Urban Bioethics Spring 2024 Presentation of Graduates

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Presentation of Graduates

Center for Urban Bioethics
Master of Arts & Certificate in Urban Bioethics
Spring 2024

Message from the Director

It is a very important time to graduate with a degree focused on health equity, justice, ethics, and structural marginalization. Those of us in the health care field are called upon, in this era, to make clear where we stand. Do we speak up for marginalized patients and communities, near and far, when their access to health care is being attacked, abridged, or denied? Do we join the system with a critical eye, noting the ways that a system meant to do good can also perpetuate harm? Do we attend to our own personal development, so that when we encounter individuals we can keep ourselves regulated, despite our own baggage and biases?

I hope that you’ve developed answers to these questions and more, throughout your time in this program. Our goal is to cultivate scholars and practitioners who are equipped to advance justice, even at some personal risk. Knowing many of you and watching your journeys—I think we have achieved that.

I hope you will stay in touch with us, as we continue to build the intellectual community of Center faculty, staff, students and alumni —you are now in the latter category. We will watch your careers with excitement, and cannot wait to see what you do to advance justice and ethics in your corners of the world. Congratulations!

Prof. Nicolle Stand

Associate Professor, Center for Bioethics

Center for Urban Bioethics

Message to Graduates

As an anthropologist working in bioethics, I am fortunate to work with students who are able to integrate the social and cultural aspects of health and health care delivery with their chosen field. It has been a tremendous privilege to get to know each of you in class through the firstyear seminar series, and it has been such a pleasure watching each of you make conceptual connections, examine familiar problems through a new lens, and chart your own path through your degree.

Each of you dedicated time and energy to learn practical strategies and develop your own ideas of how to build a healthier, more equitable world. I hope you see the essential nature of the work you have undertaken and the need for more ethically informed critical thinkers and problem solvers like you. I am inspired by the thoughtfulness, passion, and determination each of you has demonstrated throughout your time in our program and excited to cheer you on as you apply your bioethics training to your future endeavors.

Dr. Nora Jones Director, MAUB Program

Associate Professor, Bioethics

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Presentation of Graduates

Master of Arts

August 2023

Caroline Presley Burkholder

Beyond CarbonToward Liberation:

An Urban Bioethical Case for a Socially and Environmentally Just University Health System

Clifton Dietrick

School-Based Health Centers: A Conduit for Addressing Pediatric Public Health Issues in Urban Communities

Amanda Foote

Immigrant Health & Bioethics: On the Significance of Local Context

December 2023

Valerie E. Armstead

Reparations for Contemporary Black Health Care Providers and Patients Adversely Affected by the Flexner Report

May 2024

Lauren Bules

A Retrospective Review and Survey of Factors Related to Successful Engagement in a MultiVisit Patient Clinic Program

Hannah Calvelli

Prison Health and the Bioethical Challenges Facing Patients Who Are Incarcerated

Julia E. Carp

The Role of the Urban Academic Medical Center in Addressing Food Justice: From Farm to Families and Beyond

Margaret R. Carter

Ethical Considerations in Goals of Care for Patients with Polysubstance Use and Medical Complications in the Era of Xylazine

Michael Christian Coronado

Racial Disparities in Primary Open Angle Glaucoma Research Studies Among Black and Hispanic Participants: A Critical Review of Studies Used to Inform Current Screening Guidelines

Olivia Frances Duffield

Getting Well: ExpandingTools to Address Opioid Use Disorder in the Hospital

Omodele O. Durojaye

Mitigating Bias in Medical Education at the Intersection of Standardized Patients and Medical Students

Quinn Harrigan

Examining theTreatment of Those with Opioid Use Disorder in the Setting of Xylazine Emergence: A Bioethical Perspective

Adina Siegel Harris

Breastfeeding Promotion and Support: A Bioethical Lens

Victor Jegede

Bridging the Gap in Palliative Care Access for Head and Neck Cancer Patients: A Bioethical Evaluation

Esha Kadakia

Navigating the Complexities of Medical Error and Its Ethical Implications

Fabliha N. Khurshan

Health Inequities and Our Social Responsibility for Children with Incarcerated Parents

