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  • Madeline Hooper
  • Dec 2, 2020

Updated: Feb 9, 2021

When I moved to Tampa in July 2018 to start medical school, I felt very alone. Since going to college, I had lived in numerous places far from my hometown in the San Francisco Bay Area, but nothing had felt as far as Florida did. Florida was a hot and humid, foreign territory. I wasn't sure what to make of it.


One year later, I realized Tampa had become a Home to me -- yes, capital "H" -- when I returned to my apartment after a weekend in New York, which I had called my home during my pre-medical school chapter. Identifying Tampa as Home was startling news to me, but it was also a great comfort. In Tampa, I had found community, support, and safety. I had found people I cared for and a deep sense of purpose. My apartment smelled like sunscreen and was my safe harbor of courage.


An important part of my rooting in Tampa came with a ritual of frequent Friday nights and Saturday mornings on medical street runs and at a student-run clinic taking care of the local homeless population. As I spoke with our patients, many of them nomads, about where they had come from and where they now sleep, I came to appreciate what we shared: an unexpected landing in Tampa, followed by an even more unexpected connection to it.


Tampa Bay Street Medicine provides homeless individuals and refugees who live in the Tampa Bay Area with critical medical care; this fact has been well-established. But much more happens in our interactions with our patients than the delivery of healthcare services. Illuminating the tenets of humanism that enliven medicine, as we learn the stories of our patients, we come to understand how much we have in common. Indeed, the human experience is not so desperately individual. Medical students may pride themselves on ideas of eccentricity and originality, but the more I have become invested in patient care, the more I have cherished and emphasized the commonalities, normalcies, and even the banalities of our shared existence.


This year, a record number of Americans visited a food pantry for the first time as they prepared for Thanksgiving in the face of the calamitous effects of COVID-19. Home and food insecurity is an undeniable consequence of the pandemic. In contrast, as I sat down to my bountiful holiday meal, I was grateful for my health and the health of those I love. I am also deeply thankful for what I have been learning and the opportunity to care for others in a meaningful way given my role in medicine. To that end, Tampa Bay Street Medicine has played a salient role in my growth, and so I owe much gratitude to this organization, as well.


In the spirit of the season and this organization, I hope we all consider and celebrate our ability to engage with each other as 2020 comes to a close -- fewer transactions in return for more of "Have a nice day," "I like your hat," and "Here, let me help you" because through such interactions, we create Home.


Support TBSM this holiday season through the USF Foundation's HerdFunder here:


  • TBSM Humanities
  • Nov 23, 2020

Updated: Nov 28, 2020

Today we're hearing from Richa Bicht and Emma Weiland! Both women are second year medical students and have been involved with TBSM since they matriculated at USF MCOM.


"Being able to connect with our patients and make their day a little brighter is my favorite part of TBSM! Volunteering at our clinics has really opened my eyes to the importance of ensuring equitable access to healthcare regardless of socioeconomic status, and to the changes that are still necessary to make these essential services a reality for everyone in our community."


Richa Bicht, MS2

TBSM Communications Director








"What I love most about TBSM is that as an organization we make it our mission to break through uncomfortable barriers that exist around homelessness and healthcare equity. Although we may not have all the answers, we want to face the issue head on and find solutions by working directly with the people, understanding their stories and values to better serve their needs. Those that have the least always have the most to give—I am astounded by how true this statement is every time I am out on a street run."

Emma Weiland, MS2

TBSM Logistics Director

 

Student Voices highlights sound bites from TBSM volunteers and leaders about why they enjoy working with the TBSM patient population and what learn from the experience.

Updated: Nov 22, 2020

We are proud of our humanities team, Madeline and Lauren, for being selected as two of the Arnold P. Gold Foundation Student Summer Fellows! This summer, the foundation selected projects that focused on vulnerable populations due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Read more about their project, as well as the other selected students, at the link below.

https://www.gold-foundation.org/newsroom/news/17-gold-student-summer-fellows-to-focus-on-covid-19-projects/




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