Page 5 - Morehouse School of Medicine Scholarship - IMPACT
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Scholarship IMPACT on MSM medical students



                    child who vowed to
                    become a doctor after
                    witnessing his uncle’s
                       a
          A th from pancreatic
                    de
         cancer. A girl who received a stetho-
         scope as a gift and wore it around
         the house because she knew she was
         meant to be a physician. A teenager
         who, while visiting his cousin in an
         intensive care unit, walked the halls
         and saw too much — children with
         burns, gunshot wounds, other trau-
         ma — and knew he wanted to help.
         A girl who lost her five-year-old
         brother to meningitis after doctors
         failed to make the right diagnosis.
             What do all of these children
         have in common? They all have        threatens to dissuade them from      male doctor until I was 23 years
         grown up to become medical stu-      taking lower-paying jobs in needy    old,” he says. “That has been one of
         dents at Morehouse School of Medi-   communities. With scholarship        my motivators throughout medical
         cine in Atlanta.                     support, these doctors are freed to   school.”
             For more than 45 years, More-    serve in primary care and under-        MSM’s focus on health equity
         house School of Medicine has         privileged communities.              has not gone unnoticed; the school
         been known for educating the next       As you know, the country is       has twice bested all other medical
         generation of physicians who will    becoming more and more diverse,      schools in a national study to be
         provide culturally competent care to   but the diversity of its healthcare   named number-one for the insti-
         underserved communities. Indeed,     workforce still lags, with just five   tution’s dedication to the social
         about 66 percent of our graduates    percent of physicians identifying as   mission of medical education.
         are doing just that.                 African American. This is due, in       “MSM resonates with my per-
             “Many schools have mission       part, to the high cost of completing   sonal convictions that health care is
         statements that are more or less the   a medical degree. The impact is    a right, not a privilege,” says schol-
         same. Morehouse School of Med-       significant, given that studies show   arship recipient Adonias Christo-
         icine lives up to its mission,” says   that Black patients tend to have bet-  pher Lemma. “I did not enter this
         scholarship recipient Alexandria     ter outcomes when treated by Black   profession for the money. I am in it
         Williams.                            physicians.                          to help people.”
             MSM’s MD students, who              Young Black people need role         Financial concerns can be
         typically come from more difficult   models, to show that it is possible   significant for students at MSM.
         socioeconomic circumstances than     to pursue a career in medicine, says   Though the average household in-
         their peers, often leave medical     MSM scholarship recipient Dari-      come of students entering medical
         school with crushing debt that       us Stephens. “I didn’t have a Black                    continued on next page
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