Shining a light on shingles
Student and faculty co-author review of herpes zoster for clinicians
If youve had chickenpox, that varicella-zoster virus (VZV) is living within your sensory neurons and may reactivate later, causing you --and about 1 million other people that same year -- the distress associated with shingles. Also called herpes zoster, shingles develops in approximately 1 in 3 Americans in their lifetime, with the risk increasing with age.
When sophomore Meghan Scanlon, a nursing student who is also in 裡橖眻畦s Honors Program, discussed a possible project to supplement her nursing Health Assessment course for credit in the Honors Program, she and Teri Capriotti, DO, MSN, CRNP, RN, talked through a variety of innovative options.
Dr. Capriotti, a clinical associate professor, has mentored many students in the process of researching and writing for publication and has co-authored numerous articles with students in clinical journals. Ultimately, we agreed that shingles is a health issue that is gaining more publicity. With a plethora of information published on shingles, Dr. Capriotti and I thought that a complete guide to the epidemiology and treatment of shingles would be useful to primary care clinicians, explains Meghan, a native of Smithtown, Long Island. She notes that it took weeks of research, writing, and editing to complete the article Shingles: A Complete Guide for the Clinician which was ultimately published as the feature article in the February 2017 issue of the journal Clinical Advisor.
I am honored and humbled to have worked on this project. Dr. Capriotti served as a tremendous resource and mentor. The entire process was an invaluable learning experience. I am so grateful for this opportunity, says Meghan.
Read Meghans article here: