Nov 24, 2024  
Catalog 2019-2020 
    
Catalog 2019-2020 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Educational Philosophy and Objectives - School of Allied Health Professions


The School of Allied Health Professions subscribes to the philosophy of the LSU Administration which has a three-fold purpose: Developing to the highest level the intellectual and professional capacities of citizens through resident instruction; enriching instruction and establishing new frontiers through research and scholarship; and providing all Louisianans with information useful to advancing the State’s economy and culture. The School of Allied Health Professions recognizes that total health care of the community, State and the Nation must increasingly draw upon personnel, talents and skills of a broad range of disciplines. Therefore, programs for the education of allied health professionals must not only incorporate an understanding of, and appreciation for their own field, but also the fields of medicine and nursing. A comprehensive acquaintance with the cultural and physical heritage and bodies of knowledge which will assist the student in living a productive, humanitarian, and successful life in society is deemed important. The School recognizes its obligation to develop educational programs in the allied health professions compatible with this philosophy and striving for the highest level recognized as being justifiable in terms of the roles and responsibilities its graduates will assume.

The primary objective of the School is to increase the supply, at the undergraduate and graduate levels, of a variety of patient-oriented health professionals in the State of Louisiana and to meet the need for health services and future teachers in health-educational programs. The education for any health profession can best be accomplished in a health-oriented environment such as the Health Sciences Center. This environment will permit the physician, nurse, allied health professional, and the student an opportunity to see the patient, as a team, thus developing sound working relationships requisite to educating the student for a role of leadership. Because of the close relationship developed with other undergraduate campuses of the LSU System, a strong core curriculum is available from which students can obtain a basic foundation and general understanding of various fields of allied health. This will permit students to sample a broad spectrum before final selection of a specific field and admission to the School of Allied Health Professions.  A further objective of the School is to develop and maintain programs of investigative studies and research within the allied health disciplines. The School will also assume a position of leadership in providing a mechanism to promote development of programs to meet the continuing educational needs of allied health professionals in Louisiana.

The School also provides vital public health and human services through direct patient/client care, and support for families. The faculty and staff at the School of Allied Health Professions provide outpatient care at three clinics: the Children’s Center which provides developmental and psychological testing and treatment for children with autism and other learning disabilities; the Mollie E. Webb Speech and Hearing Center; and Faculty Rehabilitation Clinic which provide occupational, physical, and speech-language therapy.  The clinics serve not only as a great facility for student training, but provides the citizens of Northwest Louisiana with quality healthcare services.