Central Gwinnett High School in Lawrenceville, Georgia, was the site of a three month
long Health Career Academy which brought medical school mentors into the classroom
of 30 tenth grade students this year. The high school students were part of Central
Gwinnett鈥檚 Medical and Healthcare Sciences Academy and had shown an interest in the
healthcare field. The program will continue during the students鈥 junior and senior
years as well.
Osteopathic medicine, pharmacy and biomedical sciences students from Georgia Campus
鈥 色中色 (GA-PCOM) served as mentors in the
program designed by Main Line Health, a network of hospitals and clinics in Philadelphia,
and supported by Aetna. The well-validated and engaging curriculum was delivered to
the high school students who elected to stay after school on Friday afternoons to
participate in the program.
According to Hannah Shin, a first year GA-PCOM osteopathic medical student who led
the program along with her classmate Yasmeen Shariff, the first few weeks focused
on emergency medicine cases which were designed to build the high school students鈥
critical thinking skills. 鈥淲e wanted them to not only be able to shift through the
noise and determine which parts of the case contributed to the overall diagnosis,
but to also learn how to find and utilize reliable sources,鈥 Shin said.
Guest lecturers were also part of the Health Career Academy. One of the lecturers
was Dr. Carmen Eilertson, a senior lecturer at Georgia State University (GSU) who
received GSU鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences鈥 Outstanding Teaching Award this year.
She, along with her Teaching Assistant Matthew Rose, guided the students through a
cardiac dissection activity involving human hearts which displayed various degrees
of pathology and anomalies. The students also learned basic anatomy, physiology and
clinical applications of the heart.
The experience culminated in a symposium at Emory University School of Medicine where
the Central Gwinnett students showcased their final presentation, 鈥淭he Total Package:
Holistic Health from a Kid鈥檚 View.鈥 Other high schools participating in the program
this year were Carver High School, Maynard Jackson High School and North Clayton High
School, all sponsored by Emory.
The high school students even tried on their mentors鈥 white coats. Shin said, 鈥淚 hope
(by wearing the coats) they were inspired to one day be physicians, to feel the weight
of the coat with all its responsibility, privilege, and discovery and want to bear
all of this in the service of patients.鈥
According to Shin, the GA-PCOM students who acted as mentors 鈥渘ot only showed immense
dedication to our mission of giving back to the community and continuing the cycle
of education, but also surprised us with their individual strengths and amazing ability
to connect with the students and share what we鈥檝e learned thus far in med school.鈥
鈥淎t the end of the day,鈥 she said, 鈥渨e just really want to show the Central Gwinnett
students that they can dream and want more, because they are fully capable and able
to get where they want to be.鈥
The GA-PCOM mentors included:
Osteopathic Medicine 鈥 Hannah Shin, Yasmeen Shariff, Jeremiah Arnold, Francesca DiSantis, Sunita Jena,
Anthony Kamson, Sara Khalid, Kita Mack, Morgan Myers, Anna Nay, Valencia Ogelsby,
Ra鈥橲head Pompey, Allen Quetant, Lakshmi Rao, Catlyn Thigpen, Morgan Zegers
PCOM Georgia has been serving students and the community for 20 years as a branch campus of Philadelphia
College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM), a private, not-for-profit, accredited institution
of higher education established in 1899. Located in Suwanee (Gwinnett County), PCOM
Georgia offers doctoral degrees in osteopathic medicine, pharmacy and physical therapy.
Graduate degrees are offered in biomedical sciences, medical laboratory science and
physician assistant studies. The campus joins PCOM South Georgia in Moultrie in helping
to meet the healthcare needs of the state. Emphasizing "a whole person" approach to
care, PCOM Georgia focuses on educational excellence, interprofessional education
and service to the community. For more information, visit pcom.edu or call 678-225-7500. The campus is also home to the Georgia Osteopathic Care Center,
an osteopathic manipulative medicine clinic, which is open to the public by appointment.
For more information, visit .
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