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University Of Missouri-St. Louis Grad Hunter Campbell Headed To UMKC Medical School With Early Acceptance
The village, a suburb of Hillsboro, is that small.
May 19, 2021
When Hunter Campbell went about his home of Taylor Springs, Illinois, there was always a possibility that he wouldnβt run across one other person throughout the course of a day.
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The village, a suburb of Hillsboro, is that small.
For anyone who has met Campbell, the thought of him growing up in an area without many people surrounding him might seem a bit unexpected. Thatβs because heβs a self-proclaimed talker.
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βI really love people,β he said. βI love different people. I love talking to people. I could talk for hours. Some people say I talk too much.β
Attending school at the University of MissouriβSt. Louis and having the chance to be around so many was a perk for Campbell, who graduated last weekend with a BA in chemistry and a Pierre Laclede Honors College certificate. But returning to rural life in the future is integral to Campbellβs plan.
Heβs heading to the University of MissouriβKansas City School of Medicine next spring and hopes to return home to provide care afterward.
βOne of my biggest goals is to be a hometown doctor,β he said. βI just love small towns. I love talking to people in small towns, thereβs that, βOh, hey, thereβs Dr. Hunter Campbell. Heβs the local doctor and everybody knows him.β Thereβs just something special about rural medicine and practicing in underserved places like Hillsboro.β
He became interested in medicine through an experience with his own hometown physician, Dr. Benjamin Cady, the son of the doctor whoβd delivered and cared for Campbell throughout his life.
Campbell had gone in with a concern and was struck by Cadyβs upbeat attitude and enthusiasm.
βIt hit me while I was in there that maybe medicine is something I should look into because he took something that I was worried about and was enthusiastic about it,β Campbell said. βHe took so much time to explain everything to me. I thought, using science, youβre able to help people understand their own bodies and help them relax.β
To get some firsthand experience, Campbell worked as a scribe, a paraprofessional who helps chart patientsβ visits, for Cady and found himself even more convinced after days of interacting with patients and coworkers.
βI would leave the clinic with my cheeks were hurting because I was smiling all day,β he said.
When he was trying to figure out what college to attend, Campbell decided to go to UMSL Day, the universityβs open house. He met faculty, reviewed class offerings, got introduced to the Honors College and fell in love.
In a flash, he decided on UMSL. Landing on UMKC for medical school turned out to be a similar experience.
Campbell applied for the schoolβs Medical Scholars Program, which grants early and guaranteed admission for second- or third-year undergraduates. He spent a summer applying, messaging people such as Honors College Director of Student Services and Alumni Relations and Associate Teaching Professor Dan Gerth for guidance.
Getting accepted took the stress off for Campbell, and the more he looked into the program, the more he realized heβd found a good fit and decided to not apply to other schools.
βI was just hooked,β he said. βAfter going there to interview and then looking into their program β they do office rotations and stuff very early β it just seemed like such an interesting, cool program.
βI think that itβs going to be really interesting to see the principles that Iβve learned translate over to the human body and the biology side of medicine. Iβm very excited to start.β
Campbell has earned minors in Spanish and biology, but his major β chemistry β has been his favorite academic experience. Thatβs included studying organic chemistry with Professor George Gokel, who Campbell says βhas done just about everything,β and meeting Vice Chancellor for Research and Economic and Community Development Chris Spilling, a phosphorous chemist.
This press release was produced by the University of Missouri-St. Louis. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.