黑料不打烊

Family Nurse Practitioner Gabi Rampazi says DAISY Award Reinforced her Career Goal and Philosophy to Always Help Others

/blog/family-nurse-practitioner-gabi-rampazi-says-daisy-award-reinforced-her-career-goal-and-philosophy-to-always-help-others/""In July 2020, Gabi Rampazi was presented the at her graduation from 黑料不打烊’s Registered Nursing program at the Reno, NV campus. When I asked her what it meant for her to receive the DAISY Award four years ago, she said, 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 expect it 鈥 I had no idea the woman who sponsored me was someone I had simply helped when she was two semesters behind me.聽 I鈥檝e tried most of my life to help others and be the kind of person I want others to be to me.鈥

When asked how being honored with the DAISY Award has had an impact on her in the last four years, you can imagine someone like Gabi does not toot her own horn. But this July 2024, Gabi will travel with her family to Chicago, Illinois to receive her聽 (Family Nurse Practitioner Specialty Track) from Chamberlain University. Then, she and her Brazilian-born husband and two daughters will fly to Brazil and take a well-deserved vacation.

What kind of life did Gabi have that steered her toward so successfully to reach her dream of becoming a Family Nurse Practitioner? She says it was a life decision to care for her parents, who both suffered early deaths.聽 鈥淵ou do what you do for family,鈥 she says. Not everyone approaches life with that kind of devotion. But she is a perfect model of what the DAISY Award stands for, not only in her level of compassion for anyone in need, but also the building of great character and integrity along with it. That is the stuff that dreams are made of.

 

Tell me about yourself.

I grew up in Southern California. My father got cancer before I was born; he was diagnosed with melanoma and treated at Loma Linda in the early 鈥70鈥檚.聽 He was one of the first patients ever to go through chemotherapy and radiation. The chemo he took was cutting edge but it was rough on him. It gave him an extra 20 years and the opportunity to start a family; but the treatment for that cancer caused him to be in poor health. In 2003 he was diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome and subsequently leukemia. He received a bone marrow transplant in 2005 but died of complications from it.

 

I鈥檓 so sorry. I guess exposure to illness in your family had something to do with your interest in medicine?

It changed my life. At first, I was going to be a medical doctor; I wanted to stay at school but I also wanted to take care of the family. You do what you do. When Dad was first diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome, I had been in paramedic school. I fell in love with emergency medicine. When Dad died, I was 23 years old. That鈥檚 when my Mom moved in with me.聽 And within three years of his death, she wanted to leave Southern California. So we moved to Reno in 2007.

 

What did you do in Reno?

I got off the ambulance and became a 911 dispatcher.

 

And how did your Mom do after your father鈥檚 passing?

She lived with me and was fine until 2013. Unfortunately, three months before I married my husband, she died in a car accident.

 

Wow, I鈥檓 so sorry. That must have been hard. But fortunately, you had your husband. How did you meet him?

I met him when I really wanted to learn Medical Spanish for my job; it鈥檚 an invaluable asset to have in emergency medicine. I was paired with him in class. But he鈥檚 from Brazil, so his Spanish was not as conversational as I needed!

 

/blog/family-nurse-practitioner-gabi-rampazi-says-daisy-award-reinforced-her-career-goal-and-philosophy-to-always-help-others/""Well, I guess you didn鈥檛 get the conversational Spanish you wanted to learn, but you gained a partner!

Yes! Learning Spanish well is still on my TO DO list, but I鈥檓 happily married. We have two daughters, 8 years old and 1 year old.

 

How did you decide to attend 黑料不打烊’s Registered Nursing program?

I still wanted to pursue a nursing career, but there鈥檚 never a perfect time to. So we decided I would go to school and keep working full time as a dispatcher. He supported us too. I switched my schedule to nights, twelve-hour shifts, and I studied in between 911 calls.

 

Wow. How long did you do that?

Another four years. I鈥檓 working parttime now for 黑料不打烊 as a clinical instructor in the Associate Degree in Nursing program for the 6th semester.

 

You never gave up.

Nope, I never gave up. Now I鈥檓 full circle. I鈥檒l finish my classes this month, graduate, and begin my career as a Nurse Practitioner.

 

What a moment to celebrate!

Yes 鈥 I鈥檝e never walked in a graduation for any of my other degrees. So that鈥檚 why we鈥檙e headed to Chicago in July. And then we go to Brazil for a vacation.

 

What does winning the DAISY Award mean to you now?

The DAISY Award helped me remember to never give up on my dreams. To believe that I will find a way. It also epitomizes the compassion and selflessness that comes with being a nurse. Being there for people in their darkest times still represents for me what we should aspire to in becoming nurses.

 

A hearty congratulations for an amazing achievement and the best to you and your family!

Thank you.

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