Archives for November 9, 2022

Civil Engineering Student Loves Everything about Nebraska, Even the Weather

Jennifer Davis is a University of Nebraska–Lincoln civil engineering student who attends classes at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

By Connie White

Jennifer Davis feels at home in Nebraska.

“It’s not too crowded. It’s not too big,” she said.

She likes driving into the city to attend classes at the University of Nebraska at Omaha then taking the half-hour drive home through the countryside to Louisville. She even appreciates Nebraska’s unpredictable, if-you-don’t-like-it-just-wait-five-minutes weather.

“I like the weather,” she said. “I like how you go from winter to spring, and you really get to enjoy the different seasons.”

That’s why Davis plans to stay in Nebraska after she graduates in May with a civil engineering degree.

Though Davis attends classes on the UNO campus, her degree will be from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. As the state’s only engineering college, UNL’s College of Engineering offers classes on the City Campus and East Campus in Lincoln and on the Scott Campus in Omaha.

Davis, 22, has lived all over the world. Born in Landstuhl, Germany, near Ramstein Air Base, Davis moved nine times as a child with her family, including stays in Spain and in five U.S. states, as her father, Air Force Col. Randy Davis, received new assignments. Davis said she considered following in her parents’ footsteps (mom Marjorie was in the Air Force for six years) and serving in the military.

But Davis wanted to build her career in Nebraska, where her father grew up and her family relocated after he retired from the Air Force in 2012.

Davis attends UNO on a full-tuition Regents Scholarship. She also received an honors scholarship her freshman year that came with a laptop. The scholarships “took a lot of stress off of us,” Davis said, noting the financial assistance has allowed her to complete her degree without student loans.

After graduation, she hopes to use her engineering degree to safeguard one of Nebraska’s greatest natural assets.

While in high school, she read several books about clean water and its importance to community health. Those books lit a spark — one that put purpose behind her interest in biology and math and led her to study civil engineering.

She sees water as a blessing and wants to ensure that the water coming out of the kitchen faucet is safe to drink and that the wastewater going down the drain is properly treated before flowing into rivers and streams.

“It’s invaluable that we have access to water in the U.S.,” she said. “Look at other areas in the world —you can see that they don’t have that access to water.”

Davis said she feels at home on UNO’s Scott Campus, where she spends most of her time in the Peter Kiewit Institute. Her classes are small, with typically 20 to 30 people, so she knows her classmates. She has participated in research relevant to her field, including a project to monitor COVID-19 in wastewater. In addition, she completed an internship with the Missouri Department of Transportation and is currently working an internship with Olsson, an engineering and design firm.

Davis spends one day a week at a wastewater treatment plant in Lincoln that is being updated to run more efficiently. She said she likes the combination of outside experiences and engineering coursework.

“It’s good, experience-wise, to do an internship, go back to class, and see ‘oh, that’s why they’re teaching this,’” Davis said.

Next summer, she plans to marry fiance Nate Andres, a cyber security major at UNO, and start her civil engineering career in Omaha or Lincoln, ideally in the field of wastewater treatment.

“I want to make sure our water is being cleaned as well as possible to help protect the environment and just to be good stewards of what we have been given,” she said.

First-generation Student Builds a Better Life at UNL

Dywan Williams, a member of the Nebraska College Preparatory Academy, is majoring in accounting at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln.

By Connie White

Dywan Williams learned early on to work hard for what he wanted.

That ambition was evident in the sixth grade when Williams got the idea to mow lawns in his North Omaha neighborhood to earn cash to pay for extras like a Lunchable to take on his school field trip, so he didn’t have to eat school lunch. His ambition to succeed continued in junior high when he played football, wrestled and ran track in hopes of earning a college athletic scholarship.

At Omaha North High School, Williams switched gears. Although he played football, he decided he lacked the passion to compete at the next level. Instead, he set his sights on a new goal: to get to college through the Nebraska College Preparatory Academy (NCPA) at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln.

