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By: Thomas Mork, SPT What do you love about your profession? Is it seeing patients smile? Is it putting on your detective cap to figure[...]

By Crystal Mendoza • November 5, 2015

Written by Crystal Mendoza and Carl Gustafson The Biomedical Engineering and Physiology (BMEP) students are going global! In 2009, a few students got together and[...]

By Carl Gustafson • October 21, 2015

By Domenic Fraboni At times, diversity can be a difficult area to be “successful” in.  This can be especially true when trying to represent all[...]

By Crystal Mendoza • September 24, 2015

By Luz Milbeth Cumba-García, MS At the age of 16, I was admitted to the Universidad Metropolitana’s early admission program in San Juan, Puerto Rico,[...]

By Clara Castillejobecerra • September 17, 2015

Historically, women have been underrepresented in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). This trend seems to be predominant in academia, where sexist[...]

By Clara Castillejobecerra • July 30, 2015

By Thomas Mork I was sitting in Phillips Hall in the Siebens Building at Mayo Clinic, immersed in a speech by “Bob”: former patient, cancer[...]

By Andrew M. Harrison • July 16, 2015

“What you are doing, right now, is killing you!” Nilofer Merchant scanned a suddenly breathless crowd with a faux menace at her 2013 TED talk.[...]

By Carl Gustafson • July 5, 2015

By Dr. Jim Maher How can Mayo Clinic best honor the axis of diversity that might be called "faith," "belief," "unbelief," or "religion" and what[...]

By Andrew M. Harrison • May 13, 2015

“In re mathematica ars proponendi quaestionem pluris facienda est quam solvendi.” – Georg Cantor Just when you thought Latin was a dead language… If I[...]

By Carl Gustafson • March 19, 2015

By Nora E. King I sat in Mayo Clinic’s St. Marys Hospital cafeteria with my clinical team, in that awkward way medical students know too[...]

By Andrew M. Harrison • February 26, 2015