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Trilingual grad draws on humanities skills to better serve patients seeking medical care

Ellie Warren heads to medical school after earning her undergraduate degrees at RIT

Matthew Sluka">

a young woman dressed in jeans and a black sweater looks at the camera and leans on a railing next to windows looking out on to a snow covered campus.

Matthew Sluka

After graduation, Ellie Warren will attend medical school at SUNY Upstate Medical University. Looking toward her future career, she aims to use her knowledge of Spanish and ASL to better serve non-English speaking patients as a gynecologist.

Ellie Warren has always been interested in anatomy, but an experience in high school changed how she wanted to approach a career in medicine.

While studying Spanish, Warren volunteered weekly through her school’s honors program to help Spanish-speaking students who immigrated to the United States practice their conversational English. When one of the students Warren worked with encountered a medical issue, she reached out to her for help.

“She couldn’t even get past the calling stage because so many hospitals, urgent cares, and emergency rooms didn’t have a Spanish option when you called, so I started calling for her,” said Warren, from Hilliard, Ohio. “It really gave me a view into the stark reality of what it means to be a non-native English speaker in the U.S.”

Warren came to RIT with the goal of becoming trilingual. Now fluent in English, American Sign Language (ASL), and Spanish, she hopes to use her skills to better serve non-English speaking patients seeking care.

After graduating from RIT with a dual degree in applied modern language and culture – Spanish option and biomedical sciences in May, Warren will head to SUNY Upstate Medical University to pursue a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.).

Opportunities to travel internationally and assist with informative medical outreach gave Warren a wealth of experiences to draw from when pursuing her degree and career. In addition to studying abroad in Chile for a semester, Warren has traveled to Mexico and the Dominican Republic. While abroad, she was able to get a deeper understanding of Spanish for healthcare, differences in conversational dialects between nations, and how healthcare systems outside of the U.S. operate.

Much of her international work focused on informative advocacy around women’s reproductive healthcare—and what she learned motivated her to pursue a career as a gynecologist.

“It was eye opening how much people may or may not know about their bodies depending on where they’re from. Even in the U.S. there is a lack of medical literacy, particularly about women’s health,” said Warren.

Many students planning to pursue an M.D. don’t have time for extracurriculars, but RIT offered Warren the freedom and flexibility to enjoy these opportunities while earning her undergraduate degree. In addition to studying abroad, Warren is part of the RIT Honors Program, serves as the president of the RIT Beekeeping Club, and co-teaches for the Latin Rhythm Dance Club. She also works as a student coordinator for No Voice Zone and as a residential adviser.

Warren said that those extracurriculars, and the access services and high-quality interpreters provided through the National Technical Institute of the Deaf, made her education accessible and attainable. While she wasn’t fluent in ASL prior to coming to RIT, the wealth of knowledge and the supportive community at NTID helped her succeed both academically and in her personal goals.

Warren’s advice to other students is to dig into the liberal arts and humanities when pursuing their technical degrees. For medical school candidates specifically, she encourages them to consider learning a new language.

“I was told that I was the first student to double major in Spanish and biomedical sciences, and that was a little astounding to me,” said Warren. “If more people took the time and expanded their degrees to include liberal arts, we could really start to make the world a better, more accessible place for everyone.”

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