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Summer Self-Care Webinar Series

 

The Community Seminar Series: Summer Self-Care

What topics are covered in the series? Summer is busy, and it's easy to forget to take care of ourselves while we try to juggle what everyone else needs. Researchers from University of Illinois can help guide your summer health choices. Find a session that's perfect for you, or participate in all of them. Summer Self-Care is a collaboration between University of Illinois Extension and the Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Institute as part of the Community Seminar Series.

Register here to receive a Zoom link to the webinar: go.illinois.edu/SummerSelfCare22

If you will need a reasonable disability-related accommodation in order to participate, please email Dee Walls, walls1@illinois.edu, 217-300-6862. Early requests are strongly encouraged to allow sufficient time to meet your access needs.

  • Choose which workshop you wish to attend.
  • There is no cost for the workshop.
  • CPDU and CEUs are available. CEUs are being provided through the Continuing Education Institute of Illinois. Once you have registered for your desired sessions, please check your registration confirmation email for a link to purchase CEUs.

Summer Schedule

Training Your Mind and Brain: Maximizing Cognitive Efficiency Across the Lifespan

  • June 29 | Out of necessity, our cognitive skills become specialized across the lifespan in order to cope and thrive. More than ever before, our attention is being pulled by external and internal distractors. Evidence suggests that we are incurring costs at a personal and societal level. How can we train our minds and brains to prevent this? Jonathan Cerna, doctoral neuroscience student, discusses how various modalities of cognitive training can help us stay sharp, present, and healthy across the lifespan.

Interpersonal Communication: Beyond the Frontlines of Healthcare

  • July 6 | Interpersonal communication, the clinical skill known to hold patient-provider connections together, is also said to be the driving force behind positive health outcomes. Consisting of verbal cues, written and non-written prompts, and active listening, this network is needed as it can lessen stress while promoting health and safeguarding one's quality of life. Do these actions and relationships come across as the same for patients who vary in social status? Can this standardized care method be the tool needed when developing influences and theories of disease prevention methods? Erica Noel will move past the exterior of healthcare and what we know about interpersonal communication into mechanisms of transforming our health system through relational and comparative insight and care.

The Human Genome Project

  • July 13 | The human genome is comprised of 3 billion genetic letters called base. When scientist printed it on paper, it filled 130 volumes with 43,000 characters on each page. The Human Genome Project was launched in the 1990s to sequence and map the human genome. The first complete sequence was finally published in 2022. HGP is the largest international collaborative project in biological sciences to date, and scientists and institutes from around the world participated in this effort. Sneha Das explains why the HGP endeavor was important, how it was accomplished, and what can be done with the knowledge of the human genome sequence.

The Science of Vaccines

  • July 20 | In light of the COVID-19 pandemic, a lot of discussion, research, money, time, and effort has been expended on vaccines. What is a vaccine? How does it work? How old is this technology, and what lies in the future? Apurva Godbole, doctoral student in chemical and biomolecular engineering, explains the science behind vaccines as we discuss popular questions and myths surrounding vaccines.

Fitness & Wellness Classes: Having Fun and Feeling Good

  • July 27 | What is the difference between a good, great, and excellent fitness and wellness class? The instructor! Yes, the type of class, the equipment, and even the room all play a part in every fitness and wellness class; however, even the most boring or challenging class can be exciting because of who leads it. So, what's next once you have the "perfect" instructor? Each person has their own personal journey they must navigate, and attending a fitness and wellness class is no different. As classes are supposed to be fun and offer some challenges, they can fall short of expectations. How many times have you asked yourself why am I going to class? Is it to lose weight, get stronger, meet new people, and get ideas so I can work out on my own, or, is it to help keep you accountable? All of these are honest answers, and the goal is to learn how to have fun and feel good about moving and becoming more physically active. Latashia Key, doctoral student and avid fitness and wellness instructor, will how you how to turn your excuses into promises and explore different classes for where you are today on your journey!

The Golden Years: Cognitive and Brain Changes Observed in Healthy Aging

  • August 3 | If we’re fortunate, the golden years of our lives will be spent engaging in rewarding activities with family and friends. What cognitive changes can we expect during this time and what does healthy aging look like in the brain? Grace Clements, Ph.D., will take us on a tour of the cognitive system and the brain across middle and late adulthood to learn that although some changes can be expected, they are not all bad news.

Diet, Gut Microbiome, and Child Health: Truths & Myths

  • August 10 | Within our gastrointestinal tract there are over 1,000 species of microbes whose composition and function are shaped by genetics and other modifiable factors, including diet. Is all the hype surrounding the gut microbiome and its emerging role in child health warranted? How might diet be playing a role in this relationship? Arden McMath will discuss the current state of the science in regards to links between diet, the gut microbiome, and child health.

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About the Extension Foundation

This website is supported in part by New Technologies for Ag Extension (funding opportunity no. USDA-NIFA-OP-010186), grant no. 2023-41595-41325 from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the view of the U.S. Department of Agriculture or the Extension Foundation. For more information, please visit extension.org. You can view the terms of use at extension.org/about/terms.

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