{"id":75412,"date":"2016-12-19T09:58:58","date_gmt":"2016-12-19T14:58:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.ucf.edu\/news\/?p=75412"},"modified":"2018-06-19T13:12:51","modified_gmt":"2018-06-19T17:12:51","slug":"ucf-students-volunteer-puerto-rico","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.ucf.edu\/news\/ucf-students-volunteer-puerto-rico\/","title":{"rendered":"Student\u2019s Hardship Inspires Volunteers to Help Children with Cancer in Puerto Rico"},"content":{"rendered":"
A 海角直播 student\u2019s experience with economic hardship and childhood illness has inspired a volunteer trip to Puerto Rico, where a group of students will help bring joy to pediatric cancer patients and their families in need this holiday season.<\/p>\n
Akasha Palou, a senior studying biology, planned the 10-person trip that centers on volunteering for Fundaci\u00f3n CAP, an organization that helps low-income families with children who have cancer. Its services span from help with medical bills and family counseling, to a lodge where families can stay for free near Centro M\u00e9dico de Puerto Rico, the hospital where children in the program are treated. The UCF volunteers from Dec. 13-19 will help with maintenance around the lodge, plus organize a Christmas party for the families and patients to lift their spirits.<\/p>\n
Fundaci\u00f3n CAP\u2019s work hits close to home for Palou, a Puerto Rico native whose family struggled financially when her father was unemployed for two years. Her family of nine lived in a rented house near San Juan that had no electricity or running water when she was a teenager.<\/p>\n
\u201cThat\u2019s why I chose this trip. I understand it can be hard to pay for things you need,\u201d said Palou, who added Puerto Rico\u2019s economic recession has increased the demand for organizations such as Fundaci\u00f3n CAP. Puerto Rico has more than $70 billion of debt and a nearly 12 percent unemployment rate, spurring some schools and hospitals to close.<\/p>\n
Her father\u2019s job search led the family to Washington State and then to Palm Bay, Fla., while Palou was in high school. When her father was laid off from a job at Microsoft, the family returned to Puerto Rico to be near family and live in a low-cost environment. Constantly moving and having to make new friends made Palou more extraverted and volunteer regularly with animal shelters and church organizations.<\/p>\n
\u201cAll the changes I went through and challenges with my family showed me that\u2019s why I needed to go to college \u2013 to make a career and make a change,\u201d said Palou, a recipient of UCF\u2019s Think 30 Scholarship and the UCF Grant.<\/p>\n
Palou aspires to be a pediatric oncologist, inspired by her younger brother Jean-Paul who has had Tourette\u2019s syndrome since he was 6 years old.<\/p>\n
\u201cA frustration of mine and my parents is Tourette\u2019s syndrome doesn\u2019t have a cure and it is unknown what causes it. I remember going from hospital to hospital, trying to find a physician who really cared and was most interested in his well-being. That frustration reminded me that kids with cancer go through this every day. I want to be one of the physicians who care,\u201d Palou said.<\/p>\n