Jonathan Kolansky

Gun Violence in Philadelphia: Multidisciplinary Analysis and a Novel Community-Based Intervention Framework

Naa Korkor Koppoe

FactorsThat Influence Black/African American Applicants’ Ranking of Residency Programs and HowThese Factors Can Be Used to Inform Diversity Recruitment Efforts

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Master of Arts

Brianna Mays

Overview ofTrauma-Informed Principles for Fostering Interpersonal Community with a Focus on Innovation of Acute Adult Inpatient Psychiatric Units

Brendan McCreath

"Hostility in the City:The Implications of Hostile Architecture on Health and Ethics

Alexander An Nguyen

Barriers to Lung Cancer Screening in North Philadelphia

Isabel Noboa

A Qualitative Report of the Perspective of the Standardized Patient ProgramThrough the Lens of Standardized Patients and Medical Students

Patricia Otero Valdes

“I FeltThat the Interpreter Was so Critical for UsTo Understand the Context of the Situation”: Students’ Perspective of Medical Education’s Introduction of Services for Limited English Proficiency Patients

Miriam Raffeld

Barriers and Facilitators to Urogynecologic Care: An Investigation Into Patient, Provider, and Structural Factors Influencing Access and Treatment

Kathelyn Rivera

Epigenetics and Biopolitics: Moving Away From Using Punitive Policies to Address Opioid Use in Pregnancy

Mokhtar Bdeir

Geohaira Sosa

Jordan Michael Rojas

Unpacking Societal and Healthcare Provider Perpetuated Stigma Regarding Patients with Substance Use Disorders

Roberto Beaumont Rosario

A Systematic Review of Care Continuity for Survivors of Early Onset Chronic Conditions

Erin A. Russell

Psychosocial Risk Factors for Cyclical Urban Violence

Kyra Sloane

THRIVE: Physical Activity Accessibility as an Issue of Social Justice, an Incarceral Health Wellness Program Model

Shreya Thakur

Potential Solutions to Food Apartheid: Philadelphia and Beyond

Brianna Zenk

Power in Creativity: Exploring the Use of Musical NarrativesTo Communicate Bioethics to the Nonexpert

Fan Zhang

Ethical Decision-Making as an Intervention for Moral Distress Experienced by Psychiatry Residents

Graduate Certificate

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Valerie E. Armstead, M.D.

Reparations for Contemporary Black Health Care Providers and Patients Adversely Affected by the Flexner Report

Dr. Armstead teaches medical students, residents & fellows. She produced the 1st reentry simulation at a healthcare center in Philadelphia.

https://www.phillyvoice.com/prison-reentry-sim ulation-temple-health-care-doctors-incarceratio n/

She intends to start a carceral curriculum at Temple.

Dr Armstead strives to be an ever-selfreinventing solver of problems.

Interests: Health education, anesthesiology, product development, manufacturing, clinical trials, translational research, the endocannabinoid system, inclusive history of medicine, public health, global health, prison health, urban bioethics, diversity, equity, inclusion & belonging.

Mokhtar Bdeir

Certificate in Urban Bioethics

Mokhtar Bdeir is a Palestinian fourth year medical student graduating this May and pursuing a residency in Emergency Medicine at Temple University Hospital. He immigrated to the US at 5 years old and has been living in the Philadelphia area since. This year marks his 9th year of Temple education(undergraduate, post baccalaureate, and medical school) and next year will mark the first time that Temple will pay him for a change. He is passionate about serving his Philadelphia community and hopes to empower patients with rigorous respect and ethical care and imagine an equitable medical future that would make his Palestinian ancestors proud.

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Lauren Bules

A Retrospective Review and Survey of Factors Related to Successful Engagement in a Multi-Visit

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Patient Clinic Program

Lauren Bules is a fourth-year medical student at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University. Lauren grew up in the Philadelphia area and studied neuroscience and French at Johns Hopkins University. As a medical student, she has been actively involved in student government and peer mentoring programs. She will be pursuing a career in internal medicine as a resident at the Emory University School of Medicine. Her research interests include the social determinants of health and their effects on hospital utilization among urban communities. She looks forward to caring for underserved patient populations throughout her career.

