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By GlobeMed
The podcast currently has 12 episodes available.
At the beginning of 2020, due to financial constraints and staff capacity, the GlobeMed network went through a resize. We committed to maintaining all of the chapters at minority serving institutions and historically Black colleges and universities. However, some of them asked to pause operations, as this decision happened as the COVID-19 pandemic was starting and many students didn’t know what to expect from their universities. As the situation, both at GlobeMed and at universities, has changed, we've been supporting students at those institutions to re-found their chapters, after a hiatus.
Elvira Diouf and Denaysia Arroyo are students at North Carolina Central University, an HBCU in Durham, North Carolina. They're working to get the GlobeMed at NCCU chapter restarted this year and talk about what the process has been like, what their hopes are for their chapter, and the benefits of attending an HBCU.
To learn more about GlobeMed's impact, check out the Impact page on our website.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available soon.
Kelsey Glotz is a bedside nurse working as a beside nurse at a children's hospital in the neurology, neurosurgery, and endocrinology unit after graduating from Loyola University in Chicago. During her time as a part of GlobeMed at Loyola University, her chapter was partnered with Jambi Huasi, and organization that brings indigenous healing practices as well as Western medicine practices to the communities they serve. Kelsey talks about her experience as Director of Community Building for her chapter, advocating for medical decisions, and how she decided to have a home birth for her second child.
To learn more about some of the things mentioned in the episode, check out the links below.
To learn more about GlobeMed's impact, check out the Impact page on our website.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available soon.
Sumita Strander was very involved in the GlobeMed at Dartmouth College chapter during her undergraduate studies, majoring in Medical Anthropology. When she worked on her thesis about dementia care for Indian elders, she drew on the lessons she had learned about humility from GlobeMed. Now, she's a medical student at Harvard University and still applying the skills she gained from working in partnership to working with patients. Communications Intern Caitriona Greene spoke with Sumita about this, her motivations for doing this work, and advice for others on this career path.
To learn more about GlobeMed's impact, check out the Impact page on our website.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available here.
Kaleb Whitfield, GlobeMed at Georgia State University, and Ngozi Elobuike, GlobeMed at Howard University, both attended minority serving institutions, thought they wanted to become medical doctors, and had their lives changed from their GlobeMed experience. Communications Intern Caitriona Greene talked with Kaleb and Ngozi about what it was like to be a founding member of a chapter, how they changed their career paths, and the value of a GlobeMed experience.
To learn more about GlobeMed's impact, check out the Impact page on our website.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available soon.
Alex Moran, GlobeMed at the George Washington University alumnus, is currently a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Los Angeles. He's built a career around global research with a particular focus on HIV. He talks with Communications Intern Caitriona Greene about how GlobeMed gave him a foundation in working with local organizations, finding a passion for global and public health, and crucial skills he's picked up along the way.
One of the skills he mentioned was learning a statistical programming language, such as R or Python. Codecademy is a free, online source where you can learn those languages along with many others.
To learn more about GlobeMed's impact, check out the Impact page on our website.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available here.
The 2022 GlobeMed at University of Colorado, Boulder's Grassroots On-Site Work (GROW) interns were the first people from their chapter to visit their partner in-person since 2019. Shreya Sharma, Jeremiah Diaz, and Grace Matsey talk with Communications Intern Caitriona Greene about what their days were like in rural Nepal, how they worked together as a team, and what some of their biggest lessons were from their experience.
Check out GlobeMed at University of Colorado, Boulder's Instagram.
Learn more about Himalayan Healthcare and their work in Nepal.
To learn more about GlobeMed's impact, check out the Impact page on our website.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available soon.
Victoria Inojosa is a GlobeMed at Loyola University alumna who went on to get her law degree from Cornell University. She talks with Communications Intern Caitriona Greene about the foundation that her GlobeMed experience gave her, how she ended up working specifically with people who are on death row, and the ways that the legal system is stacked against people.
To learn more about some of the things Victoria mentioned, check out the links below.
To learn more about GlobeMed's impact, check out the Impact page on our website.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available soon.
Stevie Askew is a GlobeMed at Northwestern University alumna and worked as a Chapter and Partnership Coach at GlobeMed HQ for the 2021-2022 academic year. She talks with Communications Intern Caitriona Greene about what it was like to grow up on the far South Side of Chicago and then see similarities in a rural community in Uganda. She shares about how going on her Grassroots On-site Work, or GROW, internship at Adonai Child Development Center contributed to her desire to become a physician. Stevie also talks about what it's been like to work at HQ and what some of her successes have been and what she's taking away from the experience.
To learn more about GlobeMed's impact, check out the Impact page on our website.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available soon.
GlobeMed at University of Rochester alumna, Nisha Arya, speaks with Communication Intern Caitriona Green about her experiences and what she's learned about equitable community partnerships. Nisha talks about her Grassroots On-Site Work (GROW) experience, what it was like to lead globalhealthU sessions, and what is important to her when partnering with a community.
Nisha worked with GlobeMed at University of Rochester's partner Social Organization for Voluntary Action, based in Odisha, India on her GROW trip.
Some of the things that Nisha and Cat mentioned:
To learn more about GlobeMed's impact, check out the Impact page on our website.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available soon.
Sarah Stern is a GlobeMed at Columbia alum and currently works as a Health Educator at the Center for American Indian Health at Johns Hopkins University, creating curriculums in partnership with tribal communities that further public health initiatives. Growing up in the capital of the Cherokee Nation (Tahlequah, Oklahoma), Sarah witnessed the overwhelming need for public health programs within her community and became interested in sustainable health initiatives at a young age. Sarah graduated from Columbia University in May of 2016 with an honors degree in Gender and Sexuality Studies and a concentration in Native American studies.
Sarah mentions GWED-G, or Gulu Women's Economic Development & Globalization, GlobeMed at Columbia's long time partner organization.
Due to many factors including forced removal, Indian boarding schools, relocating programs, education and job opportunities, about 80% of Native Americans reside in urban areas presently, but the Indian Health Service (IHS) does not prioritize these areas for funding as mentioned in the podcast recording. From NCUIH, “Although 78% of American Indians/Alaska Natives reside in urban areas, the IHS funding allocation for urban Indian health only reflects close to 1% of the total annual IHS budget,” and “There are inadequate levels of funding to address the rising urban Indian population.”
About asterisk data, "American Indians and Alaska Natives may be described as the ‘Asterisk Nation’ because an asterisk, instead of a data point, is often used in data displays when reporting racial and ethnic data due to various data collection and reporting issues, such as small sample size, large margins of errors, or other issues related to the validity and statistical significance of data on American Indians and Alaska Natives."
You can also check out Sarah's podcast, Indigenae Podcast.
Christine mentioned the book "Braiding Sweetgrass" by Robin Wall Kimmerer, which you can find here on bookshop.org.
You can find GlobeMed on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Medium.
Transcript available here.
The podcast currently has 12 episodes available.