MINERVA VOICES

Making Healthcare Accessible with Alumna Chisom Egwuatu

by Chisom Egwuatu | Class of 2020
November 30, 2020

Chisom Egwuatu has spent the past two years thinking about the relationship between medical practice and the populations it intends to serve. For her Capstone project, Minerva’s version of a final year thesis, Chisom researched the negative impact of adverse or traumatic experiences during childhood on the body’s stress-response system. Her research focused on integrating protective practices, such as belongingness, into the elementary school curriculum and exploring how certain tactics might be employed to ensure deeper resilience and thus better outcomes for these youth.

After graduation, Chisom joined University of California San Francisco Medical Center for Productive Health (UCSF) as an Assistant Patient Financial Navigator to continue working with patients. At UCSF, Chisom focused on building relationships with her clients to better help them both medically and holistically. For example, understanding that access to healthcare in the United States is often determined by financial status, she would work with clients to navigate a complicated, expensive, and resultantly inaccessible system. Her role was to explain the costs associated with each patient’s treatment plan and connect patients with third-party options that might help finance their treatment at the clinic.

From her direct work with clients, which often placed her in heartbreaking predicaments, Chisom began to question why an individual’s background or financial circumstances barred them from receiving necessary medical attention and care — and what she could do to prevent this.

Armed with this purpose in mind, Chisom is currently applying to medical school in order to learn how to fix the broken healthcare system. She acknowledges that she will be stepping out of her comfort zone, but believes she is well equipped from her past four years of Minerva education. According to Chisom, her Minerva experience taught her that in order to see something manifest in the world, you need to make it happen yourself and that it is okay to ask for help. And above all, that it is important to fight for opportunities for both yourself and for those who cannot do it on their own.

Quick Facts

Name
Country
Class
Major
Business and Computational Sciences
Business and Social Sciences
Arts and Humanities
Business, Social Sciences
Business & Arts and Humanities
Computational Sciences
Natural Sciences, Computer Science
Computational Sciences
Arts & Humanities
Computational Sciences, Social Sciences
Computational Sciences
Computational Sciences
Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
Social Sciences, Natural Sciences
Data Science, Statistics
Computational Sciences
Business
Computational Sciences, Data Science
Social Sciences
Natural Sciences
Business, Natural Sciences
Business, Social Sciences
Computational Sciences
Arts & Humanities, Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Computational Sciences, Natural Sciences
Natural Sciences
Computational Sciences, Social Sciences
Business, Social Sciences
Computational Sciences
Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Arts & Humanities, Social Sciences
Arts & Humanities, Social Science
Social Sciences, Business
Arts & Humanities
Computational Sciences, Social Science
Natural Sciences, Computer Science
Computational Science, Statistic Natural Sciences
Business & Social Sciences
Computational Science, Social Sciences
Social Sciences and Business
Business
Arts and Humanities
Computational Sciences
Social Sciences
Social Sciences and Computational Sciences
Social Sciences & Computational Sciences
Social Sciences & Arts and Humanities
Computational Science
Minor
Economics
Social Sciences
Concentration
Machine Learning
Cells, Organisms, Data Science, Statistics
Arts & Literature and Historical Forces
Artificial Intelligence & Computer Science
Cells and Organisms, Mind and Emotion
Economics, Physics
Managing Operational Complexity and Strategic Finance
Global Development Studies and Brain, Cognition, and Behavior
Scalable Growth, Designing Societies
Business
Drug Discovery Research, Designing and Implementing Policies
Historical Forces, Cognition, Brain, and Behavior
Artificial Intelligence, Psychology
Designing Solutions, Data Science and Statistics
Data Science and Statistic, Theoretical Foundations of Natural Science
Strategic Finance, Politics, Government, and Society
Data Analysis, Cognition
Brand Management
Data Science and Statistics & Economics
Cognitive Science & Economics
Data Science and Statistics and Contemporary Knowledge Discovery
Internship
Higia Technologies
Project Development and Marketing Analyst Intern at VIVITA, a Mistletoe company
Business Development Intern, DoSomething.org
Business Analyst, Clean Energy Associates (CEA)

Conversation

Chisom Egwuatu has spent the past two years thinking about the relationship between medical practice and the populations it intends to serve. For her Capstone project, Minerva’s version of a final year thesis, Chisom researched the negative impact of adverse or traumatic experiences during childhood on the body’s stress-response system. Her research focused on integrating protective practices, such as belongingness, into the elementary school curriculum and exploring how certain tactics might be employed to ensure deeper resilience and thus better outcomes for these youth.

After graduation, Chisom joined University of California San Francisco Medical Center for Productive Health (UCSF) as an Assistant Patient Financial Navigator to continue working with patients. At UCSF, Chisom focused on building relationships with her clients to better help them both medically and holistically. For example, understanding that access to healthcare in the United States is often determined by financial status, she would work with clients to navigate a complicated, expensive, and resultantly inaccessible system. Her role was to explain the costs associated with each patient’s treatment plan and connect patients with third-party options that might help finance their treatment at the clinic.

From her direct work with clients, which often placed her in heartbreaking predicaments, Chisom began to question why an individual’s background or financial circumstances barred them from receiving necessary medical attention and care — and what she could do to prevent this.

Armed with this purpose in mind, Chisom is currently applying to medical school in order to learn how to fix the broken healthcare system. She acknowledges that she will be stepping out of her comfort zone, but believes she is well equipped from her past four years of Minerva education. According to Chisom, her Minerva experience taught her that in order to see something manifest in the world, you need to make it happen yourself and that it is okay to ask for help. And above all, that it is important to fight for opportunities for both yourself and for those who cannot do it on their own.