Justin Nguyen - Florida Medical Student Talks About Founding UCSB's Phi Delta Epsilon Chapter, the Importance of Building Premed Communities and Why I Can't Shoot a Basketball (#009)

Justin Nguyen - Florida Medical Student Talks About Founding UCSB's Phi Delta Epsilon Chapter, the Importance of Building Premed Communities and Why I Can't Shoot a Basketball (#009)

1 Stunde 32 Minuten

Beschreibung

vor 5 Jahren

Hey there podcast! This is Michael Le. Thanks for tuning into
another episode of Pass the Mike where I have the pleasure of
sharing the narratives of imminent or current medical
professionals. In short, my job is to build you a community of
mentors from the folks that have come before you. I couldn't be
more happy to kick this podcast off today with my blood cousin,
Justin Nguyen. That's J-U-S-T-I-N SPACE N-G-U-Y-E-N. Justin
graduated in 2018 from UCSB with a degree in Biological Sciences.
At UCSB, he studied symbiotic relationships, culminating in a
poster addressing the effects isopod parasites have on the rate
of filtration of host barnacles. He continued his Ecology work
investigating the roles of infectious processes in ecosystems,
focusing specifically on novel, adaptive parasite-host
interactions. He also spent his breaks from school supporting a
community hospital's emergency physicians by scribing for them.
Perhaps his claim to fame—and I can confirm this... I've had
multiple interactions now where people ask me if I know THE
Justin Nguyen—is his work with the International Medical
Fraternity, Phi Delta Epsilon. In March 2015, he and 17 other
UCSB students founded the Nu Chapter of Phi-D-E.  Phi Delta
Epsilon is UCSB’s ONLY co-educational pre-medical fraternity—it
provides a home for all pre-medical students. The fraternity is
committed to supporting a new generation of health care
professionals, as well as fostering an environment that promotes
academic success and the formation of life-long friendships.


Its Guiding Principles are: Philanthropy, Deity, Equity &
Education


and its Motto: Facta Non Verba, Deeds Not Words


Justin served as the working President of the Chapter,
responsible for all outgoing messaging and internal affairs. His
team has supported many non-profit organizations through
fundraisers and have engineered opportunities include a scribing
program with the neighboring Cottage Hospital and the annual
William Gelfand Lecture, a lecture series designed to educate the
public on current scientific topics related to medicine, ranging
from social issues to new discoveries in medicine. Of the last
couple of Gelfand Lectures, a talk led by Dr. Vania Manipod, a
psychiatrist, caught my eye. She spoke on maintaining mental
health and overcoming burnout among pre-medical students and
medical students across the country.


And that was all just in undergrad. Justin has been just as
prolific on his time off preparing for medical school admissions.
He scribed and doubled as a medical assistant for an Orthopedic
Clinic, gaining critical insight and serving as a crucial cog in
a well-oiled clinical environment.


You can find Justin if you want to say hello, ask a question or
learn how to shoot a basketball on e-mail at
Nguyenmtjustin@gmail.com that's
N-G-U-Y-E-N-M-T-J-U-S-T-I-N-AT-G-M-A-I-L-DOT-COM. It's not often
you get to rekindle and learn a little more about your relatives,
so I'm personally grateful to carve out some time to have a nice
conversation with him today. Justin, welcome to the show.

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