Our awesome first day at FHI 360 left me with very high expectations for our two weeks, and our second day was no different!
We started the day by working on a project that we have been tasked with – finding a way to use social media to gather feedback on a topic of global health interest, such as contraceptives, water and sanitation, or malaria. In our mere 30 minutes of brainstorming, we came up with many ideas, and are now working on a presentation that discusses the benefits of an FHI 360 Instagram account, which would include giveaways to spread awareness, Q and A sessions on Instagram’s live video tool, and polls and sliders to learn more about what users want.
For the rest of the day, we were lucky to spend time with many people who shared their journey and experiences. First, Jill Ferguson, who is a scientist for FHI 360 AND a Nurse Midwife at Duke, gave us a basic lesson on anatomy, types of contraception and how they work, and physiology. This lesson has already proven to be incredibly helpful to our work at FHI 360. Additionally, everyone at FHI 360 told us that the topic of reproductive health is uncomfortable for everyone at first, but becomes incredibly normal over time – that is becoming true for me and my Cary Academy peers!
Next, we talked to Betsy Tolley, who works with BECS just like Dr. Lorenzetti from yesterday. She shared her journey with us, and it showed me that, no matter how sure I am about what I want to do with my life, things change, and that’s okay!
After that, we ate lunch on the balcony facing the Durham Bulls Baseball fields. Yesterday, I didn’t think the view could get any better, but there was actually a game going on! We hung out there in awe of how lucky we were to be at FHI 360.
Next, we met with Dr. Laneta Dorflinger, the director of the CTID, again. Just like Dr. Tolley, her story was so intriguing. She also talked to us a little more about the different types of contraceptives and how they worked.
Last, but not least, we talked to Dr. Rebecca Callahan, a scientist with the CTID. She talked to us about a project that she was working on in Kenya and India, where she collected qualitative and quantitative data to figure out which aspect of birth control was most important for them (ex. price, visibility, duration). We will be helping Dr. Callahan to put her findings together in a powerpoint later on.
We finished the day with our heads spinning from all of the incredible and intelligent people we had met and everything we had learned. After some more time working on our innovation project, we hit the road, exhausted.
the, as I like to call it, “contraceptives collection”
durham bulls vid-1kppvq3