By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- When Ashley Harris was accepted into medical school
this year, organizers of a summer program for high schoolers
saw results they've been waiting on for five
years. Harris,
21, participated in the Rural Medical Scholars program at
Mississippi State University in 1999. He is just eight hours
short of a biochemistry degree at MSU, and begins medical
school at University Medical Center in Jackson in August. He
will earn his degree from MSU after his first year of
medical school. After
three more years of medical school he will have his medical
degree as a family practitioner and then will complete a
three-year residency, likely either in Jackson or Tupelo.
But he won't have to look for a job after that. The
Water Valley native already has one waiting for
him. Yalobusha
County has just three family practitioners, and two of them
are approaching retirement age. Officials were concerned
that this shortage of practitioners one day would prevent
area residents from receiving needed medical attention. They
were concerned enough to recruit Harris to go to medical
school. "The
Water Valley hospital offered me a contract to pay for my
tuition, living expenses, books and everything while I was
in medical school," Harris said. "Then I have to work there
for three years." Harris
accepted the offer without hesitation. "I've
always felt like I wanted to work in a small-town, rural
setting," he said. Harris
has been interested in a medical career for most of his
life. The summer before his senior year in high school, he
took part in the five-week Rural Medical Scholars program
offered by the MSU Extension Service. It is funded by the
Mississippi Rural Health Corps, a partnership between the
MSU Extension Service and the state's 15 community and
junior colleges. He said
his participation confirmed his decision to go into the
medical field, and the firsthand experience it gave him was
an asset on his application to medical school. He is working
this summer as a counselor with the 2003 program
participants. "It's
an excellent way for high school students to find out if
medicine is what they want to do, and especially what kind
of medicine they would like to go into," Harris
said. Bonnie
Carew is program director for Rural Medical Scholars. She
said the program was started in 1998 because Mississippi has
the lowest number of physicians per capita of any state in
the country. "We
have an extremely large need for family medical doctors in
rural areas because of the breadth of their knowledge. They
see people across all age ranges and with a variety of
ailments," Carew said. The
program was designed to give academically advanced youth
with an interest in medicine a firsthand view of what life
as a medical doctor is like. In addition to shadowing
physicians as they work, the young people are accepted into
MSU and take college algebra and principles of zoology. They
leave the program with a better knowledge of the life of a
physician and seven hours of college credit if they pass the
courses. The
program costs nothing more than the $35 registration fee,
and accepts youth between their junior and senior years of
high school. Students must have a minimum ACT of 25, high
grades in high school and a desire to learn about medicine.
Students must be nominated for the program by their local
community college. "We're
hoping this program will eventually produce more family
medicine physicians than would otherwise exist in the
absence of the program," Carew said. "We've got to begin
producing our next generation of physicians." Eleven
students from across the state are taking part in this
year's Rural Medical Scholars program, and 107 have come
through it to date. Harris
was the first of the program's graduates to be accepted into
medical school, but he is not the only one. Chin Onwubiko
from Stringer participated in the Scholars' first program in
1998 and was accepted into the University of Mississippi's
seven-year combined M.D./Ph.D. program. Mac Nichols from
Mantachie, another 1998 Scholar, will begin his studies in
Kansas City, Mo., this fall to become a doctor of
osteopathic medicine. For
more information about Rural Medical Scholars, visit
http://www.rms.msucares.com
or call Bonnie Carew at (662) 325-1321. Released:
July 14, 2003
Community
News
![]()
Summer program
sends students
to med school
Contact: Bonnie Carew, (662) 325-1321
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:14
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/commnews/cn03/030714.html
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.