It didnât take long for Ellie Servia AuD â15 to encounter her first âreal Alaskaâ moment.
A client came into the audiology clinic where she works seeing an consultation for a bone-anchored hearing aid after he had been mauled by a grizzly bear.
The man reportedly was building something in a rural part of the state and had to walk about a half mile to get supplies.
âHe had a gun, bear spray and his dog, but when he came out of the building, there was a big grizzly bear, and it just attacked,â Servia said. âHe played dead, rolled onto his stomach like youâre supposed to, and put his hands over the back of his neck.â
The bear tried to turn him over, and a claw cut through the middle of his ear, severing nerves. He suffered facial paralysis as well as hearing loss.
âBut heâs sitting there telling the story and says, âYou know, it was a young bear. It didnât know better,ââ Ellie recalled. âThat was my welcome to Alaska.â
Servia, who grew up in Northern California, says she always wanted to live in Alaska, so the externship opportunity was too good to pass up.
After earning her bachelorâs degree, she was selling hearing aids â what she called an incredibly rewarding career.
âIt can be an instant gratification job,â she said. âYou fit a hearing aid and instantly improve someoneâs quality of life.â
But though she was certified, she couldnât work with pediatric patients or surgical devices without a doctorate in audiology.
âI did a Google search and found a brand new program was starting at Pacific, and off I went,â Servia said.
Pacific launched its School of Audiology in 2012, offering an accelerated three-year route to a doctor of audiology degree.
Students study in an intensive three-year curriculum that includes classroom instruction and practical experience in Pacificâs EarClinic, which serves hearing and balance needs of patients throughout the community.
âI like it. Instead of studying for three or four finals and writing a paper on the side, youâre getting really in-depth in one subject at a time, then you go into the clinic and apply what you learned,â Servia said.
The third year of the program is dedicated completely to an externship in an audiology clinic somewhere in the country. Some of Serviaâs 19 peers went to Seattle; another to San Francisco. One embarked on officer training in the U.S. Army and completed an internship at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
Servia said she âlucked outâ with her placement, which offered some unique attributes.
Most externships are one year long, ending at the studentâs graduation. Servia, however, signed a two-year contract with Northern Hearing Services, then stayed on.
The audiologists she works with have multiple sites in Alaska, plus a specialty clinic on Kodiak Island. They work with a lot of pediatric patients, including almost all of the infants who are born deaf in the state, helping families prepare for and follow up after cochlear implants â just what she dreamed of when she set out to get her degree.
âPeople are relying on your answers for very serious decisions about their health, their future, really their quality of life. Youâre really helping people.â