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Home› Medicine

Medicine

  • 2022 Fall Issue
    25 October 2022
    by Alexa Panza

    Madison Whitekiller | Cherokee Nation | University of 
Oklahoma–Tulsa School of Community Medicine

    Mdison Whitekiller became a “nurse” at the age of 10. Her mother had been diagnosed with breast cancer, and Whitekiller took care of her as best she could. Looking back, Whitekiller believes this experience greatly influenced her desire to pursue medicine. Now, as she starts medical school at the University of Oklahoma–Tulsa School of Community Medicine, she is well on her way to becoming a doctor and helping not only her mother but the larger Native community.

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  • 2017 Fall Issue
    01 September 2017
    by Susan Biemesderfer

    Will Culver Cherokee / Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine / Veterinary Medicine and Public Health

    He was just looking for a part-time job while he finished up at Mission Viejo High School in Orange County, Calif. It was 2001, and Will Culver had heard that a local veterinary hospital needed kennel assistants. He started out walking dogs, cleaning kennels, and bathing various kinds of animals. When he turned 18, they promoted him to veterinary assistant — and before too long, to veterinary technician, then shift supervisor. “I always loved animals, but that expanded exponentially after I started working at the hospital,” he says.

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  • 2016 Fall Issue
    01 November 2016
    by Sarah Dollard

    Amanda Carroll / Peguis First Nation and Cree / Montana State University / Organismal Biology Heritage University / Physician Assistant Program

    High school should be a time of growth and self-discovery, and it was especially transformative for Amanda Carroll, Peguis First Nation and Cree. As a high school student she discovered both her cultural roots and her professional path.

    Born in Bozeman, Mont., Carroll is the oldest of six children. She is proud of her Peguis and Cree heritage, but didn’t always feel connected with her tribe the way she does today. Growing up, she didn’t hear the Peguis language spoken at home, nor did she learn about their traditions.

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Winds of Change is the premier nationally distributed magazine with a single-minded focus on career and educational advancement for all Indigenous people in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM).

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