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GeorgianView Spring 2022 Print Edition

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38 GEORGIANVIEW SPRING 2022 ALUMNI SPOTLIGhT On Jan. 27, 2021, alumna Jocelyn Leworthy's kidney had a police escort to London Health Sciences Centre. As the OPP cruiser raced away, lights flashing, the 25-year- old recovered in the transplant unit at Toronto General Hospital after the three-hour surgery to remove it. It wasn't the first time the Georgian graduate (class of 2015) donated a live organ. In October 2015, when she was 19 and had just completed the Early Childhood Education (ECE) program at Georgian, she donated a lobe of her liver to an infant she didn't know. "I was super invested and I was like, 'I want to do this,'" she recalls. "I learned about the statistics of how many people wait and how many people die waiting." She recovered from the eight-hour surgery and saved a baby's life. Jocelyn's lifelong passion for helping children led her to the ECE program at Georgian. She went on to earn a bachelor's and master's degree and become a child life specialist – a profession unfamiliar to many. "It was when I was studying at Georgian that I came to research different jobs in the early childhood profession, which brought me to my child life specialist role with Gilda's Club," says Jocelyn, who lives with albinism, a rare condition that causes a lack of pigmentation in her hair and skin, as well as a visual impairment that cannot be addressed with corrective lenses. She wishes she'd had a child life specialist in her childhood to help with the psychosocial aspect of living with albinism. In her role, Jocelyn focuses on play-based interventions to provide psychosocial support to children and youth who are coping with stressful life experiences such as illness and disability. Her work as a child life specialist at Gilda's Club Simcoe Muskoka earned her a 40 under 40 in Cancer award for her work with children living with cancer. "It's an honour because I don't do my job with the hope of recognition," she says. "I feel so much reward in knowing that although I can't change what children and their families are going through, I know there aren't these types of resources in every community." "It's unique support that I can offer. There are lots of different psychosocial supports for families but they don't do what I do." Devoting her life to others | Play-based therapy is a big part of what Jocelyn does with her clients as a child life specialist. "I was super invested and I was like, 'I want to do this,'"

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