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Mandela Rhodes
Scholar brings new
perspective
to OU-COM research

Aalyia Sadruddin and
Gillian Ice, PH.D.,
M.P.H
By Suzanne McMillen
In
April, Ohio
University College
of Osteopathic
Medicine welcomed
researcher Aalyia
Sadruddin, a 2009
Mandela Rhodes
Scholar, who for the
next two years will
work on research
related to health
care in Kenya and
the Kenyan
Grandparents Study,
a project that
examines the impact
of caregiving for
orphaned children on
the health and
well-being of Luo
elders in rural
western Kenya.
Together with
Gillian Ice, PH.D.,
M.P.H.,
associate professor
of social medicine,
Ms. Sadruddin’s
current research
projects include
papers on stress of
grandparent
caregivers in the
context of HIV, and
socioeconomic status
and obesity. She
will also be working
on publishing some
of her own work
centered around
disease perception.
This research is an
extension of her
master’s thesis,
which assessed how
nurses perceive
malaria and HIV/AIDS
and how meanings of
help-seeking
behaviors are
administered.
Ms.
Sadruddin defines
her academic
interests as
“understanding
African perspectives
of health, illness,
and disease with the
broader aim of
devising health
policies that
reflect African
needs.” Her ultimate
goal is to attain
the necessary
applied skills
needed in the social
medicine field to go
back to Africa as a
field researcher and
help co-develop
projects that
directly involve
community members.
“I
grew up in a context
where I’ve seen
malaria and HIV in
my back yard. I have
never been able to
distance myself from
both diseases and
they are a part of
what constitutes my
situated knowledge,”
she says. “It didn’t
make sense to me, as
an aspiring
practitioner in the
field, not to meet
that context.”
Raised In Kisumu,
Kenya, Sadruddin
describes her
experience growing
up in Kenya as a
“knowledge pool.”
Her experiences with
malaria and HIV in
Kenya and South
Africa and her
insight from
watching her father
at work as a
cardiologist
encouraged her to
focus her studies on
health care needs in
African communities.
Her most
life-changing
moment, however, she
says was her
introduction, as a
Mandela Rhodes
Scholar, to Mr.
Nelson Mandela in
2008.
“It
was getting the
Mandela Rhodes
Scholarship when I
realized that
bringing about
change in your own
context - your own
field or whatever
your vision in life
is - is all about
your own personal
capacity, and
stretching yourself
to a new personal
level,” she said.
“It really made me
aware of what my own
personal project is,
the ethical journey
I hope to follow in
obtaining that, and
realizing this
journey is not going
to be an easy ride.”
Ms.
Sadruddin assists in
drafting research
for publication,
develops grant
proposals to
continue research
projects, conducts
background research,
and acts as an
outreach liaison to
other organizations
that have mutual
goals to lay the
groundwork for
expanding projects
and creating new
ones. One such
project is the World
Health Organization
Study on Global
AGEing and Adult
Health (SAGE), which
is part of a
longitudinal survey
program to compile
comprehensive
information on the
health and
well-being of adult
populations and the
aging process.
The
Mandela Rhodes
foundation was
launched in 2003 to
build exceptional
leadership capacity
in Africa. Each year
the Foundation
awards up to 30
scholarships to
young African
students who
demonstrate a strong
capacity for
academic and
leadership skills.
Mandela Rhodes
Scholars are given
the opportunity to
pursue their chosen
post-graduate degree
while also
benefiting from
access to leadership
development programs
that support the
Foundation’s
principles. Ms.
Sadruddin was one of
28 recipients of the
award in 2009. Since
the Scholars program
inception in 2005,
123 scholarships
have been awarded.
Ms.
Sadruddin graduated
with distinction
from the University
of the Witwatersrand
in Johannesburg,
South Africa, in
2011, having
received a master’s
degree in Health
Sociology and an
interdisciplinary
honours degree in
Medical
Anthropology, Health
Sociology and
Demography and
Population studies.
She
had been following
Dr. Ice’s ongoing
research and work
for the past six
years, which led her
to pursue a position
with Ice and OU-COM.
Ms. Sadruddin
described Ice as “a
great inspiration to
an aspiring
academic” and notes
that they share
similar fascinations
for the discipline
of anthropology.
“It
has been a pleasure
to have Aalyia here
in the department of
social medicine,”
Dr. Ice said. “She
brings with her not
only a strong
academic background
and real world
sensibility, but
also a cheerful
personality and
enthusiasm for
global health issues
that has been
infectious both in
the department and
with students
pursuing global
health interests.”
Ms.
Sadruddin says that
working on the
research has allowed
her and Ice to
continue building a
sustainable
relationship with a
community that, in
some cases, would
otherwise be unable
to access health
care. “OU-COM
represents the
health issues faced
in Kenya and
sub-Saharan Africa
quite widely, and I
feel good that I can
bring a different
aspect and that they
appreciate that,”
she said.
Never
taking the
opportunity for
education for
granted, Ms.
Sadruddin is getting
the most out of her
experience at
OU-COM. “I am doing
exactly what I want
to spend the rest of
my life doing,” she
said. “And the fact
that at the age of
23 I’ve basically
been told to run
with it, I want to
sprint!”
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