NCPA prepares academically talented first-generation, income-eligible students from four Nebraska high schools — Omaha North, Omaha South High School, Grand Island Senior High School and Winnebago High School — for college and their future careers. Through the academy, students receive mentoring and support beginning in their freshman year in high school and continuing through their time at UNL. NCPA covers students’ full cost of college attendance.

Williams, who was raised by a single mother, said the NCPA staff were there for him as he dealt with adversity and believed in him when he didn’t believe in himself. During his freshman year at North, he said he was at risk of being disqualified from the program because his GPA didn’t meet the required threshold.

“They said, ‘Dywan, you can do this. You got this.’ And I did it,” Williams said.

He studied hard and graduated from North with a 3.5 grade point average.

When he arrived on the UNL campus for his freshmen year, Williams said he was scared and intimidated — no one else in his family has graduated from college.

But as he spent time with the program’s staff and students, who come from similar backgrounds, his confidence increased. “If they did it, I can do it, too,” Williams told himself.

He was right.

Williams, 19, is a sophomore accounting major in the College of Business. He has a 3.82 GPA at UNL and has lined up an internship for next summer at Ernst & Young (EY) in Minneapolis, where he will shadow accountants at the firm and learn about public accounting work. If that goes well, he will move on to a second internship the following summer, when he will have the opportunity to engage with clients and gain real-life experience. He said he hopes to receive a job offer after he graduates.

His dream job is in auditing, where he would work with companies on their financial reporting and internal controls and learn how companies operate their businesses. “Accounting is the language of business,” Williams said.

Kurtis Krentz of Minneapolis, a senior partner at EY, connected Williams to EY’s internship program. Krentz said he first met Williams through his involvement with NCPA providing support to students. He and his wife, Jill, are donors to the program through the University of Nebraska Foundation and view NCPA as serving a critical role in addressing inequalities in society by supporting students who may not otherwise have been able to pursue a college degree.

“When I met Dywan, it didn’t take long for me to see Dywan’s potential. He is doing terrific in school and is so driven to better himself and his future,” said Krentz, who graduated from UNL with an accounting degree in 1989. “Understanding his story, you can’t help but be impressed by how he’s changing the course of his life.”

Williams said he feels grateful to be at UNL. Asked what he likes about the university, he answered: “Everything.”

“I like the food,” he said, with a smile. “I like the fact that I’m around people who also want to be successful. I like the fact that I get to create a better life for me and my family.”

Williams said the scholarship assistance has taken a burden off him.

“My mom didn’t have to worry about paying for college,” he said. “I don’t have to worry about taking out loans and being in debt for a long, long time.”

Williams expressed gratitude to the donors who are “making an impact on my life, making an impact on my community and the next generation that’s coming up.”

“Thank you, thank you so much,” he said. “It helps me realize there’s people who want to help people like me have a better life. We’re not alone.”

UNMC Physical Therapy Student says Studying at UNK was a ‘No Brainer’

Luis Reyes Mendieta is in the physical therapy program at the University of Nebraska College of Medicine on the University of Nebraska at Kearney campus.

By Ed Rider

Two continents. Three countries. Five states.

Luis Reyes Mendieta’s road to the physical therapy program at the University of Nebraska College of Medicine in Kearney, Nebraska, has been anything but a direct path. Born in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, Reyes Mendieta moved to Tennessee with his family when he was 6 years old so his father could train as an aircraft mechanic. They moved again to Nairobi, Kenya, to work as missionaries for 10 years before relocating to Alaska.

After a year at John Brown University in Siloam Springs, Arkansas, Reyes Mendieta transferred to Kansas State University where he earned his bachelor’s degree in kinesiology. After graduation, he moved to Alaska, but came to believe that returning back to the “lower 48” would enhance his opportunities to be accepted into PT school. Reyes Mendieta moved to Wichita, Kansas, where he accepted a position at an inpatient physical therapy hospital.

With several physical therapy schools to choose from, the UNMC College of Allied Health Professions (CAHP) was Reyes-Mendieta’s first choice.

So how did Reyes Mendieta end up working toward his Doctor in Physical Therapy (DPT) degree in a town that he initially described as “the middle of nowhere?”