Caroline Presley Burkholder

Beyond CarbonToward Liberation: An Urban Bioethical Case for a Socially and Environmentally Just University Health System

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Caroline Burkholder is the Senior Sustainability Manager at Temple University and have over a decade of experience working in governmental agencies, nonprofits, and public institutions. Caroline earned a BS in Sociology and a BS in Humanities from Florida State University. A student of urban bioethics, Caroline has specific interests in urban studies, spatial justice, environmental health equity, and climate embodiment. She hopes to continue her career as a critical social science researcherpractitioner in higher ed: teaching and managing strategic research projects and community engagement initiatives to deliver solutions to pressing urban health equity issues.

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Hannah Calvelli

Prison Health and the Bioethical Challenges Facing Patients Who Are Incarcerated

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Julia E. Carp

Hannah Calvelli is a fourth year medical student interested in prison health and health equity. She and her colleagues, Olivia Duffield and Dr. Brian Tuohy, established a novel prison health service-learning program at LKSOM. Hannah has published several articles on prison health and presented her work at the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities and the AMA Change Medical Education annual conferences. Hannah has also conducted clinical research on hemodialysis clinic social networks and cardiothoracic surgery outcomes. Hannah will be pursuing a career in academic surgery at the University of Pennsylvania upon graduation.

The Role of the Urban Academic Medical Center in Addressing Food Justice: From Farm to Families and Beyond

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Sharon Herring

Julia earned a Bachelor of Science in Psychology and Bachelor of Arts in Global Health from Duke University in 2017. She is graduating from the Lewis Katz School of Medicine in May 2024 with a medical degree and Master of Arts in Urban Bioethics. Julia’s clinical and research interests include caring for underserved populations, community engagement, access to medical care, and food justice. Collaborating with the food prescription program, Farm to Families, has been a highlight of her time at Temple. After graduation, Julia will pursue a residency in Internal Medicine and Primary Care at Weill Cornell Medical Center in NewYork City.

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Margaret R. Carter

Ethical Considerations in Goals of Care for Patients with Polysubstance Use and Medical Complications in the Era of Xylazine

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Sam Stern

Margaret (Meg) is a MD/MAUB student graduating in May 2024. Prior to coming to medical school, Meg earned a Bachelor of Arts with dual-majors of Public Health and Psychology at American University in Washington, DC. She then worked for the Philadelphia Department of Public Health in the Health Commissioner's Office for two years. Having discovered her passion for working with urban patients with complex medical needs, she then did a PostBaccalaureate at Temple University and began at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine in 2020. After graduating, she will begin Internal Medicine residency at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.

Michael Christian Coronado

Racial Disparities in Primary Open Angle Glaucoma Research Studies Among Black and Hispanic Participants: A Critical Review of Studies Used to Inform Current Screening Guidelines

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Michael Coronado is a current fourth year medical student at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University. He is a dual degree student actively pursuing a Master of Arts in urban bioethics. He previously graduated from St. John's University with a B.S. in biology and a minor concentration in philosophy. His research interests include healthcare disparities and urban bioethics.

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Clifton G. Dietrick, M.D.

School-Based Health Centers: A Conduit for Addressing Pediatric Public Health Issues in Urban Communities

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Nora Jones

Clifton is a first-year Pediatric resident at the Medical University of South Carolina

Olivia Frances Duffield

Getting Well: ExpandingTools to Address Opioid Use Disorder in the Hospital

Olivia Duffield is a fourth year medical student p ursuing a dual degree MD/MA in Urban Bioethics. She will go on to complete internal medicine residency at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, and hopes to eventually pursue a fellowship in Infectious Disease. Her research interests are focused on harm reduction and the intersection of injection drug use and infectious disease.

