Alumna Helps Her People Fight Diabetes

Feb 1, 2012 | Blog

Lynn Cuny. Diabetes prevention coach in Rapid City, S.D.

 

Alumna Helps Her People Fight Diabetes

February 1, 2012

 

Lynn Cuny. Diabetes prevention coach in Rapid City, S.D.

Lynn Cuny, an Oglala Lakota alumna who works for a special diabetes prevention program as a health technician in Rapid City, SD , leads a group on a hike through the Black Hills as part of her community prevention and awareness program in this 2010 file photo.

Lynn’s Lakota name means “She Helps Her People.” Her name perfectly predicted her life’s path. Lynn earned her master’s degree from Oglala Lakota College (OLC) in South Dakota and today works to educate people about preventing and controlling type II diabetes in her community as a prevention health technician.
“I feel passionately about it because I have family members who have been affected by diabetes. It’s a disease that hits home for me and the community,” Lynn says.
Scholarships were integral to Lynn’s success. Her parents struggled to buy food and could not afford to send her to college. Lynn says she was determined to go to school and studied hard to qualify for scholarships.“It is a struggle to even go to college, but to be financially capable [of going] is one of the most important things in helping students stay in school and come full circle. We have professional people in our communities who are becoming teachers, business leaders, and cultural leaders. Just retaining those people [in college] and having them make a positive impact is a great thing.”

 

Recent Blog Posts

Earth Day is Every Day

Earth Day is Every Day

Today, April 22, is the 54th Earth Day since its first celebration, which birthed the modern environmental movement in 1970. It is a day to raise awareness of the damage done to the planet and the need for more sustainable practices in every aspect of life and industry. For Indigenous peoples, the responsibility to care for the earth and the environments that shaped our cultures is one we have carried for millennia. That commitment to the places that are a part of us persists today in the studies and careers many Native people pursue.