
Trimble Tech High School senior Nicole Estrada, 17, carries out CPR on a mannequin Sept. 7 at a medical training hosted by the Anne Burnett Marion School of Medicine at TCU. Estrada belongs of her high school's patient care professional program. She prepares to go to medical school and pursue a job in health care. (Cristian ArguetaSoto
Nicole Estrada, 17, signed up for Trimble Tech High School's client care professional program due to the fact that she always understood she wanted to work in the medical field.
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Regardless of her household's cautions about how difficult the journey would be, she continues to pursue a healthcare career.
" They told me that it's going to be a lot of work. Nothing's going to ever come easy to me. If I'm truly determined, then whatever is going to slide efficiently, as long as I put an effort in," Estrada said.
Estrada and more than 250 more high school trainees-- over 100 from Trimble Tech alone-- got involved Sept. 7 in Anne Burnett Marion School of Medicine at TCU's hands-on medical training workshops where students utilized virtual truth headsets, mannequins and genuine clients to learn from medical specialists.
" It helped me grow my desire in wanting to be in the healthcare system," Estrada stated.
Korie Hawkins, the assistant director of service learning at the Burnett School of Medicine, said the workshop is part of a bigger effort to offer chances in the medical field for all students who have an interest in training.
The goal is access, she stated.
" Helping them to comprehend that they can also achieve these chances. The larger goal is to ultimately permit them to be able to start the process of applying to medical schools and what that feels and looks like. They'll be in the community," Hawkins said.
Anne Burnett Marion School of Medicine at TCU).


Trimble Tech High School student Valeria Escobedo, right, listens to a Burnett School of Medicine at TCU faculty member throughout a hands-on ultrasound training. Escobedo, 17, who would be the very first in her family to go to, belongs of her high school's lifesaver program, in preparation for a profession she plans to pursue after college. (Cristian ArguetaSoto
The Burnett School of Medicine at TCU will open behind Trimble Tech High School, and Hawkins sees space for partnership with the high school's medical programs, she said.
" It is really essential to me to make certain that the trainees understand that they can do anything they want to do, whether that's going to medical school, (or) whether it be a nursing student," Hawkins stated. "We are going to be that beacon of light that reveals them they don't just have to stop at the medical system. They can continue to go on and achieve all these different objectives.".
Cristian ArguetaSoto is the community engagement reporter at the
Fort Worth Report. Contact him by e-mail or through Twitter. At the
Fort Worth Report, news choices are made separately of our board members and monetary advocates. Read more about our editorial independence policy here.
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by Cristian ArguetaSoto,
Fort Worth Report.
< figure class=" wp-block-image size-large"><> < img src=" https://fortworthreport.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/CAS_tcu-3-1024x683.jpg" alt="" class=" wp-image-87638"/><> < figcaption class=" wp-element-caption">> Trimble Tech High School senior Nicole Estrada, 17, carries out CPR on a mannequin Sept. 7 at a medical training hosted by the Anne Burnett Marion School of Medicine at TCU. < figure class=" wp-block-image size-large"><> < img src=" https://fortworthreport.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/CAS_tcu-4-1024x683.jpg" alt="" class=" wp-image-87639"/><> < figcaption class=" wp-element-caption">> Trimble Tech High School trainee Valeria Escobedo, right, listens to a Burnett School of Medicine at TCU faculty member throughout a hands-on ultrasound training. < figure class=" wp-block-image size-large"><> < img src=" https://fortworthreport.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/CAS_tcu-5-1024x683.jpg" alt="" class=" wp-image-87640"/><> < figcaption class=" wp-element-caption">> A Burnett School of Medicine at TCU fitness instructor helps Cristo Rey High School trainees discover about sutures Sept. 7.
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