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Omodele O. Durojaye

Mitigating Bias in Medical Education at the Intersection of Standardized Patients and Medical Students

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Nora Jones

Omodele Durojaye is a dual degree MD/MAUB student graduating in May 2024. She is originally from Baltimore, MD but has spent the past 10 years in Philadelphia – as she received her BS in Biochemistry also from Temple in 2018 before starting medical school here. A true Temple owl! Her primary research interest is in medical education and the intersection between workforce disparities and healthcare disparities. After graduating this semester, she will be starting Vascular Surgery Integrated Residency at Houston Methodist Hospital in Texas.

Amanda Foote, M.D.

Immigrant Health & Bioethics: On the Significance of Local Context

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Amanda graduated from the Lewis Katz School of Medicine in Spring 2023 and started an Emergency Medicine residency at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) in June. Her interests in emergency medicine include palliative care, substance use disorders, access to care and climate & health.

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Quinn Harrigan

Examining theTreatment of Those with Opioid Use Disorder in the Setting of Xylazine Emergence: A Bioethical Perspective

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Quinn is a fourth year medical student at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine. She attended Kenyon College for her undergraduate education and completed a post-bachelorette program at Temple University. Quinn is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa and Gold Humanism honor societies. Her main research interests include addiction medicine and xylazine, and she is looking forward to exploring more areas of research in residency. Quinn will be starting as an emergency medicine resident at Temple University Hospital this July.

Adina Siegel Harris

Breastfeeding Promotion and Support: A Bioethical Lens

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Adina Harris is a fourth year medical student at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine. After graduation, she will be continuing on to the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for her pediatric residency. Adina's interests include medical education, food insecurity, breastfeeding, and neonatal intensive care.

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Victor Jegede

Bridging the Gap in Palliative Care Access for Head and Neck Cancer Patients: A Bioethical Evaluation

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Nora Jones

Esha Kadakia

Victor is a 4th year medical student here at the LKSOM. During his time at Lewis Katz he served as the President of the schools SNMA chapter and was also nominated into the Alpha Omega Alpha Organization. His research interests involve incorporating VR/AR to improve surgical workflow and outcomes. He is a life-long temple owl, previously getting his bachelors of science in biology from Temple main campus. His next step is starting residency in Otolaryngology at Vanderbilt University in Nashville Tennessee.

Navigating the Complexities of Medical Error and Its Ethical Implications

Esha Kadakia is a fourth-year medical student at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University. She will be pursuing a general surgery residency at the University of North Carolina. In addition to her bioethics work, she has a specific interest in trauma, thoracic, and minimally-invasive surgery.

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Fabliha N. Khurshan

Health Inequities and Our Social Responsibility for Children with Incarcerated Parents

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Fabliha Khurshan was born in Chittagong, Bangladesh and moved to West Philadelphia as a 15 month old. She stayed in Philadelphia for undergrad where she studied Health and Societies with a focus on Public Health and is currently a fourth year medical student at LKSOM. She is joining Jefferson University/Nemours Children's Health in Wilmington, DE as an intern for the class of 2027.

Jonathan Kolansky

Gun Violence in Philadelphia: Multidisciplinary Analysis and a Novel Community-Based Intervention Framework

Jonathan Kolansky is a graduating fourth year medical student who will be beginning his upcoming General Surgery Residency at Cooper University Hospital in Camden, NJ. Jonathan's interest in a career in surgery was sparked by his clinical research coordinator role before medical school, where he worked with the trauma surgery department at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. Fascinated by this clinical exposure, Jonathan also developed a keen interest in the social background and experiences of the trauma and gun violence victims and patients that he was working with, cementing his interests in being a gun violence advocate.

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Naa Korkor Koppoe

FactorsThat Influence Black/African American Applicants’ Rank of Residency Programs and HowThese Factors Can Be Used to Inform Diversity Recruitment Efforts

Naa Korkor Koppoe is currently a fourthyear medical student at Lewis Katz School of Medicine and a soon-to-be internal medicine resident in Houston, Texas. She was raised in Northern Virginia and attended the College of William and Mary where she majored in Chemistry and Africana Studies. She is interested in health equity, mentorship, and education.

