For the health professionals of the future who are graduating from Weill Cornell Medicine - Qatar (WCM-Q) this year, their step into the next stage of their lives is being taken in a world where the need for highly skilled, and equally highly dedicated, healthcare workers has been driven home by the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.
The latest batch of graduates from the Qatar Foundation (QF) partner university has seen the crisis bring home to them the responsibilities that their chosen profession carries. And as Dr Abdullah al-Mulla, one of the members of its Class of 2020, says: "By seeing what is happening in the world as a result of the spread of Covid-19 and the great efforts of healthcare workers on the frontlines, we feel, as medical graduates, a great responsibility and great enthusiasm to contribute and play our role in tackling this epidemic.
“We realise the magnitude of the challenges that will face us, but our belief in the nobility of the message that we carry as doctors motivates us and increases our will and strength.
“Just by reading the newspapers, watching TV, and checking social media, I see healthcare workers around the world risking their lives to save those of others, and how they have turned into heroes in people`s eyes, That gives me more motivation and enthusiasm to get onto the frontlines, and use the knowledge and the moral principles I gained during my studies at Weill Cornell Medicine - Qatar to help fight pandemic.”
The Class of 2020’s achievements at WCM-Q were celebrated through a recent online graduation ceremony, and Dr al-Mulla says: ”Having graduated from medical school during a pandemic is, in itself, an achievement – not only for us as graduates, but also to all the people behind the scenes.
“They worked hard to orchestrate the graduation and to get us to where we are today. From all our professors at WCM-Q, to the university’s administration, they were able to seamlessly transition all educational activities from the classroom to the screens in our homes, in the midst of a pandemic that brought the world to a halt.”
Dr al-Mulla, who will now embark on a residency in paediatrics at Virginia Commonwealth Hospital in the US as the next step in his medical career, says his journey in WCM-Q, “has truly built me into the person I am today”.
“Going from high school to WCM-Q is difficult, because as a high school student you do not really have all those life and study skills that you need to get through medical school,” he said. “But you gain them, and in addition to that, you gain something more important: lifelong friendships."
Dr al-Mulla explained that WCM-Q has driven him to develop the skills to become a well-rounded physician, stretching beyond medical capabilities and into areas such as time management and studying efficiently.
“I also gained great insight into different areas of medicine, such as understanding human physiology and pathology,” he explained. “As I entered the clinical study years of medical school, I started to understand how doctors must be understanding and empathetic to a patient and have the utmost professionalism."