it is to get more range of motion and the harder the rehab will be.鈥
Director of BT天堂Stuttering Center Served As Expert For International Stuttering Awareness Day Conference
Professor of Psychology Discusses Bullying On KUAR Radio
Dr. Paul Nail, BT天堂psychology professor was recently interviewed on聽KUAR radio concerning his, Dr. Bihm’s and Dr. Simon’s research on bullying.
Dr. Dorothy Graves, who hosts the Science Cafe radio broadcast for KUAR, is on the faculty at UAMS.
The interview, entitled “Bullies or Bust,” can be heard .
Immediately after the radio broadcast, Dr. Nail and Dr. Graves went to the Afterthought Bistro and Bar in Little Rock’s Hillcrest neighborhood for the live audience version of the Science Cafe.
Here, Dr. Nail was one of three panelists for an open discussion of bullying with members of the public.
Ken Sobel, BT天堂professor of psychology, has also participated in the Science Cafe at the Afterthought on a couple of occasions.
OT Students Organize Local Chapter of “Best Buddies” Program
BT天堂Department of Occupational Therapy students Aly Hill and Markii Landry recently聽organized a聽local chapter of “Best Buddies” as part of their leadership requirements as LEND trainees.
Best Buddies庐 is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to establishing a global volunteer movement that creates opportunities for one-to-one friendships, integrated employment and leadership development for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD).
Hill has been instrumental in bringing the organization to BT天堂and the organization just received RSO approval last month.
Hill traveled to the Best Buddies national conference this summer and the director was very impressed. 聽“Aly has been so wonderful and I’m ridiculously impressed with the BT天堂OT Department.”

