Keeyon Olia

Co-​​op in sleep lab ‘awakens’ student’s passion for medicine

Keeyon Olia

Keeyon Olia, S’18, worked on co-op at the Sleep and Inflammatory Systems Laboratory at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

by Jason Kornwitz

Keeyon Olia’s co-​​op in a sleep lab at a big Boston hos­pital this fall awak­ened his pas­sion for med­i­cine and piqued his interest in pur­suing a career in pedi­atric psychiatry.

Olia, S’18, worked as a clin­ical research stu­dent in the Sleep Inflam­ma­tory Sys­tems Lab­o­ra­tory at the Beth Israel Dea­coness Med­ical Center, col­lab­o­rating with a team of nurses to con­duct two National Insti­tutes of Health-​​funded studies.

Both studies focused on ana­lyzing the effect of sleep depri­va­tion on the ability to process pain, one of which required healthy par­tic­i­pants to stay in the research center for two, 19-​​day periods of time. It was for this study that Olia imple­mented a range of tests, from recording brain waves to mea­suring par­tic­i­pants’ heart rates.

Olia also worked on two inde­pen­dent research projects, using lab data to examine the effects of sleep restric­tion on emo­tion reg­u­la­tion and long-​​term blood pres­sure reg­u­la­tion. Although his co-​​op ended in December, he has con­tinued to pursue this work with the goal of pre­senting his find­ings at the 25th Annual Psy­chology Under­grad­uate Research Con­fer­ence at UCLA this May.

I had thought about being a doctor before this expe­ri­ence,” said Olia, a third-​​year psy­chology major, “but not as seri­ously and not with as much confidence.”

I met so many pedi­atric doc­tors there and learned so much about pedi­atric med­i­cine,” Olia explained. “It really moti­vated me to pursue the field from a clin­ical per­spec­tive as well as a research perspective.”When he wasn’t working in the lab, Olia was attending pop­ular con­fer­ences and shad­owing doc­tors, including psy­chi­a­trists, neu­rol­o­gists, and sleep spe­cial­ists. One con­fer­ence was the Har­vard Catalyst’s Child Health Sym­po­sium on Devel­op­mental Ori­gins of Health and Dis­ease, a day­long meeting aimed at high­lighting the emerging tools and tech­nolo­gies being used to combat the long-​​term health effects of adverse early-​​life exposure.

It was at this con­fer­ence that Olia con­nected with Linda Van Marter, an asso­ciate pro­fessor of pedi­atrics at Har­vard Med­ical School who later encour­aged him to apply for a com­pet­i­tive summer intern­ship in Boston Children’s Hospital’s Divi­sion of New­born Med­i­cine. The pro­gram, Olia explained, would sate his interest in med­i­cine and research, giving him the chance to observe new­born care and con­duct trans­la­tional or epi­demi­o­log­ical studies.

Back on campus, he’s looking for­ward to acing his pre-​​med classes with an eye toward applying to med­ical school. If it hadn’t been for the doc­tors whom he shad­owed on co-​​op, he said, those who recalled for him the trials and tribu­la­tions of col­lege aca­d­e­mics, he might not be get­ting an ‘A’ in his chem­istry course this semester.

I have the capacity to suc­ceed, but I need to put in the work and remain focused,” Olia explained, noting that he’s still waiting to find out if he’ll be picked for the summer intern­ship. “It’s amazing how much I’ve grown over the past six months and now I can’t wait for every­thing that my future entails.”

Originally published in news@Northeastern on February 23, 2016

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