Information for Our Community

Whether you are part of our community or are interested in joining us, we welcome you to Washington University School of Medicine.

close  


Visit the News Hub

Medical students create Hawaiian floral crowns for Siteman patients

'When you make a lei, you're putting a piece of your self or your spirit into it for the recipient'

by Elizabethe Holland DurandoMay 8, 2018

Matt Miller

First-year Washington University medical student Iris Kuo’s classmates were intrigued by the lovely haku lei – a floral crown — Kuo wore for the class’s White Coat ceremony in the fall. Eager to share her Hawaiian culture with her new classmates, the Honolulu native offered to arrange a workshop to teach them how to make the colorful crowns. But before long, the idea blossomed into something even more meaningful: an opportunity to connect with and show kindness to patients coping with cancer.

“I had an encounter with a patient who shared with me her experience with cancer — from the diagnosis, to the treatment, to remission,” Kuo explained. “As she spoke, I was reminded that the science behind our medical interventions is only part of the care that health-care workers can provide to patients. I realized that I could take this workshop idea and maybe create some beauty by aiming to lift patients’ spirits.”

Kuo, who earned her bachelor’s degree from Washington University in 2016, arranged a workshop April 30 in the Farrell Learning and Teaching Center involving some 50 medical students, faculty, members of the Hawaii Club on the Danforth Campus, and St. Louis community members with ties to Hawaii, the latter of whom helped those new to the art of making haku lei. Together, the group made about 50 floral crowns.

With help from Kelsie Kodama, president of the Hawaii Club, and Ryan Sachar, a research assistant on the Medical Campus, Kuo distributed the haku lei on May 1 — Lei Day in Hawaii — to about 45 patients receiving care for gynecologic cancers at Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University.

Maria Baggstrom, MD, an associate professor of medicine, supported Kuo throughout the planning process, and Siteman provided financial support.

“It worked out so beautifully,” Kuo said. “I got to share a piece of Hawaii’s culture with the workshop participants and the patients; I got to bring together different worlds I’m part of in St. Louis; and I got to bring some smiles to the patients.

“It’s believed that when you make a lei, you’re putting a piece of your self or your spirit into it for the recipient,” she continued. “It was my hope that, through the haku lei, the patients would feel our hope, support and aloha for a moment in their healing process. … These ladies, they’re fighting cancer, so if these haku lei made that process even a tiny bit better for them, that’s all I was hoping for.”

Matt Miller
Patient Jerry McCaleb hugs medical student Iris Kuo after Kuo presents her with a haku lei May 1 at Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
Matt Miller
Medical student Iris Kuo presents patient Patricia Hodges with a haku lei May 1 at Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
Matt Miller
School of Medicine students, faculty and others make haku lei — floral crowns — for patients April 30 at the Farrell Learning and Teaching Center.
Matt Miller
Maria Baggstrom, MD, helps other faculty, medical students and others make haku lei from flowers April 30 at Farrell Learning and Teaching Center.
Matt Miller
Medical students (from left) Samantha Lund, Margaret Duncan and Leah Newcomer smile for a photo of themselves wearing the haku lei they made for patients April 30 at the Farrell Learning and Teaching Center.

Elizabethe works with the science-writing and media relations teams within Medicine Marketing & Communications. She writes occasionally, including stories for Outlook magazine and the Record that took her to Bangladesh to cover faculty efforts to help Rohingya refugees. She is a former reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Las Vegas Sun and the Northwest Florida Daily News, and she has taught journalism and/or writing courses at The Ohio State University, Lindenwood University and Webster University. She has a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a master's degree in journalism from Ohio State.