DPT Graduates 'Step Up' in Support of Classmate


12/11/2013

Members of the Winter 2013 graduating cohort of the Doctor of Physical Therapy program were not about to let classmate Alyssa Curtis stand alone.

So when Curtis posted on Facebook that complications from surgery to remove a brain tumor earlier this year would force her to cross the stage for this past December's commencement ceremonies in tennis shoes, her classmates laced up their tennies, too.

"She joked about it on Facebook, but it seemed like she would be uncomfortable if she were the only one wearing tennis shoes," said graduating classmate Katie Carberry, who emailed the idea to the other 33 members of the DPT cohort. "I thought it would be a good idea so she wouldn't feel like she stood out."

Curtis, who was diagnosed with a Stage III malignant tumor after suffering seizures in the midst of her clinical assignment in August, said she has felt embraced by her classmates while undergoing treatment. The complicated surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., this past fall caused minor paralysis on her left side. To walk with her classmates, Curtis needed to wear a brace on her left ankle and only tennis shoes would fit with that.

To discover her classmates were wearing tennis shoes, too, was in keeping with the level of support the cohort has shown her all year, she said.

"I have never gone a day without hearing from at least one of them," she said. "We say all the time how much we have each other's back. This is absolute proof."

Alhtough Curtis won't receive her doctoral degree until she is able to complete the clinical assignment that was interrupted by discovery of the tumor, it was important to her that she join her classmates at commencement, said Michael Puthoff, PT, PhD, director of the DPT program.

DPT graduate Justine Uhl said it was equally important to Curtis' classmates. "It's everything," Uhl said. "We wouldn't be complete with her. She is part of our class. She has been here through thick and thin. She should be here."

Uhl alsoled a fundraising effort to help defray Curtis' medical expenses. Along with Curtis' family and friends, DPT student teamed to host a trivia contest the day after commencement. Direct contributions still can be made out to "Benefit for Alyssa Curtis" and mailed to Modern Woodmen Bank at 1701 1st Ave., Rock Island, Ill.

Curtis recently completed a first round of radiation and chemotherapy and will undego a brainscan to determine if another round is necessary. She plans to complete her degree work when able and said her experience as a patient will make her a better and more empathetic physical therapist.

Meanwhile, her classmates have taken to answering to the title of Team Alyssa. Uhl said teamwork is just a natural outgrowth of the SAU DPT program.

"From the first day we started class, we were all in it together," Uhl said. "The PT program at St. Ambrose is not easy - anyone who has been through it will tell you that. And we all knew that we were going to have to get through it together, because that is the only way we could. We all just kind of grew together."

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