Class of 2021 medical school graduates: leaders during the pandemic

Author | Jina Sawani

The University of Michigan medical student education experience uniquely prepares graduates to make an impact in health care. The COVID-19 pandemic, which greatly affected their final two years of medical school, also provided the graduating class of 2021 with unforeseen opportunities to show others that they are ready to lead and change medicine.

Many of this year’s graduating class volunteered through the M-Response Corpscreated new learning experiences and led other important initiatives to help in any way they could. They did not watch and observe as the world changed; instead, they stood up, engaged and helped their community respond.

Now, after almost a year-and-a-half of perseverance, these 169 doctors-to-be will gather with loved ones around their mobile phones, monitors, laptops and screens to participate in a virtual Michigan Medical School commencement ceremony and celebrate entry into their chosen profession.

The online ceremony will feature remarks from the honored speaker, Joneigh S. Khaldun, M.D., MPH, a U-M alumna, chief medical executive for the State of Michigan, and chief deputy director for health in the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services; student speaker Steven Goldenthal, who was selected by his peers to speak for the graduating class; and Gifty Kwakye, M.D., a faculty member chosen by the class as the Senior Award recipient.

In addition, U-M and medical school leadership will deliver remarks, and also guide graduates through many of the traditional segments of the ceremony, including an official reading of each student’s name, and recitation of the Hippocratic Oath.

The medical school will stream the festivities on the Michigan Medicine YouTube channel at 3 p.m. EDT today, but the community can also celebrate through the Commencement 2021 website at commencement.medicine.umich.edu. Here, graduates, families, friends, faculty and staff can post their messages of thanks, congratulations and well wishes. Community members can also share messages on their Twitter and public Instagram accounts by using the hashtag #GoBlueMD.

“Our graduating students have reminded us of just how remarkable they are in these challenging times,” said Marschall S. Runge, M.D., Ph.D., executive vice president for medical affairs at U-M and dean of the U-M Medical School. “Through observing their many demonstrations of leadership, I am confident that the future of health care is in very good hands. Congratulations to the Class of 2021.”

Commencement day caps a two-week celebration of the Class of 2021, which began May 3 with a daily sharing of the Graduation Awards recipients on the medical school’s social media channels, as well as its website.

“As we reflect on the journey of this graduating class, we need to recognize how this pandemic disrupted the most formative phase of their education; the time when students typically make choices to understand what kind of physician they want to be,” says Rajesh S. Mangrulkar, M.D., associate dean for medical student education and the Marguerite S. Roll Professor of Medical Education. “Through it all, this class went through this time with grace and kindness, and they also doubled-down on their commitment to serve our patients and communities. We are so proud of the Class of 2021.”

There are many other notable accomplishments for this year’s senior medical students:

  • Thirty-three percent of the students will stay in the state of Michigan for their next level of training, which includes 22% who plan to continue their education at Michigan Medicine, U-M’s academic medical center. The rest will embark on training in 30 other states. A resounding 98.2% of U-M Medical School students matched for their residency, which exceeded the national average of 92.8% percent.
  • Twenty-seven students will graduate with both a medical degree from U-M and an advanced degree in another field from a top-ranked graduate program at U-M, Stanford, Columbia and elsewhere. These degrees include Ph.D.’s as part of U-M’s Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP), or master’s degrees in public health, clinical research or business. Three students have also completed both a medical degree and a residency program in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery.
  • While COVID-19 has elicited feelings of uncertainty and anxiety, it also inspired a groundswell of humanitarianism. When the pandemic impacted their world, U-M’s medical students immediately wanted to make a difference — and they have. Members of the quickly formed M-Response Corps worked tirelessly to meet an endless stream of pandemic-related needs since last March, involving more than 500 medical students.
  • U-M Medical School offers students the chance to choose a “Path of Excellence” (PoE) a scholarly concentration where they can learn about important fields that improve health such as bioethics, health policy, the humanities, scientific research or global medicine, nurturing their passion, interests and their projects from the moment they enter medical school. Approximately 82% of 2021 grads completed a PoE.
  • Beginning with this cohort of graduating students, U-M Medical School now requires students to complete a Capstone for Impact (CFI) project, as they build experience in learning how to lead change in medicine. Eighty-two percent of the graduating students completed a CFI project this year. Projects ranged from developing a novel supplemental oxygen therapy control system, to training and deploying U-M medical students as respiratory therapist extenders during COVID-19, and building an equitable surgical training pipeline.

For more information on Commencement, visit: commencement.medicine.umich.edu.

Media Contact Public Relations

Department of Communication at Michigan Medicine

[email protected]

734-764-2220

Featured News & Stories Health Lab Podcast in brackets with a background with a dark blue translucent layers over cells
Health Lab Podcast
Study Shows Medical Marijuana Use Decreased in States with Legalized Recreational Use
The number of patients using cannabis for medical purposes has increased more than 600 percent since 2016.
Illustration of a microscope
Health Lab
Helpful enzymes vanish in many patients with antiphospholipid syndrome
Researchers recently revealed a new mechanism behind antiphospholipid syndrome that the investigators hope will eventually allow treatments to be targeted closer to the source of the problem.
marijuana leaf drawing blue lab note yellow badge upper left corner
Health Lab
Data shows medical marijuana use decreased in states where recreational use became legal 
Data on medical cannabis use found that enrollment in medical cannabis programs increased overall between 2016 and 2022, but enrollment in states where nonmedical use of cannabis became legal saw a decrease in enrollment
Illustration of hand holding list, with pill bottle in opposite and and small pic of doctor talking to patient
Health Lab
New urine-based test detects high grade prostate cancer, helping men avoid unnecessary biopsies
A new urine-based test addresses a major problem in prostate cancer: how to separate the slow growing form of the disease unlikely to cause harm from more aggressive cancer that needs immediate treatment.
hospital.jpg
News Release
Michigan Medicine part of research group awarded $15 million to study inflammation's impact on heart, brain health
Research teams from Michigan Medicine, Northwestern University and University of Pittsburgh will lead a $15 million project dedicated to studying inflammation’s role in cardiac and brain diseases. The specific work by Michigan Medicine will focus on the driving forces behind inflammatory processes linked to aging and obesity and how to prevent inflammation that could lead to heart failure, dementia and other diseases.
Florescent image of a human ovarian follicle
Health Lab
Spatial atlas of the human ovary with cell-level resolution will bolster reproductive research
New map of the ovary provides a deeper understanding of how oocytes interact with the surrounding cells during the normal maturation process, and how the function of the follicles may break down in aging or fertility related diseases.