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Bingo Benefit raises $10,000 for Ivy Tech Terre Haute | WIBQ The Talk Station

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (WTWO/WAWV) Community members came out to Ivy Tech Community College on Saturday to help raise thousands of dollars for scholarships. The college hosted its third annual Bingo Benefit, which included over 200 guests and 20 rounds of Bingo. In total, it raised an estimated $10,000, according to a press release from Ivy [.]

Bingo Benefit raises $10,000 for Ivy Tech Terre Haute | 100 7 MIX-FM | Today s Hit Music

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (WTWO/WAWV) Community members came out to Ivy Tech Community College on Saturday to help raise thousands of dollars for scholarships. The college hosted its third annual Bingo Benefit, which included over 200 guests and 20 rounds of Bingo. In total, it raised an estimated $10,000, according to a press release from Ivy [.]

SCCH offers simulated training to EMS workers

Sullivan, Ind. (WTWO/ WAWV) — The Rural Health Innovation Collaborative's (RHIC) Mobile Sim Unit made its way to Sullivan for Sullivan County Community Hospital's (SCCH) annual paramedic refresher course, complete with real life simulated scenarios. Maddison Barbarick, Director of Emergency Services at Sullivan County Community Hospital, said the simulated training is unlike anything else, "They're [.]

$50 thousand grant helps get a new simulation training unit

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (WTWO/WAWV) - After receiving a $50,000 grant from the Union Health Foundation, a new mobile simulation training unit designed to .

Cameron Hospital expands sepsis training

ANGOLA — On May 7, Cameron Memorial Community Hospital in partnership with the Rural Health Innovation Collaborative and the Small Rural Hospital Improvement Project, conducted a sepsis and code blue training simulation for staff as part of a grant-funded education initiative. Members from the Rural Health Innovation Collaborative simulation team offered a session at 8 a.m. and all Cameron Hospital respiratory therapists and house supervisors as well as registered nurses and patient care technicians who work in the emergency and medical-surgical departments were invited to participate. The training utilized state-of-the-art, high-fidelity simulators and trained actors to immerse participants in scenarios that replicated real-life situations and reflected the hospital’s current sepsis protocols and procedures. Funding for the training was provided by Small Rural Hospital Improvement Project in partnership with the Indiana Hospital Association and the Indiana Department of

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