“I was very interested in UNMC. I really liked the program and was very impressed with the faculty,” Reyes Mendieta said. “Once I visited Kearney — I noted that they were a tight-knit group with smaller class sizes — it was a no brainer. Kearney was definitely the place to be.”

CAHP is located in the new Health Science Education Complex on the campus of the University of Nebraska at Kearney. It includes state-of-the-art classrooms, clinical teaching laboratories, clinical simulation facilities and a gross anatomy laboratory. Most importantly for Reyes Mendieta, CAHP offers a DPT degree.

He also saw Kearney as a great fit for his wife Carmen, daughter Flora, 2, and son Pascal, 4 months. “It’s an amazing place to raise a family,” Reyes Mendieta said. “It’s been a good experience. Kearney is a really neat town; it has everything you’d really need. It’s got a Target, so that makes my wife happy.”

Inspired by his role model, Reyes Mendieta said he wanted to pursue physical therapy from a very young age. He has been committed to service to others throughout his life and foresees his career as an extension of that service.

“My dad was always my biggest role model. But instead of fixing planes, I wanted to help fix people,” Reyes Mendieta said. “Having lived in Kenya, I saw the need to increase access to health care. Wherever I practice after graduation, I hope I can bring that to the people in need of quality care.”

Another factor that lured Reyes Mendieta to the physical therapy field was the ability to provide care without having to rely on pharmacological interventions.

“As a DPT, I won’t be dependent on being able to prescribe medications or provide other medical/surgical interventions,” Reyes Mendieta said. “All the tools I need are the information and knowledge provided through my doctoral-level education. With my education. I hope to make an impact, not just in the U.S., but also around the world.”

He is thankful for the financial support that he has received along the way. Reyes Mendieta has received academic financial support from the Charles O’Malley Trust, the Adams Fund, the Erwin W. Neuharth Scholarship and the Ray and Amy Frohn Fund.

“It’s been a good transition and a great experience,” Reyes Mendieta said. “We’ve really enjoyed rural Nebraska.”

Dad Inspires UNMC Student Taylor Kizer to Become a Donor

Taylor Kizer has been raising funds to support multiple sclerosis research and education at the University of Nebraska Medical Center since her dad was diagnosed with MS in 2015.

By Connie White

Taylor Kizer wants to start a ripple. “Enough ripples can start a wave,” the 24-year-old says. Taylor’s hope is that a wave of research can someday bring a cure to her dad.

Lance Kizer was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2015 at the start of Taylor’s senior year at Overton High School, which is about 25 miles west of Kearney.

On vacation in California with his wife, Lance noticed that his leg began to drag as he tired while walking on the beach. He had experienced other symptoms back home in Nebraska: weakness in his legs and trouble with balance and coordination. Lance went to see an orthopedist and then a neurologist. After undergoing a spinal tap and an MRI, Lance learned his diagnosis.

“None of us was super sure what multiple sclerosis was,” Taylor says, recalling her family’s reaction.

But Taylor knew this: There is no cure.

Taylor set out to learn all she could about the chronic neurological disease while raising funds to benefit the Multiple Sclerosis Research and Education Fund at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

Taylor and her best friend Sidney Enochs organized a “Take the Shot for MS” basketball tournament at their high school. The “shot” referred to more than just basketball. At the time, Lance was giving himself three injections a week to treat his symptoms. Nine teams signed up, and Taylor and Sidney netted $4,000 in donations.

Taylor and Sidney weren’t done.

After graduating, the two friends enrolled at the University of Nebraska at Kearney. With the help of family, friends, the community of Overton and the surrounding central Nebraska towns, Taylor and Sidney put on three more basketball tournaments and a sand volleyball tournament. They also hosted a 30-mile bike ride between Overton and Kearney. In 2020, when COVID-19 shut down in-person events, Taylor and Sidney sent out donation packets. Their 2022 fundraiser was another sand volleyball tournament, held July 9 in Kearney. The event brought in nearly $7,000.

In all, more than $39,000 has been donated to the UNMC fund through Taylor and Sidney’s fundraising and other donations sent on behalf of the Kizer family.

