View more photos from the commencement ceremony here.
Among the graduates:
Jessica Yingst, doctor of public health
Yingst is the first to graduate from Penn State College of Medicine with a doctor of public health degree. Throughout her three years in the program, she investigated whether smokers find electronic cigarettes to be an acceptable replacement for smoking.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that the United States spends nearly $170 billion on medical care each year to treat smoking-related disease in adults. Nearly half a million Americans die prematurely of smoking or exposure to secondhand smoke annually. Research by the College of Medicine’s first doctor of public health graduate is investigating effective methods for quitting smoking.
“Some smokers continue to be unsuccessful in their attempts to quit using traditional methods,” Yingst said. “Research has shown that e-cigarettes are more effective than other nicotine replacements in helping smokers quit.”
Yingst plans to continue in her role as research project manager for the Penn State Tobacco Center of Regulatory Science where she manages several research studies on smoking cessation and tobacco regulatory science.
Caleb Shervinskie, doctor of medicine
Shervinskie and his colleagues wrote about their experiences as patient navigators during their first year of medical school in an article in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. Penn State College of Medicine requires first-year medical students to enroll in a nine-month health systems science course, which includes a patient navigator role at clinical sites.
Through patient navigation and three health systems courses at the College of Medicine, students begin to develop the knowledge, skills and attitudes to function effectively amid the complexities of an evolving health system.
“The key thing I learned from my time as a patient navigator is that medical students, and thus physicians, have the ability to change the system they work within if they take the initiative and have the confidence to do so,” Shervinskie said.
“Whether that change be at the individual patient level, the clinic or hospital level or the health system level, it is all important, and it can all be done.”
Shervinskie will begin an internal medicine residency at University of Virginia.
Oliver Mrowczynski, doctor of medicine
Mrowczynski began his studies at Penn State College of Medicine as an MD/PhD student but quickly realized during the graduate portion of his education that he had a passion for neurosurgical research.
With the support of faculty in the Department of Neurosurgery, he became one of the inaugural students of the neurosurgery accelerated pathway at the College of Medicine.
Demand for physicians continues to grow faster than supply, according to a report commissioned by the Association of American Medical Colleges. Accelerated pathways for medical students at the College of Medicine allow students to enter residency training faster than the traditional education.
“I’m excited to have the opportunity to continue doing research during residency,” Mrowczynski said. He is working in a lab that is searching for new ways to treat and diagnose deadly brain tumors.
Mrowczynski feels that the accelerated pathways not only have financial benefits, but educational benefits as well.
“The accelerated path elevates the curriculum based on your interest,” Mrowczynski said. “Students can do specialized rotations in areas like neurosurgery and ophthalmology. The faculty can tailor a student’s path through medical school for a more personalized, beneficial and educational experience.”
Mrowczynski will begin a neurological surgery residency at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center.