Equity in Medicine Scholar Program
Developing strong physician pipelines in underserved areas by recruiting students from these areas and encouraging them to return home to practice.
Developing strong physician pipelines in underserved areas by recruiting students from these areas and encouraging them to return home to practice.
Apply for the Equity in Medicine Scholar Program…and begin the road to giving back to your community!
Anders Grant spent more than 20 years as a dietitian on the East Coast and in Texas. Years later, in her 50s, she began working with families on the Navajo reservation in Crownpoint, NM, and that’s when medicine called out to her.
In her three years there, she “fell in love with the community and the people.” Aided by the Equity in Medicine scholarship at St. George’s University, Ms. Grant is committed to returning to the reservation—a medically underserved area—when she becomes a physician.
Healthcare access and education is limited in and around Crownpoint. According to Ms. Grant, it takes upward of an hour to visit with a healthcare professional, and even then, staff and resources are limited.
As an ultra marathoner, Ms. Grant is especially focused on the treatment and prevention of diabetes, working closely with children and families on the reservation to address the root of the problem—obesity. Her diet and exercise program for children yielded tremendous results and was soon adopted by many parents.
“What I really emphasized was moving,” she said. “They saw me running out there every day, which showed that I practice what I preach. If I can get the children to start improving their health now, oh my goodness, the future is unlimited.”
In rural America, state-of-the-art technology and a wealth of resources may only be found at a great distance. Growing up in the foothills of North Carolina, Taylor James has seen the consequences of such deficiencies firsthand—and they have shaped her career path.
As a Spanish minor, she also completed a doctor shadowing assignment in Spain, an experience she said “instilled the importance of cultural competence.” She has used her bilingualism to communicate with—and ease the minds of—Spanish-speaking patients.
While she is keeping her options open, Ms. James is leaning toward a career in primary care, to become a valuable resource in a community that needs it. She even foresees opening up her own family medicine clinic, and is grateful for the financial flexibility she has to do so through receiving the Equity in Medicine Scholarship from SGU.
“I was so shocked and so thankful to receive the scholarship,” she said. “I have really enjoyed my first few weeks here. It’s a lot of studying—which I expected—but I don’t think I expected the overwhelming amount of resources and support that we have to ensure that we’re successful.”
Please contact our Scholarship Committee at scholarships@sgu.edu.