Brianna Antonia Mays

Trauma-Informed Principles for Fostering Interpersonal Community with a Focus on Innovation of Acute Adult Inpatient Psychiatric Units

Brianna Mays is an alumna of Columbia University, where she earned a BA in Psychology before advancing to the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University. Currently a fourth-year medical student, Brianna has previously served as Vice President of the Integrative Medicine Interest Group and CoPresident of the Global Health Organization. Her current scholarly pursuits and interests include trauma-informed care, community psychiatry, global psychiatry, and integrative medicine. Brianna's next milestone is her residency in Psychiatry with Hackensack Meridian Health at Ocean University Medical Center in Brick, New Jersey.

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Brendan McCreath, M.D.

"Hostility in the City:The Implications of Hostile Architecture on Health and Ethics

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Brendan McCreath hails from Hawthorne, New Jersey and trained at Drexel University College of Medicine. He is currently a third year internal medicine resident at Temple University Hospital and will stay at Temple to complete a Point of Care Ultrasound fellowship next year. He plans to practice as a hospitalist and to continue working with underserved populations.

Alexander An Nguyen

Barriers to Lung Cancer Screening in North Philadelphia

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Alex is a rising family medicine physician who will be training at Harbor UCLA hospital. He is passionate about public health, serving the underserved, and improving the quality of life for his patients. His research interests include health care disparities and lifestyle modifications. After his residency, he plans on doing a fellowship in sports medicine because he is an athlete himself and would like additional medical training. He aims to be a leader in the healthcare field wherever he ends up.

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Isabel Maria Noboa

A Qualitative Report of the Perspective of the Standardized Patient ProgramThrough the Lens of Standardized Patients and Medical Students

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Isabel is a 4th year medical student at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine, concurrently pursuing a Master of Urban Bioethics. Her interests lie in medical education and forensics. She's a recipient of the Lewis Katz Memorial Scholarship and has been accepted to a pathology residency at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, aiming to specialize in forensic pathology

Patricia Otero Valdes

“I FeltThat the Interpreter Was so Critical for UsTo Understand the Context of the Situation”: Students’ Perspective of Medical Education’s Introduction of Services for Limited English Proficiency Patients

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Patricia Otero Valdes is a fourth-year medical student who will soon be starting her next journey as an Internal Medicine resident at Tulane in New Orleans. Originally born and raised in Cuba, she moved to Miami, Florida, when she was 11 years old with her parents, where her interest in medicine began. She attended college at Florida International University, obtaining a Bachelor of Science majoring in Biology with a minor in Psychology and Interdisciplinary Studies. Her interests are varied, ranging from the field of Cardiology to medical education to battling disparities in healthcare, such as language equity.

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Miriam Raffeld, M.D.

Barriers and Facilitators to Urogynecologic Care: An Investigation Into Patient, Provider, and Structural Factors Influencing Access andTreatment

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Sharon Herring

Miriam Raffeld is a 4th year OBGYN Resident as Temple University Hospital. She has always had a passion for women's health and started the Masters in Urban Bioethics when she began her residency. She has been applying this knowledge to her patient population while working at Temple Hospital. She will be starting her fellowship in Urogynecology at Northwell Health in NewYork City and her research interests include barriers in access to care and care equity.

Kathelyn Rivera

Epigenetics and Biopolitics: Moving Away From Using Punitive Policies to Address Opioid Use in Pregnancy

Thesis Advisor: Prof. Nicolle Strand

Kathelyn Rivera is a fourth-year medical at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at University who will be starting her Emergency Medicine residency at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis in June. medical school, Kathelyn worked in public health internationally and locally on various disease elimination projects with an emphasis on quality improvement. Her interests include exploring social determinants of health in urban settings, social emergency medicine, addiction medicine, and women's health.

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Jordan Michael Rojas

Unpacking Societal and Healthcare Provider Perpetuated Stigma Regarding Patients with Substance Use Disorders

Jordan Rojas is a fourth year medical student who is graduating from the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University with a dual degree (MD/MAUB [Master's of Arts in Urban Bioethics]). He received a BS in Biochemistry at the University of Washington with a minor in Classics. He has matched into Psychiatric residency at Temple University and is currently interested in mood disorders and addiction.

