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Meet Johns Hopkins’ First Black Female Neurosurgeon Resident

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Meet Johns Hopkins’ First Black Female Neurosurgeon Resident


Nancy, who’s graduating from John Hopkins and will go on to work in their neurosurgery department, hails from Ghana. She was raised in the West African country until the age of 15, and has been in Maryland for the past 11 years.

“I am very much interested in providing medical care in underserved settings, specifically surgical care,” she said in a statement. “I hope to be able to go back to Ghana over the course of my career to help in building sustainable surgical infrastructure. I will be matching into neurosurgery, a field that I am greatly enamored with, and hope to utilize those skills in advancing global surgical care.”

Nancy’s husband, Kwabena, is also studying medicine as a 3rd-year medical student at University of Maryland….

Please read original article Meet Johns Hopkins’ First Black Female Neurosurgeon Resident posted on Healthy Black Girls on 12 April 2017 | 2:32 am —

The image of the butterfly has come to define the many expressions of the feminine black consciousness and for a good reason. The butterfly is the perfect articulation of the exquisite beauty of nature. Whether tiny or large, brightly colored or more subdued, the butterfly’s allure is undeniable. Each one displays its own unique patterns and hues, and no one species outshines any other.

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