by Clem Boyd, Communication Content Manager
When Victoria Denen stepped into Soin Medical Center in Beavercreek on July 9 for her first day as a nurse, she could thank parents, siblings, extended family and friends for their support. But one pal in particular went the āextra Milo.ā
Denen, a 2019 graduate of ĆŪ¶¹app, is also a Type 1 diabetic. Her faithful friend Milo, a yellow Labrador retriever service dog, walked alongside, curled up nearby and gave her timely puppy paw alerts that her blood sugar was too high or too low throughout her undergraduate studies.
ā Angie Mickle
Denen and Miloās partnership began just a week before she attended Cedarvilleās nursing camp, which is held every June. Nursing camp is an opportunity for high school juniors and seniors to preview the nursing profession and the nursing program at Cedarville.
āIt was a little stressful, to be honest, because we were brand-new to each other,ā Denen said. āBut everyone at the camp was really nice. On the first day, Karen Callan (coordinator of nursing lab and facilities) was running the camp, and she asked me if there was anything they could do to help make the transition easier. Everyone was just so considerate and helpful.ā
Her camp experience propelled her to apply to Cedarvilleās nursing program. āI knew thatās what I wanted to do after camp,ā Denen said. āThey helped me see nursing as servanthood to others, and they prepared us well with the skills and the ability to think critically.ā
One year after camp, Denen and Milo arrived at Cedarville for the first full day of classes. Everyone was very accepting of Milo, and many were in āawwā of him when he would give Victoria a puppy-paw alert.
āMost people assumed he was one of the 4 Paws dogs in training,ā Denen said, referring to the Xenia-based 4 Paws for Ability, Inc., which trains service dogs for veterans and special needs children. Students are 4 Paws trainers, and the pups are a regular feature on Cedarvilleās campus. Milo actually came from an organization in Texas that specializes in training dogs for diabetics.
āPeople would ask me about how he worked and what he does, and it was cool to share his training,ā she continued. āHe would put his paw on me, and it kind of looks like a dog handshake or something like that, and people would say, āHeās so cute,ā and Iād say, āOh yeah, thatās an alert.āā
Because of Miloās sensitive sniffer, he can detect changes in Denenās body chemistry that indicate her blood sugar is elevated or low. āI check my blood sugar with a glucose monitor, and then depending on if itās high or low, I either give myself insulin if it is high, or eat a snack if itās low. And then I give him a big puppy party.ā
A puppy party? āI donāt think he associates an alert as something thatās wrong with me,ā Denen explained. āHe just knows that if he identifies it, he gets treats. So I throw a ball for him, and I give him all the credit, so itās a really exciting thing for him to alert.ā
While the immediate effect for Milo is a lot of fun, the lasting impact for Denen is life-changing. If her blood sugar is too low, she could pass out or have a seizure. If her blood sugar is too high, she can have trouble focusing in the short term, and the outcome down the road could be kidney problems, peripheral neuropathy (numbness in the limbs), blindness, hypertension and stroke.
āSo itās really important to have a good, tight control of that, and Milo helps me with that,ā Denen said.
āVictoria changed my vision of nurses with a healthcare need who have a service dog,ā said Angie Mickle, dean of the Cedarville School of Nursing. āVictoria was a leader in our nursing program. She was involved in the Student Nursing Association and took part in every activity we did. She taught everybody the whole time she was here being taught. I was impressed by her perseverance from nursing camp to graduation.ā
Denenās first job is working on a medical/surgical unit at Soin, so she will have to track her blood sugar without Miloās help on the job. But her long-term goals include working with newly diagnosed diabetic patients.
āHaving diabetes is part of what gave me the passion for nursing,ā she said. āI really want to work with them and tell them itās not the end of the world, and you can still have a normal life with diabetes. I think it could be a cool ministry.
āAnd if Iām working in a childrenās hospital with diabetics, and they let me bring Milo in, that could be cool for them to interact with a service dog and see how helpful he is. Thatās what got me into nursing, and thatās what I would love to do.ā
Imagine the puppy parties then.
Located in southwest Ohio, ĆŪ¶¹app is an accredited, Christ-centered, Baptist institution with an enrollment of 4,193 undergraduate, graduate and online students in more than 150 areas of study. Founded in 1887, Cedarville is recognized nationally for its authentic Christian community, rigorous academic programs, including its doctor of pharmacy, masterās in global public health, M.S.N. family nurse practitioner, healthcare mba, pharmd/mba dual degree, and M.S.N. nurse educator programs, strong graduation and retention rates, accredited professional and health science offerings and leading student satisfaction ratings. For more information about the University, visit .