Source: Biomedical Engineering Concept, iStock
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Hello, my name is Ikram. Pronounced “eek” and then the animal “ram”. Despite people constantly messing up my name, calling me “eye-kram” or even “ink-ram” (yeah I am not sure where they got the “n” from either), I love my name. I love how it is short and simple yet it has a deep meaning: honour, hospitality, and generosity. But, enough about my name, for now.
I am currently a junior at the University of Illinois at Chicago studying Biomedical Engineering with a concentration in Cell and Tissue Engineering. In my opinion, BME is one of the coolest majors out there as it is an eloquent synergy of all the engineering disciplines and more. Consequently, the diverse and useful knowledge that I gain each day at school feels simply empowering. I got into this major through my interest in going to medical school afterward, but to be honest, the more I learn about BME the more I feel like I could be content going into industry instead of becoming a doctor (who would have thought?).
However, regardless of my immediate plans after my undergraduate degree, my long-term goal is to go back to my home country and assist in bettering the healthcare system there. Whether it is through developing illness prevention programs, creating cost-effective diagnostic tools, or opening emergency care facilities in underserved communities, I just want to help. And I am okay if my pathway of how I am going to achieve that is not entirely laid out now because as Osho said, “Nobody has the power to take two steps together, you can make only one step at a time.”