Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
New Doctors Say They'll Stay Local to Address Valley Health Needs
Randy-Reed-Image
By Randy Reed, Operations Manager
Published 5 years ago on
June 3, 2020

Share

Dr. Kenya Covarrubias didn’t speak English when she began 10th grade at Washington Union High School in the small Fresno County town of Easton. But that obstacle didn’t stop the motivated young woman from becoming valedictorian of her graduating class. She then went on to double major in chemistry and biology at Fresno State.

Now, as she enters the medical field with her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Clovis-based California Health Sciences University, Covarrubias is drawing on her personal experiences to guide her professional path.

“I realized how difficult it is to communicate with a person if you don’t speak the same language — especially if you’re in a position where you’re already not feeling well.” — Dr. Kenya Covarrubias

Local University Awards 52 Doctor of Pharmacy Degrees

She’s among a class of 52 graduates awarded doctorate degrees in May from the fast-growing local university’s College of Pharmacy.

“When I first moved here, I didn’t speak any English and I still had to go to the doctor to get my vaccinations, and I still got sick,” Covarrubias said. “And I realized how difficult it is to communicate with a person if you don’t speak the same language — especially if you’re in a position where you’re already not feeling well.”

That’s one of the reasons she is so strongly committed to remaining in the local area to pursue her pharmacy career.

“I feel a connection to the community and I feel the need to help and make a difference here in the valley,” she said. “There’s a lot of need and there’s a lot of gaps that need to be filled. And I feel like I could play a role in that.”

Connection with Migrant Community

While Covarrubias was born in the United States, she moved to Sinaloa, Mexico, with her family at a young age. She returned to the Fresno area when she was 16, living with relatives and focusing on her education. Since that time, she has become acutely aware of the significant health care barriers faced by many in the Valley, particularly those in migrant communities.

While attending CHSU, Covarrubias was active in an ongoing migrant health education program in partnership with Fresno Unified School District. She was moved by the response of a participant she had met earlier and who asked her for advice on managing his blood pressure.

“Ever since then, I’ve been watching what I eat,” he told her. I’ve been exercising and I’ve been telling my family, my kids, that it’s important to watch what you eat and to be healthy because it shows,” the man said.

“I knew that I really wanted to go into pediatrics and to go to a pediatric-specific or pediatric-only hospital,” — Dr. Renzio Apostol

To Covarrubias, the direct relationship is key.

“It’s never really about saving the world,” she said. “It’s about saving the one person that you made a connection with.”

Giving Back to ‘Community I Grew Up In’

Other 2020 CHSU graduates share similar views, including Dr. Renzio Apostol.

A Sanger High School graduate, Apostol took part in a humanitarian project in Central America while studying for his bachelor’s degree at UC Irvine.

“I volunteered in Nicaragua and Honduras, where we helped build water infrastructure for these communities that didn’t have sanitary water,” he said.

While on the trip, Apostol was particularly affected by the ability of the children he saw to persevere under those conditions. He says it had a strong influence on his ambition to become a pediatric pharmacist.

(L to R) Vu Nguyen, Kenya Covarrubias, and Brittany Johnson celebrate their graduation from California Health Sciences University. They are among 52  graduates who were awarded a Doctor of Pharmacy degree in May from the Clovis-based university. (CHSU)

Drawn to Pediatric Health Care

“I knew that I really wanted to go into pediatrics and to go to a pediatric-specific or pediatric-only hospital,” Apostol said. “I knew I’d be able to work with this certain population that is really resilient.”

His decision to apply to CHSU’s pharmacy school was an easy one, he said.

“I think the main reason I really wanted to come back here was I wanted to come back to the community I grew up in,” Apostol said. “I knew that we had a lack of primary care providers. And I want to contribute to increasing that number here by becoming a clinical pharmacist in the Central Valley.”

As a graduate, Apostol is staying true to his goal and will soon begin his residency with Valley Children’s Hospital. He intends to continue his health care career locally.

“My personal motto is, ‘I live to serve and I serve to live.’ “ — Dr. Brittany Johnson

“I plan to stay in the Central Valley and kind of hopefully stay with pediatric pharmacy and be able to help that community as I keep going forward,” he said.

Apostol was the recipient of the university’s Outstanding Graduate Award, sponsored by Granville Homes.

(Granville Homes President and CEO Darius Assemi is the publisher of GV Wire and is a member of CHSU’s Board of Trustees.)

Focused on a Healthier Community for All

Meanwhile, Dr. Brittany Johnson will continue to focus her efforts on improving health outcomes in her hometown of Bakersfield.

It’s there that she hopes to extend her career with CVS, the country’s largest retail pharmacy chain. She worked for the company prior to pursuing her doctorate degree at CHSU and continued part-time while attending.

“Being part of the Central Valley is part of me,” Johnson said.

She views her medical education as part of a responsibility to help create a healthier community for all — an ambition guided by her foundational philosophy.

