Allentown Central Catholic High School grad chooses medical residency at SLUHN
CONTRIBUTED ARTICLE
After four years of intense study and clinical experience, 30 Temple University/St. Luke’s School of Medicine students recently graduated at a ceremony held at the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia.
Six graduates will continue their education at St. Luke’s for residency, including Nicholas Roma, a Lehigh Valley native who plans to stay and practice in the region as an interventional cardiologist.
During his education at the region’s first and only medical school, Roma completed a rotation in cardiology and had the opportunity to work with electrophysiologist Darren Traub, M.D., who Roma said had a huge impact on his career choice.
Traub allowed Roma to assist him in implanting pacemakers and scrub in during ablations, a procedure used to scar small areas in the heart to correct rhythm disorders. Roma also was involved in interventional procedures, such as cardiac catheterizations. This involves the insertion of a tube into the chamber or vessel of the heart to restore blood flow.
“Interventional cardiology’s one of the few careers where you have an immediate impact,” Roma said. “Heart attack patients come in with terrible chest pain, and after a 20-minute procedure, it’s relieved. It’s mind-boggling.”
For the Allentown Central Catholic High School and Muhlenberg College graduate, the ability to stay local was a key factor in his choice of medical school and residency program. He will begin his four-year residency in internal medicine in July, followed by a two-year cardiology fellowship.
St. Luke’s offers both and is the only program in the country to give residents the opportunity to “lock in” to the program for six years.
The opportunity to work so closely with attending physicians, residents and other medical students, as well as members of the medical school’s administration staff, made Roma’s experience at Temple/St. Luke’s special.
“We strive to ensure all of our students feel supported and have the absolute best education and experience,” Senior Associate Dean of Temple/St. Luke’s School of Medicine Shaden Eldakar-Hein, M.D., M.S., said.
“I’m incredibly proud of this class and their accomplishments. They will all be amazing physicians and I’m honored to be a part of their medical training journey.”