
NYU Long Island School of Medicineâs Class of 2025 in their first white coats.
Photo: Joe Carrotta
Twenty-four incoming students marked the beginning of their careers in medicine at the White Coat Ceremony on Thursday, September 8, at the schoolâs Research and Academic Center in Mineola. The annual event is a rite of passage for medical students around the country as they are âcloakedâ in their first white coats, signifying the start of their formal medical training.
, founding dean and chief academic officer at NYU Long Island School of Medicine, welcomed the students to the school, which graduated its inaugural class of primary care physicians in May.
âIt is a young school, but already has a vitality and energy within it that I think you will find quite infectious,â he told the class, adding, âYou will build qualities that include resilience, endurance, and an empathic approach to patients and colleagues and yourselves.â
The class of 2025 will pursue careers in the following primary care areas:
- internal medicine: 13
- pediatrics: 7
- general surgery: 2
- obstetrics and gynecology: 2
âI wanted to become a primary care physician so Iâd have more power to help my patients,â says Danielle Reid of Atlanta, who has worked as a nurse for several years. âPrimary care really is that first line of defense, and people who fall through the gapsâoften minorities and people of colorâusually do so in this first crucial step. I want to be a change maker and help fill in these health equity gaps, and Iâm excited that NYU Long Island School of Medicine truly shares in that ambition.â
One-third of the Class of 2025 identifies as underrepresented in medicine and half are women. When it opened its doors three years ago, NYU Long Island School of Medicine became the first medical school on Long Island to offer to all students, regardless of need or merit.
âIâve wanted to be a doctor since I was a kid, but I grew up in a low-income householdâmy dad drives a yellow cab and my mother is a stay-at-home momâso it was the kind of dream you keep working toward despite knowing that you likely wonât be able to afford it,â says Mohammed Shah from Queens. âNow here I am on the path to become a primary care physician in a tuition- and debt-free program, which means a lot to someone like me. Iâm so excited to get to use what we learn in interactions with patients.â
Media Inquiries
Lacy Scarmana
Phone: 646-754-7367
lacy.scarmana@nyulangone.org