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Ep. 130 Create@State Podcast Goes Back to Virtual Symposium

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This is A-State Connections on KASU. I’m Johnathan Reaves. This is the weekly segment called “A-State Connections and Create@State: Making Connections That Count. In this segment, we hear presentations during this year’s virtual Create@State symposium. These are presentations from the College of Nursing and Health Professions. Click on the Listen button for the entire segment.

First is Teresa Clark with the presentation “Improving Medication Reconciliation Quality During Long-Term Acute Care Transitions of Care”.

Next is Cameron Leach with the presentation “A Local Clinic’s Statin Use Rates in Patients with CVD Risk Factors Versus the National Average”.

Next is Emily Marshall with the presentation “In Vitro Bactericidal Effects of 415 NM Blue Light on Pseudomonas Aeruginosa”:

Next is Lorri Strider with the presentation “Percentage of Patients with Type 1 Diabetes that Follows American Diabetes Association’s Treatment Recommendations”.

To hear more segments like this one, you can subscribe to the Create@State podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts. Take KASU wherever you go and listen to podcast segments on the KASU app. Please tell others about the Create@State Podcast, also leave us a 5-star review on Apple podcasts. We would love to hear from you.

You’re listening to A-State Connections on KASU.

Johnathan Reaves is the News Director for KASU Public Radio. As part of an Air Force Family, he moved to Arkansas from Minot, North Dakota in 1986. He was first bitten by the radio bug after he graduated from Gosnell High School in 1992. While working on his undergraduate degree, he worked at KOSE, a small 1,000 watt AM commercial station in Osceola, Arkansas. Upon graduation from Arkansas State University in 1996 with a degree in Radio-Television Broadcast News, he decided that he wanted to stay in radio news. He moved to Stuttgart, Arkansas and worked for East Arkansas Broadcasters as news director and was there for 16 years.