Second Year Service Project: First Aid Services Team

For my second year service project I volunteered with the American Red Cross on the First Aid Services Team (FAST). As a member of FAST, I volunteer at various events around Ohio State and Columbus to provide first aid and emergency medical care to patrons. Some of the events I have volunteered at include basketball games, concerts, hockey games, wrestling matches, races, and more. Overall, volunteering with FAST has helped me give back to the OSU campus and our local community while also gaining clinical experience by treating patients. This volunteer opportunity has also allowed me to utilize my EMT-B certification and help lead fellow FAST members as an advanced responder during emergency situations. While a lot of my time volunteering has been spent waiting on standby, ready to respond to a call at a moment’s notice, knowing that my team and I are prepared to handle any call that is thrown at us helps me realize how important our job is because when something does go wrong, we are there to help. If we did not have the volunteers that we do and were not present at the events we serve at, minutes and even seconds could be wasted waiting for other first responders to arrive on scene, but in the event of an emergency those minutes and seconds can cost someone’s life. I never thought I would have such an amazing volunteer opportunity and while the great responsibility of caring for someone’s life can be intimidating, the moments when I have been able to keep an unresponsive woman breathing by inserting a nasal airway or stopping a girl’s head from gushing blood after being hit by a hockey puck, are incredibly rewarding and have inspired me even more to pursue a career in Emergency Medicine. I plan on continuing to volunteer with FAST until I graduate in order to gain more patient care experience, but also to give back to this community that has become my new home. By volunteering with FAST, I am one step closer towards achieving my goal of becoming an Emergency Medicine Physician.

 

 

 

Academic Enrichment: Informational Interview

I had the pleasure of interviewing Mahala Spalsbury, a first year medical student at the University of Toledo. Throughout the course of the interview she offered a lot of great insight about going through the medical school application process which I will soon go through myself within the next year or two. I have spoken to many people about applying to medical school, but Mahala was able to provide me with valuable advice due to her recent experiences applying and beginning medical school, offering a different perspective than other people I have spoken to.

In regards to what schools to apply to, she recommended that I apply to all Ohio schools because I have betters odds at an in-state school. I also need to do my research on any other schools outside of Ohio to check and see what percentages of out-of-state people that they actually admit. I also learned to gather information about what different schools look for in applicants, specifically in regards to research experience. I personally do not have a big interest in performing research and would rather focus my time and efforts on clinical experiences, so Mahala recommended that I not bother with Case Western and the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine as those schools have a high focus on research. Also, in order to help sort out information from different schools, she suggested purchasing the MSAR to help search through what schools I qualify for and what I schools I should apply to.

We also talked a lot about MCAT preparation and while she didn’t really take a traditional route for studying, she recommended starting 6 months in advance. The goal is to learn all of the material and understand it by the end of spring semester next year and then focus on practice tests for 2 months before I take the MCAT at the end of June. After speaking with her I’m also planning on purchasing Kaplan books to study, but I believe I can set and stick with a strict schedule for covering the material instead of participating in an expensive course.

In the end she stressed that if I work hard and set my mind to it, I will succeed in whatever I do and it all will pay off. Mahala loves being in medical school and she encouraged me to stick with it and power through because it will all be worth it in the end. It was very inspiring and motivational to hear this from a student who has just gone through the process and speaking with her was definitely a great confidence booster to keep on working with everything that I am doing so that one day I can become an Emergency Medicine Physician.