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Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine students Xi
Fu and Monica Holly DeMasi have been awarded the Frederick C.
Robbins and Janet S. and Thomas M. Daniel student travel fellowships.
These fellowships, endowed by gifts of friends of Robbins and
by a gift from the. Daniels, are awarded competitively each year
to fourth-year medical students after review by a committee of
proposals submitted by the students.
DeMasi, who is fluent in Spanish, will use her award to travel
to the remote village of Tres Reyes in the Mexican Yucatan. She
will work in a clinic that she visited during the summer following
her first year of medical school. There she plans to provide health
education for women, including infant care and gynecologic disorders
as well as other illnesses commonly seen among the clinic's patients.
In addition, she will organize a group of "health promoters"
from the community to work with the clinic on a continuing basis.
Fu, who grew up in China and is fluent in Mandarin Chinese, will
travel to Shanghai to study sexually transmitted diseases among
teen-agers.
Like DeMasi, Fu spent the summer after the first year working
in the clinic to which she will return. On this return visit,
she will conduct studies of high school and college students to
evaluate the educational programs being used to make these students
aware of sexually transmitted diseases and to help develop a more
effective public health program aimed at diminishing their occurrence
in these young people.
Each of these awards is in the amount of $1,200 this year.
"My wife and I are delighted to see this award made," said Daniel.
"Our own experiences abroad and those of our children have been
of great importance in our lives. We hope that these endowed funds
can grow through future gifts so that international experiences
will be possible for more CWRU medical students in the future."
James Kazura, director of the Center for International Health,
added, "CWRU is known for its programs in international health.
These student awards will help to ensure that future generations
of CWRU medical graduates will have an interest in working in
countries where health care needs are poorly served."
Each year, 20 to 25 senior CWRU medical students-about one fifth
of the class-take electives overseas, most of them in developing
countries. CWRU has two formal exchange programs, one with the
Hebrew University School of Medicine in Jerusalem and one with
Khon Kaen University School of Medicine in Khon Kaen, Thailand.
Many other international experiences are arranged through overseas
contacts by faculty members of the Center for International Health.
Some CWRU students draw on their own or family contacts to initiate
individual international experiences, as did this year's award
winners.
Robbins, a 1954 Nobel laureate for work cultivating the poliovirus,
is currently university professor emeritus and medical school
dean emeritus. He is a former director of pediatrics and infectious
diseases at Cleveland City Hospital (now MetroHealth Medical Center)
and former president of the Institute of Medicine.
Daniel is professor emeritus of medicine and international health
and former director of the Center for International Health. Both
Robbins and Daniel have been active in international medicine
during their professional careers.
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