“My personal motto is, ‘I live to serve and I serve to live.’ ”

DON'T MISS

California Just Blew Its First Deadline for Voter-Approved Healthcare Measure

DON'T MISS

Trump Administration Halts Dozens of Research Grants at Princeton University

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Sheriff’s Pilot Takes His Last Flight as He Retires After 31 Years of Service

DON'T MISS

A Palestinian From the West Bank Is First Detainee Under 18 to Die in Israeli Prison, Officials Say

DON'T MISS

How Safe Is It to Walk to School? Fresno County Wants to Find Out

DON'T MISS

Baseball Is Back! How to Listen to Your MLB Favorites and the Grizzlies

DON'T MISS

Trump Says He’s Settled on a Tariff Plan That Is Set to Take Effect Wednesday

DON'T MISS

Auto Sales Surged in Anticipation of Trump’s Tariffs

DON'T MISS

Raid Or Rumor? Reports Of Immigrations Sweeps Are Warping Life In CA’s Central Valley

DON'T MISS

House Speaker Johnson Fails to Squash a Proxy Voting Effort From New Moms in Congress

UP NEXT

How Safe Is It to Walk to School? Fresno County Wants to Find Out

UP NEXT

Lakers Hold Off Rockets With 6 3-Pointers Apiece From Dorian Finney-Smith, Gabe Vincent

UP NEXT

Athletics Bat Boy Stewart Thalblum Takes Down Drone in Left Field

UP NEXT

NFL Postpones Tush Push Decision but Passes Other Rule Changes, AP Source Says

UP NEXT

March Madness: It’s South Carolina vs. Texas and UCLA vs. UConn in Women’s Final Four

UP NEXT

Voice of America Wins in Court, for Now, as Judge Blocks Trump Administration From Firing Staff

UP NEXT

Major Layoffs Begin at Health Agencies That Track Disease and Regulate Food

UP NEXT

Watch: City Demolishes Historic Chinatown Building to Make Way for Housing

UP NEXT

U.S. Bank Executive Terry Dolan Dies in Plane Crash Near Minneapolis

UP NEXT

What Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ Tariffs Could Mean for Americans: Fareed Zakaria

A Palestinian From the West Bank Is First Detainee Under 18 to Die in Israeli Prison, Officials Say

1 hour ago

How Safe Is It to Walk to School? Fresno County Wants to Find Out

1 hour ago

Baseball Is Back! How to Listen to Your MLB Favorites and the Grizzlies

2 hours ago

Trump Says He’s Settled on a Tariff Plan That Is Set to Take Effect Wednesday

2 hours ago

Auto Sales Surged in Anticipation of Trump’s Tariffs

3 hours ago

Raid Or Rumor? Reports Of Immigrations Sweeps Are Warping Life In CA’s Central Valley

3 hours ago

House Speaker Johnson Fails to Squash a Proxy Voting Effort From New Moms in Congress

3 hours ago

UN Agency Closes Its Remaining Gaza Bakeries as Food Supplies Dwindle Under Israeli Blockade

4 hours ago

Hooters Goes Bust and Files for Bankruptcy Protection

4 hours ago

Can CEMEX Dig a 600-Foot Hole and Not Harm the River? Arambula Says No and Writes a Bill

4 hours ago

California Just Blew Its First Deadline for Voter-Approved Healthcare Measure

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. California voters told lawmakers last fall that they wante...

8 minutes ago

8 minutes ago

California Just Blew Its First Deadline for Voter-Approved Healthcare Measure

Nassau Hall at Princeton University is in Princeton, N.J., Oct. 8, 2024. (AP File)
12 minutes ago

Trump Administration Halts Dozens of Research Grants at Princeton University

After 31 years of service, Fresno County Sheriff’s Deputy IV and Pilot Michael Sill is retiring, having logged over 10,000 flight hours.
44 minutes ago

Fresno County Sheriff’s Pilot Takes His Last Flight as He Retires After 31 Years of Service

Khalid Ahmad holds a poster of his 17-year-old son, Waleed, who died in an Israeli prison, that reads in Arabic, "The hero prisoner Martyr, mercy and eternity for our righteous Martyrs," in the West Bank town of Silwad, northeast of Ramallah Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (AP/Nasser Nasser)
1 hour ago

A Palestinian From the West Bank Is First Detainee Under 18 to Die in Israeli Prison, Officials Say

1 hour ago

How Safe Is It to Walk to School? Fresno County Wants to Find Out

2 hours ago

Baseball Is Back! How to Listen to Your MLB Favorites and the Grizzlies

Vehicles at an Audi showroom in Miami, March 29, 2025. President Donald Trump has said that tariffs would encourage auto companies and their suppliers to move to the U.S. (Saul Martinez/The New York Times)
2 hours ago

Trump Says He’s Settled on a Tariff Plan That Is Set to Take Effect Wednesday

Vehicles are passed through final inspection at the end of the assembly line at the General Motors facility in Spring Hill, Tenn., Oct. 7, 2024. Sales of cars picked up recently partly as buyers rushed to lock in deals before President Trump’s 25 percent tariffs on cars and auto parts go into effect. (Brett Carlsen/The New York Times)
3 hours ago

Auto Sales Surged in Anticipation of Trump’s Tariffs

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend