Since my second semester at UT, I have devoted 15 hours a week to volunteering as a Young Life leader. Every week I help run a club meeting for dozens of high school kids, manage a planning meeting with my teammates, and lead a small group for sophomore girls. I spend hours at St. Stephen’s Episcopal School watching games and performances, and simply getting to know these young adults. Through investing this time to build relationships as a mentor and role model, I strove to show these girls that they are significant, noticed and valued. Volunteering as a Young Life leader has taught me invaluable lessons in building relationships, caring for others, and working with a team that will help me to be a more supportive and productive physician…
Finding a program that would help me explore my interests in science and provide me with the knowledge to procure a profession in the medical field was a very rigorous task, however the Health Profession Recruitment and Exposure Program clearly emerged on top. After reading the description available online, I knew that HPREP would not only enhance my interest in the medical field, but also reshape my vision of the science world. I look forward to participating in the small group workshops led by medical students as I believe they will expose me to medical activities early on in my career that will spark a further interest. Also the ability to ask questions and work with the medical students, fellow students, and teachers will enable me to make connections, obtain unique advice and allow me to have a mentor or person I can reach out to and follow his or her footsteps to my own goals.…
Describe your particular interest in attending UNE COM and any contact you have had with UNE COM students, alumni, faculty or clinicians, admissions counselors, student affairs staff, etc. How did these interactions influence your decision to apply? As a student athlete, there have been numerous experiences where I have faced an entirely new roster of teammates. In certain instances, this has caused a lack of fluidity and success.…
Osteopathic Medicine Personal Statement As a child, I had the opportunity to grow up in Haiti, in doing so I had the opportunity to learn and interact with the culture in my early years. The remainder of my formal education was completed in the United States, but the experience that I went through in my early life in Haiti, I assumed helps mold and shape my optimistic perception of the future. Growing up within a disadvantaged community there were tough times, moments in which any individuals could not help but feel a sense powerlessness, those were some of the moments that shaped my views. This I believed have instill within me the motivation to help individuals in need.…
They call them “Tap-taps,” the brightly painted open back trucks that transport passengers through the dusty streets of Haiti. A traveler taps the side of the vehicle to board, pays, rides and then taps to jump off at a desired destination. For one particular man who sat with his face covered by a towel, that destination was the Diegue clinic in Port-au-Prince. All I knew from intake was that this patient was here for a foot issue. I noticed the adult sitting uncomfortably, a towel wrapping his foot, as his eyes scanned around the room.…
Risha Patel CASPA - Please explain why you are interested in being a Physician Assistant. The test came back negative. We all felt Juan’s relief as we translated in Spanish that he did not contract HIV. While shaking my hand, he exclaimed in broken English, “I want to thank you because this isn’t your body or your responsibility, it’s mine.…
Upon reflection of the last few years of my life, I a proud to say that I have transformed from a simple studios human into a captivating self-driven woman. Like others, when I began high school, I was relatively oblivious to the needs of others and lacked insight to who I would become. Immediately after gracing the front doors to my high school, I stumbled upon a variety of activities that satisfied my need for knowledge and my extroverted personality. As a freshman, I participated in volleyball, basketball, and outdoor track. On the academic side, I fell in love with my Health Team Relations class and began to see the beauty of helping and healing others.…
vI have the drive and the passion to pursue medicine and I believe that medicine is a strong fit for me. I have worked hard throughout my undergraduate years to make this dream of mine a reality. I have experience working and volunteering in various medical settings and these experiences have helped me gain understanding of how the medical field works as well as shape my goals and aspirations for the future. One of my most memorable experiences was volunteering as a medical intern at Dr. Liu’s primary care office.…
This helps me attain my predetermined purpose because I need to be prepared and be ready to interact with a lot of students in medical school. According to two students that are currently attending Portland State, Portland State has cutting-edge technology in their chemistry facilities, and the professors advocate students to collaborate in order to complete a lab (Lai & Lai). Similarly, Harvard contains a profusion of buildings that “are used exclusively for scientific research. They offer interconnected labs, clusters, and offices designed to…
Question 1 Why do you believe AZCOM (Arizona College of Osteopathic Medicine) would provide you with the type of osteopathic medical education you are seeking? Growing up I have had the opportunity to witness AZCOM transform my three brothers into successful osteopathic physicians. Their journey through Midwestern University, has affirmed this institution’s outstanding qualities in clinical exposure, student-centered faculty, and excellent didactics.…
When I first decided to pursue a career in medicine, the osteopathic philosophy was not something I was very familiar with. I knew that I owed it to myself and even my future patients to research the profession and make it a priority to shadow an osteopathic physician. It took many cold calls and emails, but through the American Osteopathic Association (AOA) Mentor Program I was eventually able to find an osteopathic physician, specializing in family medicine, that was excited to share the profession with me. Dr. Phuc Huynh, DO, invited me to spend the morning with him as he visited his patients in a skilled nursing facility. Conversing with Dr. Huynh about the osteopathic philosophy and observing him compassionately interact with his patients…
1) Briefly describe your exposure to medicine As the daughter of a pediatrician, the medical field has surrounded me my entire life. However, my familiarity with the details of medicine expanded at age 15 when I began to volunteer at the C.A.R.E. Clinic, which provides medical care for the uninsured. My internship at a medical examiner’s office exposed me to the anatomy and physiology of the human body and the medical causes of death. In college, I explored medicine by volunteering in the emergency department at Children’s Hospital and Clinics of Minnesota in St. Paul and participated in a Global Medical Brigades trip to rural Honduras.…
Attending a school that emphasizes diversity like the University of California, Los Angeles allowed me to interact with dissimilar people and immerse myself in many cultures different from my own. Through conversations outside of class and attending multiple culture nights, I was able to experience some of the customs, values, and beliefs of other cultures I had never been previously exposed to. However, most of my understanding has come from my service in Dr. Amy Waterman’s lab at the UCLA Transplant Research and Education Center. The research lab aims to reduce racial disparities in transplant. An example of our discoveries during research was results showing that minorities, especially African Americans, are less likely to pursue living…
“Attention, racers! GO!” Our streamlined canoe leapt forward with each stroke, racing toward the finish line. Relying on technique and endurance, attributes hard won through dedication, hard work, and perseverance, my teammates and I earned a bronze medal that day on the world stage. The first day of my surgery clerkship, I felt as much excitement as I did standing on the podium.…
Orthopedic Surgery averages more than 20 surgeries in a month (“Career”), which leads to the fact that orthopedic surgeons are in high demand. Orthopedic surgery looks like an interesting career, which I’d like to be in, in my future. A career in orthopedic surgery takes a lot of education and training, but has many benefits. There are many different kinds of surgeons in the United States. You have general surgeons, specialty interest surgeons, and specialists in the fields of surgery (“Sports Physicians”).…