小猪视频

Interdisciplinary research, community outreach, and personal calling converge in a new study published by PC faculty and students

A 小猪视频 School of Pharmacy student consulting with a member of the local community.

A decade ago, Dr. Christopher Farrell stood in front of a small group gathered at and gave what he thought was a clear and engaging talk on breast cancer. He spoke about genetics, DNA, treatment pathways 鈥 a full academic lecture delivered earnestly to a room of older adults.

Their smiles encouraged him. Their feedback afterward changed everything.

鈥淥ne of the women said, 鈥楽on, I have no idea what you were talking about, but you were so excited,鈥欌 Farrell said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when it hit me 鈥 we needed to find a completely different way to talk about cancer.鈥

What began as a humbling moment in a church fellowship hall has become a multi-year rural health initiative at 小猪视频 鈥 culminating in a recently-published in the聽. The study is co-authored by Farrell, now an adjunct professor in the ; associate professor of biology Dr. Austin Shull 鈥11, and assistant professor of occupational therapy Dr. Courtney Addison. It also includes contributions from biology major聽Natalie Paxton, who brought her own background in rural breast cancer support to the project and and a group of PCSP graduates 鈥 Melanie Ginzburg, Morgan Enlow, Marlana Roberts, Hilary Stamps, Cayla Adams, Missouri Jenkins, and Alexus Hamus.

Together, their work shows how training pharmacy students through a 鈥渢each-the-teacher鈥 model can significantly improve cancer literacy, empower rural patients, and strengthen the role of pharmacists in community health.

A rural problem with real consequences

The project is rooted in a sobering reality: rural Americans face worse outcomes for almost every major health condition, including cancer. Even when incidence rates are similar to those in urban regions, mortality rates are higher.

鈥淩urality really tracks for worse outcomes concerning cancer,鈥 Shull said. 鈥淒iagnoses are about the same, maybe even a little less, but the survival is worse.鈥

Researchers point to a constellation of causes 鈥 limited access to specialists, fewer screening opportunities, transportation barriers, economic strain, and lower health literacy.

That last factor is the one Farrell set out to address.

鈥淭he community wanted this education,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey wanted someone to explain these diseases in a way they could understand, and pharmacists are often the health professionals they interact with most.鈥

A patient may see a pharmacist ten times more often than their primary care provider, Shull notes. That frequency creates natural opportunities for communication, trust-building, and guidance 鈥 all essential factors in early detection and improved outcomes.

鈥淧harmacists are on the front lines,鈥 Farrell said. 鈥淧eople ask them questions all the time. They need to feel confident answering them.鈥

小猪视频 School of Pharmacy students working at the school's clinic.
A model built for connection

After his experience at First Baptist, Farrell began developing a model that would place pharmacy students at the center of community-based cancer education. The model had three simple components:

  • Workshop-style training聽on cancer biology, risk factors, and communication strategies
  • Student outreach聽to churches, community centers, and survivor groups
  • Data collection and assessment聽to evaluate student confidence and knowledge gains

Students learned how to break down complex topics 鈥 staging, treatment options, genetic risk 鈥 into accessible language tailored to the people they were serving.

鈥淚t was a win-win for everybody,鈥 Farrell said. 鈥淪tudents learned how to communicate, the community learned how to understand their diagnoses, and it reinforced the mission of PC.鈥

The response was immediate.

鈥淚 never had to recruit students,鈥 Farrell said. 鈥淭hey gravitated toward it. It shows something about PC鈥檚 culture 鈥 students want to serve.鈥

That ripple effect was so much more important than a social media post or a flyer or a newspaper. Meeting people where they鈥檙e at 鈥 that was the cool thing this whole project encompassed.鈥

Dr. Courtney Addison, Assistant Professor of Occupational Therapy
Meeting people where they are

When Addison joined the project, she brought not only help with data collection and analysis but also a broader community health perspective.

鈥淭he impact was in meeting the population where they were,鈥 Addison said. 鈥淭he students going to the churches was huge. It met the culture of the community.鈥

She emphasized that faith-based settings provided more than convenient locations 鈥 they offered emotional scaffolding for patients, survivors, and families navigating cancer.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 not somewhere you typically see from a medical model,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut it was so impactful.鈥

Addison recalled one community member who learned something from a pharmacy student presentation, shared it with someone else, and helped that person seek an early diagnosis.

鈥淭hat ripple effect was so much more important than a social media post or a flyer or a newspaper,鈥 she said. 鈥淢eeting people where they鈥檙e at 鈥 that was the cool thing this whole project encompassed.鈥

Her perspective also reflects her passion for connecting occupational therapy to rural cancer survivorship. The OT program now partners with the , offering monthly education sessions on diet, exercise, home modifications, fatigue management, and mental well-being.

鈥淧eople here face disparities 鈥 transportation, access to care, all those things,鈥 she said. 鈥淪trategies like this help increase survivorship rates and overall health.鈥

Scientific roots, educational reach

For Shull, the project blended two sides of his career he rarely gets to combine.

