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Physiotherapy student able to continue studies, thanks to generous donors

A traffic accident left Dal physiotherapy student Joan Cherian wondering how to do a community placement in Truro without a car. Thanks to the generosity of Dal donors, she found a solution.

Posted: December 11, 2024

By:聽Emm Campbell

Cherian works with a patient in a clinic.

Everything was going well for Joan Cherian. She was in her second year of physiotherapy studies at Dal, and had just earned her driver鈥檚 license, making it possible for her to gain crucial hands-on experience through clinical placements in communities across Nova Scotia.

But one day, during her first placement at a Dartmouth clinic, Cherian鈥檚 car was t-boned while she was making a left turn in an intersection. 鈥淚 had a bruised rib and a couple of scratches, so it was nothing major,鈥 Cherian says. 鈥淏ut now I was stuck without a car.鈥

Cherian was able to do her second placement in New Glasgow thanks to a friend who was also training there. But when she learned that her third placement was in Truro, she began to worry.

鈥淚t was in winter, and I was scared of driving after the accident,鈥 Cherian says. 鈥淚 had been practicing so that I could make the one-hour trip back and forth to Halifax, but it was too much for me.鈥

Searching for a solution

Realizing she couldn鈥檛 swap placements with another student, Cherian looked at renting a place in Truro during her training. But with outstanding payments on her car and other expenses, she couldn鈥檛 figure out how to make it work financially. For a moment, she thought she might not be able to continue with the program.

鈥淚 was confiding in a friend about my situation, and she told me to reach out to the clinical coordinator for help,鈥 Cherian says. 鈥淭he coordinator suggested that I apply to the Physiotherapy Annual Fund.鈥

Supported by donors, the fund provides financial assistance to physiotherapy students like Cherian on an as-needed basis. She says their generosity made a big difference for her.

鈥淚t covered half the cost of an Airbnb for six weeks, which I couldn鈥檛 have done on my own,鈥 Cherian says.

鈥淭hat was a huge weight off my shoulders. It meant I could stay in Truro, do my training, and be present with the patients I was taking care of without any stress.鈥

A valuable experience

As it turned out, the placement that donors helped make possible was particularly invaluable for Cherian. 鈥淚t was my first experience working at a private practice,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檒l be starting a job with private clinic in Ottawa, so I was able to learn a lot that will help me.鈥

With her studies at Dal nearly wrapped up, Cherian is preparing for that job and thinking ahead. She wants to be a vestibular physiotherapist and is interested in studying concussions. But the ultimate goal is to one day open her own clinic in a rural community鈥攁 dream inspired by the placement that donors helped make possible.

鈥淪ometimes, there is so much going on for students that it can be make or break for finishing a degree,鈥 she says. 鈥淜nowing that their support was there when I really needed it made it possible for me to focus on being the best student I could be. And now, I can focus on being the best physiotherapist I can be.鈥

Cherian assists a patient in the clinic who is using a balance ball on the wall with hand weights.