A Community Unlike Any Other | ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ Celebrates AANHPI Heritage Month

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A Community Unlike Any Other 
AANHPI Heritage Month


May 27, 2024
Photograph of ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ med student Tyler Kung in white coat

For Tyler Kung (DO ’27), medical school is not an individualized journey. No matter what your background is, he believes it should be treated as a shared experience.

β€œHaving continuous support is central and should be something that everyone considers when they go to medical school,” said Kung. β€œThe community here at ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ is unlike anything I've experienced previously in my life. There isn't a person here that I don't feel comfortable talking to.”

Kung has found a particularly strong sense of community within ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ’s chapter of the Asian Pacific American Medical Student Association (APAMSA), where he serves as co-president. For those interested in joining APAMSA, Kung says, β€œWe are here to support you and make sure that you aren't in this alone.”

With undergraduate degrees in anthropology and economics, Kung understands more about the social determinants of health than other medical students. Seeing medicine through a social lens is what drives him.

β€œI was at the American Psychiatric Association’s annual conference in New York City, and one of the first meetings I attended was about Asian-American identity and Asian cultural formation with regards to psychiatry,” he said. β€œThey talked about how Asian Americans have the lowest utilization of mental health services.”

Tyler Kung (DO ’27) smiling with a group of students in the ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ chapter of APAMSA

This statistic stood out to Kung and affirmed his interest in providing proper care to those who may need it but do not feel comfortable asking for help.

β€œI do think there's a stigma,” he shared. β€œThere's a plethora of data that supports that fact. I don't think that it's talked about a lot in Asian American communities. There are enormous amounts of pressure for achievement, and so if you don't necessarily meet that bar of achievement, it can be injurious to mental health.”

First exposed to mental health during his time working in a nursing home, Kung was able to see how a lack of autonomy impacted the residents.

β€œThey were unable to live the quality of life they had before their diagnosis,” he said. β€œThat inspired me to pursue medicine because I wanted people to live their own lives. I didn't want it to be dictated by disease. That led me down the path to medical school.”

Tyler Kung (DO ’27) with his family

Kung now hopes to become a source of strength and comfort for a wide variety of patients. Similar to one provider he met when he was just a high school student.

β€œI shadowed a primary care physician, and she spoke only Mandarin to her patients in Chinatown, New York. I'm from Jersey, so it was essentially my local community, and seeing the ability for her patients to feel comfortable and be treated by her for 20–30 years really warmed my heart,” he said.

β€œThese people would otherwise be unseen in traditional healthcare settings since they can't speak the language, so I think that there's a lot of opportunity there. Being someone who is part of the AAPI community, I want to understand what people are going through and use some of my unique background experiences with those types of patients.”

The ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ Asian Pacific American Medical Student Association (APAMSA) Chapter aims to educate and advocate for AAPI healthcare issues, support Asian American Pacific Islander ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ students, and connect with Philly's Asian community. The organization’s events are open to all, and everyone is encouraged to join their community. Those interested may reach out to apamsa@pcom.edu with any questions, or follow them on Instagram at .

 

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About ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ

Established in 1899, ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ has trained thousands of highly competent, caring physicians, health practitioners and behavioral scientists who practice a β€œwhole person” approach to careβ€”treating people, not just symptoms. ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ, a private, not-for-profit accredited institution of higher education, operates three campuses (ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ, ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ Georgia and ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ South Georgia) and offers doctoral degrees in clinical psychology, educational psychology, osteopathic medicine, pharmacy, physical therapy, and school psychology. The college also offers graduate degrees in applied behavior analysis, applied positive psychology, biomedical sciences, forensic medicine, medical laboratory science, mental health counseling, physician assistant studies, and school psychology. ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ students learn the importance of health promotion, research, education and service to the community. Through its community-based Healthcare Centers, ΊΪΑΟ΄«ΛΝΓΕ provides care to medically underserved populations. For more information, visit pcom.edu or call 215-871-6100.

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