International Service Learning: Experiential Education
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2534345/fan_mail/new] Watching medicine up close can change your plans fast, especially when you see it practiced in places that don’t have the safety net of big hospitals, endless imaging, and overflowing supplies. We sit down with Brice, a University of South Carolina grad and cardiology medical scribe, to unpack how mentorship and service learning turned his interest in medicine into a clear direction and a bigger mission. We start with the nuts and bolts of being a paid clinical scribe: learning Epic, sharpening documentation, understanding diagnostic tests, and building the kind of long-term physician mentorship most pre-med students struggle to find. Then we go abroad. Brice shares what it felt like to leave the country for the first time on a Costa Rica service learning trip, why the happiness he saw in underserved communities surprised him, and the patient moments that made healthcare disparities impossible to ignore. From there, Belize takes it further with a rare mix of free clinics and hospital rotations. Brice describes what resource-limited wards look like, what he learns from physicians who can do “so much with so little,” and a standout OR experience where an orthopedic surgeon teaches fracture care and imaging like a personal masterclass. We close with Brice’s advice for students worried about cost or fear of the unknown, plus details on the upcoming Tanzania gap-year trip built around hospital time, clinics, and cultural experiences. If you’re thinking about global health, gap year plans, medical Spanish, or finding real mentorship before med school, hit play, share this with a friend who needs the push, and subscribe and leave a review so more future clinicians can find the show. I also want to thank our listeners for joining us as it is our goal to "share the voices of international service" with you! As a 50+ year nurse that has worked in quite a variety of clinical roles in our healthcare system, taught healthcare courses for the past 20 years at the university level, and has traveled extensively with students on international service-learning trips, I can easily attest to the fact that it is the hands-on experiential experiences that are most meaningful in life! I hope that by hearing these voices you too can become involved in service, whether it be locally, nationally, or internatioally. Feel free to check out our website at www.internationalservicelearning.org, follow us on Instagram @islmedical, or send me an email at DrH@internationalservicelearning.org [DrH@islonline.org] if you wasnt to learn more about international opportunities for yourself, your school, your church, or any other cohort!
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