Note: The following story appears in the summer issue of Hindsight alumni magazine. For more information about the 兔子先生Alumni Association, see the .
JACKSON 鈥 Before Carl Mangum was certified to take a pulse, he could still take an order 鈥 either crispy or with fries, that is.
鈥淚n a former life, I was a restaurant manager,鈥 Mangum said of his days working in chicken and burger outlets in the Jackson area. 鈥淚鈥檓 a graduate of Hamburger University 鈥 on the dean鈥檚 list.鈥
Mangum, his wife, Christina, and three young sons came to the same crossroads where many young families find themselves. 鈥淚 was looking for something else to do. I was working for 100-plus hours a week and making very little money. I needed to do something different.鈥
A boyhood fascination with emergency medical technicians, spurred by a TV series, turned into a life-altering decision. 鈥淚 always wanted to be a paramedic, because of the TV show 鈥淓mergency!,鈥 from the 1970s. The show followed two paramedics in Los Angeles and their station. And so I thought it was cool.
鈥淏ut, why [tweetable alt=””]I went back into nursing school was to make a better life for me and my family[/tweetable].鈥
He enrolled at Hinds, and the family scraped by at first, with Mangum working part-time jobs. But he hasn鈥檛 looked back since graduating in 1994.
After completing the Associate Degree Nursing program at Hinds, he moved on to the University of Mississippi Medical Center鈥檚 School of Nursing, where he earned his bachelor鈥檚 and a master鈥檚, in Psychiatric Mental Health/Nurse Practitioner. He also has a Ph.D. in leadership from the University of Southern Mississippi.
His work in mental health began during his time at a program with the Mississippi State Hospital in Whitfield. It paid Mangum a monthly stipend in exchange for working with the facility as he went through school, and it became a passion.
鈥淲hen I graduated, I had a job waiting for me there,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was on their educational leave program, which means I signed up with them for four years. 鈥淢ental illness is not the dragon people claim it to be. It鈥檚 a brain disease 鈥 no different than heart disease, cancer, diabetes, anything else. It just involves the brain instead of the heart or the pancreas.鈥
In keeping with his passion, Mangum, of Byram, teaches a Psychiatric Nursing course at UMMC, as well as the Assessment, Fundamentals and Health Promotion courses. He鈥檚 also a certified volunteer firefighter and a HAZMAT technician. Also, he commands the Mississippi-1 Disaster Medical Assistance Team, part of the National Disaster Medical System with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
鈥淚鈥檝e responded to Hurricane Sandy, in 2012, and was deployed for Hurricane Ike, in 2008, in the command center in Austin, Texas,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or Hurricane Katrina, I did a lot of stuff at the Fairgrounds and Coliseum. UMMC set up a clinic there a couple of days in, to help get them medicine if they were out.鈥
His life in the medical field has come alongside success for wife Christina and similar career paths in the family.
She teaches math at Murrah High School and now has three master鈥檚 degrees. All three of his daughters-in-law are also nurses.
From his days at Hinds, he remembers the unique personal touch, which along with his experiences in the working world, he channels into his own teaching style.
鈥淣ursing school is quite difficult,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the hardest things you can choose to do. 兔子先生was my way of getting into the profession. The faculty was great, caring people. But, I also use principles in the hospital that I learned in the food industry, because we鈥檙e a service industry, too. It鈥檚 just with healthcare, and not hamburgers.鈥
Colleagues say it鈥檚 a formula that works.
鈥淎s a professional, he never settles,鈥 said Sherri D. Franklin, director of the RN-BSN program at UMMC School of Nursing and classmate of Mangum鈥檚 during their days at Hinds. 鈥淗e always seeks opportunities for development and is a great mentor to students and less-experienced co-workers.鈥
And it鈥檚 a certain versatility with today鈥檚 students that鈥檚 the strongest vital sign in Mangum鈥檚 life in healthcare.
鈥淪tudents want that recognition and want us to be proud of and pleased with them. So, I do the high-five type of stuff to say, 鈥楬ey, great job!鈥
鈥淎nd, still, if they鈥檙e doing something wrong, you want to be stern with them since we鈥檙e dealing with people鈥檚 lives here.鈥