Pulse

Summer 2016

Issue link: http://digital.copcomm.com/i/701910

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 26 of 51

H E A RT B E AT S torrancememorial.org PULSE | 27 "IT'S GRATIFYING TO HELP AND REASSURE PEOPLE WHO MAY BE WORRIED OR DISTRAUGHT. WE GET AS MUCH OUT OF IT AS WE GIVE." V olunteering is truly a family affair for the Quan family of Rancho Palos Verdes. Not only have Carol Quan and her three children given their time to Torrance Memorial Medical Center, but even Carol's mother has gotten in on the action. Daughter Olivia, now 21, and a student at UC Irvine, was the trendsetter. As a high school student, she chose to participate in Torrance Memorial's high school volunteer program during her sophomore and junior years. Her duties in Escort Services included transporting and discharging patients, delivering items to patient rooms and ferrying lab specimens. e experience has affected her life. Olivia plans to enter nursing school aer graduation. "My experience at Torrance Memorial definitely solidified my interest in nursing because I enjoyed being in the hospital and working with other volunteers, nurses and staff," she says. "I met so many great nurses and think they are awesome people!" Olivia's experience motivated her mother to give it a try. "I was already doing volunteer work like serving on the PTA, but those roles were related to my children. I decided to do something for me," Olivia's mother, Carol, says. Carol joined Luminaries, the group that assists with events and fundraisers. She also volunteered in the Labor and Delivery Unit, helping patients with the check-in process and helping them to feel comfortable. She now acts as a greeter at the main entrance. Carol already had warm feelings for Torrance Memorial because of her children's experiences there. Her youngest child, Davis, visited the emergency room twice for sports- related injuries. But the most impactful interaction came when middle child, William, who has intellectual disabilities, suffered a grand mal seizure and had to be brought to the ER. He was 12 at the time. "ey got us in quickly and the nurses were extra special and kind to him," says Carol. "As a mother, it was an emotional time for me. ey made me feel comfortable and calm about William's situation." William's disabilities didn't keep him from carrying on the family tradition when he got older. As a volunteer, he assisted the volunteer office and helped with preparations for the Holiday Festival. "Volunteer Services was so nice and let him work on special projects," says Carol. "e experience gave him a lot of confidence, and that confidence helped him get a job working in the mailroom at Toyota." Davis, a senior at Palos Verdes Peninsula High School, followed in his older siblings' footsteps. He's in his fourth year as a Nova, in the high school program for children of Luminaries volunteers. He volunteers in Escort Services and also has helped at the Holiday Festival and other special events. " Volunteering at Torrance Memorial is a one-of-a-kind experience. Not many people get the chance to see the inner workings of a hospital, so the knowledge I gained is unique in every way," he says. e only Quan family member who hasn't volunteered is husband and father, Jeff, whose schedule prevents it. "He feels le out," Carol laughs. Carol even urged her mother, Akiko Takenaka, to get involved. Akiko emigrated from Japan in 1965 and was hesitant because English is not her native language. But she finally relented and began volunteering weekly in the gi shop operated by the Torrance Memorial volunteer auxiliary. "I was a little scared when I started," Akiko says, "but little by little I felt more confidence. I realized, 'Wow, I can do this!'" Akiko described a recent interaction with a new father who was buying flowers for his wife. "He joked about getting a discount for his first baby and I laughed. It was fun and made me happy." Carol sums up the experience that she, her children and her mother have shared: " We've really benefited. It's so much fun learning about the hospital and how people are cared for. And it's gratif ying to help and reassure people who may be worried or distraught. We get as much out of it as we give."

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Pulse - Summer 2016