Roberto Beaumont Rosario

A Systematic Review of Care Continuity for Survivors of Early Onset Chronic Conditions

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Roberto is a Class of 2024 Temple/St. Luke's School of Medicine graduate excited to begin his Internal Medicine residency. For him, being a physician is a childhood dream manifested. His understanding of the complex healthcare environment is shaped by his educational experience which includes Master of Arts in Urban Bioethics, Master of Business Administration, Master of Accounting and Bachelor of Science in Psychology/Exercise & Sports Science with minor in Women's Studies. He hopes to use his varied perspective to inspire health, champion healthcare equity, and confront complex health system dysfunction.

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Erin A. Russell

Psychosocial Risk Factors for Cyclical Urban Violence

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Peter Simonsson

Kyra Sloane

Erin is a fourth-year medical student who will be working as a Family Medicine resident physician after graduation. She attended the University of Delaware where she graduated with degrees in Biological Sciences and in Liberal Studies with a concentration in Bioethics. She became interested in the topics of urban violence and community trauma after working in a North Philadelphia middle school prior to her matriculation at LKSOM. Her other areas of interest include food insecurity, addiction, and women's health. She will be starting her Family Medicine residency at JeffersonAbington Hospital this June.

THRIVE: Physical Activity Accessibility as an Issue of Social Justice, an Incarceral Health Wellness Program Model

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Kyra Sloane is a 4th year MD/MAUB dual degree student, Salvadoran first gen American, Wes & Ary's daughter, Jeannine/Francesca/Daniella's little sister. She is interested in: social determinants of health, women, first generation in medicine and minority mentorship, incarceral health, preventative healthcare, and weight training and functional wellness. In June, she will officially be an Emergency Medicine resident!

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Geohaira Sosa

Certificate in Urban Bioethics

Geohaira is from NewYork City and completed a BA in Biology and Psychology at CUNY Queens College as a first-generation college student. During medical school, she also completed a graduate certificate in Urban Bioethics in which she explored ethical considerations and frameworks for equitable access to psychedelic medicine. She will be starting her Psychiatry residency at UC Davis in California. She is most interested in exploring a career in Forensic, Palliative or Consult-Liaison psychiatry.

Shreya Thakur

Potential Solutions to Food Apartheid: Philadelphia and Beyond

Thesis Advisor: Prof. Nicolle Strand

Shreya is a graduating 4th year medical student who will be joining the Family Medicine Residency at UC Irvine this year. Her research interests include food insecurity and produce subsidy programs, and she is also interested in public policy and healthcare reform. Her future plans include potentially pursuing a fellowship in Adolescent Medicine.

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Brianna Zenk

Power in Creativity: Exploring the Use of Musical NarrativesTo Communicate Bioethics to the Nonexpert

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Brian Tuohy

Brianna Zenk is a graduating fourth year medical student from the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University in Philadelphia, PA. She will begin her emergency medicine residency at Hennepin Healthcare in Minneapolis, MN in June of 2024. Her interests include social emergency medicine, mentorship, and the intersection of music and medicine.

Fan Zhang, M.D.

Ethical Decision-Making as an Intervention for Moral Distress Experienced by Psychiatry Residents

Thesis Advisor: Dr. Nora Jones

Fan Zhang (Lily), MD, is a fourth-year psychiatry resident at Temple University Hospital. She earned her undergraduate degree in Neuroscience from the University of California, Los Angeles, and her medical degree from Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine. She is currently pursuing a Master's degree in Urban Bioethics at Temple University. Following residency, she will pursue a career in Adult Outpatient Psychiatry, Community Psychiatry, and Addiction Psychiatry.

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Congratulations, Graduates!

Our best wishes toward your continued success in advancing health equity in communities and building a more ethical and socially just society.

A huge thank you to Catherine Averill, the MAUB program's Senior Advisor, for her work in putting together this beautiful look book! A public kudos as well for her emotional support and unwavering efforts in helping these graduates cross the finish line!

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