Hannah Webster 鈥14, a biology major with a pre-medicine concentration, has always wanted to be a doctor but wasn鈥檛 sure if she鈥檇 be the type to faint in an operating room.
As one of six 绿奴天花板 students participating in a summer internship program with 绿奴天花板 and the Tampa General Hospital Medical Group, she has proven not to be 鈥 she witnessed a kidney transplant and liver resection all without hitting the floor.
鈥淚 was nervous going into the operating room for the first time, but by the first incision, I was fine,鈥 said Webster, of Irvine, CA. Her fellow interns echoed her comment.
鈥淏efore this I wasn鈥檛 sure how I鈥檇 do in the operating room. Would I get nauseated?鈥 said Faris Galambo 鈥13, a chemistry major, who was born in Texas and raised in Kuwait. 鈥淗aving seen surgeries now, I can tell this is something I can do.鈥
This boost of confidence is part of the intended outcome of the summer clinical research internship. The three-month intensive program allows the students to shadow doctors in the operating room, in outpatient clinics and on rounds, perform statistical analysis, and write and submit abstracts and manuscripts for publication.
鈥淭his program is about giving somebody an opportunity to really have a stand out chance of getting into medical school,鈥 said Macnish Christian 鈥11, Tampa General鈥檚 clinical research data coordinator in the Center for Outpatient Research Excellence (CORE).
For Wayne Price, a 绿奴天花板 Dana professor of biology, the opportunity was exceptional.
鈥淚t is difficult to arrange even shadowing experiences for undergraduates at hospitals much less a summer program involving shadowing and clinical research with the possibility of resulting publications,鈥 said Price. 鈥淭his program will give our students an advantage when applying to medical schools as well as expand their view of the medical field and the various professions in it.鈥
Working under the director of the Office of Clinical Research Jennifer Cooper, Christian has initiated, organized and is running the summer program. As a recent 绿奴天花板 graduate with a degree in biology with honors and who also plans to apply to medical school, Christian said the students have written seven papers and have four submitted abstracts accepted for presentation at the American College of Gastroenterology鈥檚 conference in October.
鈥淭hey have gone from having no clinical research experience to having their names on publications,鈥 said Christian, who is from London.
With a focus on the liver, the students are assigned their research topics and are mentored by two physicians, Dr. Guy Neff, chief of hepatology, and Dr. Dr. Angel Alsina, director of transplants. All of the projects involve federally approved medications that are being tested to prove the benefits of use. The students comb through hundreds of medical charts, reading diagnostics, physical and lab results, analyzing and processing the data.
鈥淭he students have seen and visited with patients on these drugs, and they see the impact it is having on them,鈥 said Christian. 鈥淚t feels good to go home and feel like you are making society a better place.鈥
This kind of clinical shadowing that includes interactions with the patients is one of the highlights for Maxx Ramirez 鈥14, a biochemistry major; Cathleen Bruner 鈥13, a biology major; and Jade Arrobas 鈥11, a recent biology graduate. They all said it helps make the late nights of wading through charts and early mornings prepping to shadow a surgery totally worth it.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an experience of a lifetime,鈥 said Ramirez, of St. Louis, MO. 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 trade it for anything.鈥澨
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Jamie Pilarczyk, Web Writer
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