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Medical school applications surge as COVID-19 inspires Black and Latino students to become doctors

Medical school applications surge as COVID-19 inspires Black and Latino students to become doctors Marco della Cava, USA TODAY Racial bias in health care more evident during COVID-19 pandemic Replay Video UP NEXT Miriam Cepeda watched helplessly as her grandfather, an immigrant from the Dominican Republic who was sick with COVID-19, resisted pleas last March to go to the hospital. “He told us he had sad memories of hospitals back home and he just didn’t trust the medical system,” said Cepeda, 19, whose grandfather later passed away from COVID. “For a lot of minority communities, going to the doctor isn’t our first choice or solution.”

Student s medical setbacks fuel passion for nursing career

Student s medical setbacks fuel passion for nursing career Follow Us Question of the Day By CAITLIN HEANEY WEST and The (Scranton) Times-Tribune - Associated Press - Saturday, January 30, 2021 SCRANTON, Pa. (AP) - Madison Jarocha knows her life would look much different if illness had not touched her. From an autoimmune disease that shook up her world as a teenager to broken bones to a cancer diagnosis in her final year of college, the 21-year-old has faced - and survived - more than some people do in a lifetime. Today, Madison, of South Abington Township, has a few months to go before earning her nursing degree from University of Central Florida. As a student in Abington Heights School District, however, Madison thought she’d one day study mathematics. That, along with much more of her life, changed when she was 16.

New Faculty Spotlight: Jason Park | WSU Insider | Washington State University

January 29, 2021 Jason Park This is the final installment in a series of articles highlighting new faculty members from each college at Washington State University. By Todd Mordhorst, Office of the Provost Highly specialized scientific research can be a lonely pursuit, but Jason Park doesn’t have to go far to find an understanding ear. He’s a first-year research assistant professor in the College of Veterinary Medicine, investigating Anaplasma a pathogen spread by ticks that infects humans and large mammals. Park’s wife Dana Shaw, an assistant professor in the Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Pathology, is studying those same ticks and their immune response to the pathogens they carry, including Anaplasma and Borrelia (Lyme disease bacteria).

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