The
servant leader: Amanda McConnell, D.O.
Amanda McConnell’s path to medicine started
at home and took her all over the world
By Anita Martin
While other kids
played kickball and dodged water balloons, ten-year-old
Amanda McConnell, D.O. ('08), mostly stayed inside, anchored at her
grandfather’s bedside in her hometown of Proctorville,
Oh.
“It started with numbness in his feet; within days it
paralyzed him,” she says of her grandfather’s battle
with the viral nerve condition Guillain-Barré. He made a
full recovery after more than six months of intensive
treatment and physical therapy. During that time,
McConnell, who graduated in June from OU-HCOM,
established herself as his personal nurse.
“I was always there, so the home nurses and physical
therapists taught me his exercises, how to take his
pulse, things like that,” McConnell says. “That was when
I realized I wanted to be a doctor.”
In high school, McConnell volunteered summer nights at
St. Mary’s Hospital in West Virginia—working the
high-intensity 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. emergency room shifts.
Later, as a biology student at Wright State University,
she participated in OU-HCOM’s Summer Undergraduate
Research Fellowship program, conducting biomedical
research and getting to know “the compassionate nature
of OU-HCOM faculty.”
After enrolling at OU-HCOM, she assisted one such faculty
member, Assistant Professor Gillian Ice, Ph.D., in
international health research. Ice studies the stress
response of Kenyan elders who raise children orphaned by
the HIV/AIDS crisis. McConnell traveled to Kenya between
her first and second years to help.
“I came back extremely energized after seeing the
difference I could make,” McConnell says. The experience
inspired her to earn a dual Master of Public Health
degree and participate in two more OU-HCOM international
programs: a geriatrics tutorial in Edinburgh, Scotland,
and a clinical rotation in El Salvador.
More recently, McConnell completed a year-long family
medicine fellowship at OU-HCOM, where she was named by
her fellow classmates as 2008 Student D.O. of the Year.
She’s completing her neurology residency at
Grandview Hospital in Dayton.
“Neurology is complex; it’s a puzzle,” McConnell says.
“At the same time, it will allow me to do formal
teaching, research and clinical work—and still have a
family.”
And that’s not all. McConnell and her husband, Benjamin
Mack, a fourth-year medical student at Wright State
University, also hope to eventually set up a permanent
clinic in a developing country and sponsor opportunities
for future medical students to experience international
medicine.
McConnell sees herself as a lifelong learner and
international medical advocate. “I would like to use
what I know for the betterment of other people,” she
says. “A doctor is a servant leader.”
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On
her mentor:
Gillian Ice, Ph.D.,
assistant professor, social medicine
“Dr. Ice really took me under her
wing. She encouraged me to apply to
the Master’s of Public Health (dual
degree) program and to get involved
with more international programs.”
On being the first doctor in her
family:
“It was new territory for my family
and myself. My mother and father
both attended Ohio University and
held professions within the
educational field. Looking back, I
believe the majority of my family
thought my passion for medicine was
just ‘a phase’ that would soon pass…
We laugh about that now.” |
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