Chemistry

The trips of a lifetime

Katelyn Stermer

Class of 2014
Majors: Chemistry, international service
Hometown: Barrington, Ill.

In the spring of her sophomore year, Katelyn Stermer boarded a plane bound for Central America. She knew that she wanted to become a physician. But her professor, Robert Clark, encouraged her to consider working in underserved clinics in Nicaragua and Costa Rica.

“I gained great clinical experience,” she says, “and I learned what it means to practice medicine. You’re not just a doctor but also an emotional guide. If you tell someone, ‘You have cancer,’ there’s a whole psycho-social component beyond conveying the factual diagnosis.”

Just as Professor Clark intended, the experience broadened Katelyn’s perspective. As a bright chemistry major, she saw the human body as a problem to be solved. After the trip, she says, she recognized that there is much more to a patient than what is viewed through a microscope.

Katelyn says her understanding changed even further the next semester when she traveled to South Africa and Namibia.

“I saw the impact of HIV/AIDS. That’s where it really turned around for me,” she says. “I had felt there was a deeper meaning to the work of medicine, but I couldn’t define it with words. I realized it’s important to take care of a person as a whole being. A person’s body may be ailing, but the patient has social, spiritual, and emotional needs. I may not be able to treat all of those needs, but I have to recognize they exist.”

Katelyn decided to delay her applications to medical school in order to learn more about the human aspects of medical care. That interest, which was also developed by her humanities courses in Christ College, led Katelyn to consider graduate work in public health.

“I realized I was really invested in the delivery of health services, which is what I didn’t see M.D.s being taught,” she says. “A public health degree can help me understand the outside factors beyond a person’s body mechanics. I want to be a better physician and have that base knowledge.”

Katelyn says she found support from her chemistry professors, who identified public health as a natural synthesis of her interests. Her advisor, Steven Engerer, assisted her in choosing appropriate classes for her final semesters at Valpo, wrote letters of recommendation, and helped convince her family that this was a reputable path to take.

“The chemistry department encourages students who may not necessarily want to be a hard-line scientist,” Katelyn says. “Valpo and the faculty here have made me the well-rounded person I want to be academically, spiritually, and emotionally.”

That well-rounded person was also an excellent candidate for graduate school. Katelyn was accepted into all five Master of Public Health programs to which she applied, including two Top 10 programs. She accepted a spot in the Master of Public Health – Epidemiology program at the University of Illinois-Chicago and enrolled in medical school courses during her second year.