“You have to understand the community you serve.” New Haven’s director of public health, Maritza Bond, MPH, made this point during the two-part panel discussion series for the Yale health professional schools community, New Haven Voices, held on September 8 and 29. Yale School of Medicine’s (YSM) Offices of Medical Education and of Diversity, Inclusion, Community Engagement, and Equity (DICE) co-hosted the series.
At the first session, Marietta Vázquez, MD, associate dean for medical student diversity; professor of pediatrics (general pediatrics and infectious diseases) said, “I have to start by noting that the motivation for organizing this series is the students’ strong interest in better understanding how they can most meaningfully contribute to the community in their role as health professional students, as well as residents of the city.”
Second-year MD-PhD student Kyle Gavulic— one of the student organizers for the series along with his medical school classmates Lamley Lawson, Roselyn Terrazos-Moreno, and Diane Zhao — expanded upon this idea. “As members of the YSM community—whether it be in our capacity as students, staff, or faculty—we are provided enormous opportunities to protect and support the health of the people around us. We are also called upon by leaders in our community and our peers to institute change and promote equity and inclusion.” To effectively do so, he explained, “we must first seek to understand, listen, and engage with members of the broader community in which we reside.” The student organizers hoped attendees would leave the panel events feeling empowered to become more involved in New Haven and more appreciative of how one becomes a structurally competent health care professional.