Rana Zabad, M.D., chief of the multiple sclerosis/neuroimmunology division in UNMC’s Department of Neurological Sciences, says Taylor’s fundraising is critical to advancing the program’s goals.

“Within the last quarter of a century, the science of multiple sclerosis and similar conditions has gone through unprecedented growth in all scientific aspects of the disease, resulting in an earlier diagnosis of MS and similar conditions,” Zabad says.

The UNMC fund supports training and a fellowship program to prepare the next generation of interested neurologists and psychiatrists to care for people with MS and to conduct research. She says a rise in the prevalence of MS in the United States and worldwide has led to increased demand for neurologists specializing in MS.

And while great strides are being made, treatment and diagnostic gaps exist, including understanding the disease’s “fingerprints” through biomarkers, blood tests or tests of other bodily fluids to allow for earlier diagnosis, managing treatments for long-term safety, reaching MS patients in rural and urban areas, and researching cheaper treatment options.

“With the proven benefit of early treatment and the availability of 23 FDA-approved disease-modifying therapies and counting, there is a pressing need to train more providers with expertise in the accurate diagnosis, earlier treatment and management of treatments’ side effects,” Zabad says.

MS occurs when the immune system attacks the nerve fibers and the myelin, the protective layer insulating healthy nerve fibers in the brain and spinal cord. Each patient reacts differently, with some having minimal to no symptoms, others mildly to moderately impacted, and a third group with significant limitations.

Because of the treatments now available, Zabad says the disease’s effects can be somewhat mitigated. However, MS still impacts the employment, family and social life of a sizeable group of patients.

Lance, a veterinarian in Overton, is among 4,000 patients being actively followed through UNMC’s multiple sclerosis program.

He says his symptoms have progressed as he expected over the past seven years.

He now uses a walking stick and has lost dexterity in his fingers. “One arm is less useful than it was before,” Lance says.

If he gets a fever, like he did when he had COVID-19 last fall, he can barely walk.

He has cut back his work schedule to part time because of the physical demands of working with large animals.

Lance, 54, attends weekly physical therapy sessions and does balance and stretching exercises at home. Under Zabad’s care, he comes to Nebraska Medicine in Omaha every six months to receive infusions. He recently underwent surgery to implant a baclofen pump in his abdomen to deliver medicine to treat painful spasms in his back.

He’s grateful for the care he has received, noting that Zabad is always willing to spend whatever time it takes to answer questions from him or his wife, Sue.

Sue says her family, which also includes two sons, gets through the tough days with the support of family and friends and their faith.

“You do learn to take it one day at a time. One minute, one hour,” she says. “I wish we knew what the future held.”

Lance and Sue Kizer say they are proud of their daughter’s fundraising efforts but say they’re not surprised. Once she gets an idea, Taylor is determined to see it through.

“This is one way she can help me directly,” Lance says.

Tayler says she has been fortunate to meet other families coping with MS through the fundraisers. Donations often are made on behalf of someone with MS. Taylor says she tries to inspire hope because living with a chronic disease like MS can cause people to lose hope.

“We’ve just been able to spread a lot of awareness for multiple sclerosis,” she says.

Zabad calls Taylor a “rising health care advocate.”

“Taylor’s fundraising put Nebraska on the map of MS centers of excellence that offer fellowships,” Zabad says. “I trust that Taylor will continue to partner with us. She and her family have been of great help to their community raising awareness about the disease and encouraging patients to seek a second opinion and care at UNMC. Taylor’s work enables us to think over and over about our priority — patients first.”

Lance’s diagnosis also influenced Taylor’s choice of profession. After earning a degree in health sciences from UNK in 2020, she enrolled in UNMC’s physician assistant program. She will graduate in December and plans to return to Kearney, where she has accepted a position with CHI Health Orthopedics Good Samaritan.

She says she’s looking forward to “practicing amazing medicine in small town Nebraska.”

“Being around my family is always a plus,” Taylor says.

And she plans to keep raising funds to help find a cure for her dad.

To learn more about the multiple sclerosis program at UNMC, click here