鈥淭here鈥檚 the basic scientist part of me, trying to understand how cancer grows and spreads,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his project has been about the educator 鈥 how we can have larger impacts on long-term health outcomes.鈥

Shull said the pharmacy workshop produced measurable gains in students鈥 confidence and understanding, especially around modern therapies and diagnostic markers.

鈥淲e saw good gains in pharmacists and pharmacy students being trained in a rural population,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey were better able to communicate the nuances that have grown in cancer diagnoses, prognosis, and therapy.鈥

This educational success was only one piece of a much larger vision taking shape across campus.

Zeta Tau Alpha presents the Laurens County Cancer Association with a $1,000 donation.
A calling years in the making

For Paxton, the research began long before she stepped onto campus or took her first PC class.

鈥淢y mom started a breast cancer organization after my grandmother was diagnosed,鈥 Paxton said. 鈥淪he saw the need for community and how everyone鈥檚 affected, not just the patient.鈥

The organization,聽, serves rural families in Macon, Georgia 鈥 offering kids鈥 camps, support groups, financial assistance, and emotional care. Paxton grew up in that world, both as a camper and volunteer.

鈥淚t touched me,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was personal, not just research. It started way before college.鈥

When Shull invited her to help with background research for the paper, she recognized a familiar landscape. Rural families in South Carolina faced many of the same challenges she had witnessed back home.

鈥淪eeing rural breast cancer patients and what they go through firsthand 鈥 it solidified what I鈥檝e seen, but then on a more medical side,鈥 she said.

Paxton plans to attend physician assistant school. Her work with Shull 鈥 combined with her leadership in Zeta Tau Alpha, whose philanthropy is breast cancer education 鈥 shaped the direction she wants to take her future career.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been beautiful because it鈥檚 grown as I鈥檝e gotten here,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his work has given me a purpose while I鈥檓 here.鈥

She also emphasized the importance of PC鈥檚 service ethos.

鈥淲e want to pour into our community, because it also gives so much back to us,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the perfect place for it.鈥

Paxton said student involvement in cancer outreach extended beyond research and into campus-wide philanthropy. Through Zeta Tau Alpha, she helped lead partnerships with the Chapter on campus and the Laurens County Cancer Association, including a pickleball tournament and a Color Run that brought together students, faculty, alumni, and community members. The events raised funds for both organizations, with a portion of the proceeds directed specifically to support cancer patients in Laurens County.

Additional efforts included a partnership with , where a pink 鈥淶eta Drink鈥 was featured throughout October, with a percentage of sales benefiting the Laurens County Cancer Association. Paxton said members were also challenged to raise $20 each through a social media 鈥渇undraising bingo card,鈥 a figure intentionally chosen to make the impact tangible.聽

鈥淲e told them that $20 was a gas card for one round trip for a patient to get to their appointment,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t really put it into perspective how we were able to help.鈥 

Paxton said the group worked closely with the cancer association to understand its needs, ensuring the donations aligned with the missions of both organizations while directly supporting local patients.

Interdisciplinary at its best

What began as one professor鈥檚 outreach idea has evolved into a multidimensional effort involving:

  • Pharmacy faculty and students
  • Biology faculty and undergraduate researchers
  • The Occupational Therapy Doctoral Program
  • Community partners聽like the Laurens County Cancer Association
  • Greek-life philanthropy

鈥淚t鈥檚 interdisciplinary at its best,鈥 Shull said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got arts and sciences, pharmacy, OT, undergraduate students, graduate students 鈥 everyone working toward the same goal.鈥

Addison agreed.

鈥淭he number of touchpoints matters,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just a doctor in an office. It鈥檚 pharmacists. It鈥檚 students. It鈥檚 churches. It鈥檚 OT. All of those touchpoints increase knowledge and support.鈥

A model for rural communities everywhere

The authors believe the model could help rural populations well beyond Laurens County.

鈥淚t could be expanded anywhere,鈥 Addison said.

Shull echoed that sentiment, noting that rural cancer disparities persist across the country.

鈥淭his paper is one of the first strikes,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are places where this could be put together in a really powerful way.鈥

Farrell hopes the work continues at PC, even as he has transitioned out of full-time roles.

鈥淚 really am passionate about this program,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ny way we can show what we鈥檝e done is great 鈥 because it reflects back on PC.鈥

He added that its success underscores something important about the college.

鈥淚t shows who we say we are,鈥 he said. 鈥淧roviding service to people who are less fortunate is part of PC鈥檚 culture.鈥

A church, a conversation, a change

Much has happened since Farrell鈥檚 first presentation, but that church moment still shapes the work. The nodding faces, the polite encouragement, the honest admission 鈥斅營 have no idea what you were talking about聽鈥 set into motion a project that has touched students, enriched academic programs, strengthened local partnerships, and reached rural patients who needed clarity and support.

In that way, the rural cancer literacy project is exactly what community-centered science should be: grounded in real need, powered by collaboration, sustained by service, and expanded by students who bring their own stories and passions into the work.

For Paxton, for Farrell, for Addison and Shull, and for the people of Laurens County, the project isn鈥檛 merely research. It is a reminder that knowledge 鈥 clearly shared, compassionately delivered 鈥 can change lives.

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