Creighton University Taps Four Graduates as Spirits of Creighton
Three 2008 graduates of Creighton University’s School of Medicine, who helped establish a free medical clinic serving Omaha’s homeless, uninsured and underinsured, and a graduate of the College of Business imbued with a spirit of determination and service received the Spirit of Creighton Award at the University’s May 10th spring commencement at the Qwest Center Omaha.
Joseph Ortega, BSBA’08, a finance and accounting major from Aurora, Colo.; Justin Birge, M.D. ’08, of Omaha; Jacob Smeltzer, M.D. ’08, of Derby, Kan.; and Mary (Maggie) Skrypek, M.D. ’08, of St. Paul, Minn., received the award. Since 1949, the Spirit of Creighton Award has been given annually to graduating students exemplifying the best qualities of the University’s founders. Recipients are honored for their initiative, enterprise, academic achievement and outstanding character traits.
Medical graduates Smeltzer, Birge, and Skrypek (as in the photo) were instrumental in establishing the Magis Medical Clinic at the Siena/Francis House in 2004. The student-run program serves more than 1,500 medically underserved patients annually. Medical students and physician volunteers work with other organizations to provide acute care and follow-up, physical exams, lab tests, medications, specialty clinics and referrals.
As fundraising director for the Magis Clinic, Birge raised more than $450,000 through grants, private donations and events over the past three years. He also served on the School of Medicine Student Advancement Committee and was his class vice president for two years. Birge has been active as a volunteer with Paws for Friendship, a pet therapy program, and Body Basics, a community program teaching Omaha grade-school children about anatomy and physiology. He has been inducted into the prestigious Gold Humanism Honor Society for his integrity, compassion and altruism.
Skrypek has served as director of the Magis Clinic, coordinating other officers and managers, writing grants, and representing the clinic to the Omaha community. She has also been very active in Creighton’s Institute for Latin American Concern (ILAC) and Creighton United in Relief Assistance (Project CURA), service programs that bring free health care and health education to underserved populations around the world. Skrypek has served as a volunteer with an Omaha pediatric tuberculosis clinic; Siena/Francis House; Habitat for Humanity; and Project Suds, a community program teaching Omaha children proper hand-washing techniques.
Smeltzer has volunteered his time to such organizations as Magis Clinic (including two years as director), Siena/Francis House, One World Community Health Center, Body Basics, and Project Suds (organizer and volunteer). At Siena/Francis House, he organized an ongoing program through which ConAgra Foods donates bread to the shelter. He was one of only four Creighton third-year medical students to be inducted into Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA) Medical Honor Society, and he served as co-president of AOA’s Creighton chapter. He has been inducted into the prestigious Gold Humanism Honor Society. In 2006, Smeltzer’s class awarded him an Aesculapian Award for his guidance, compassion, and selfless service to the class, community, and the University.
In addition to holding a 4.0 grade-point average, Ortega has been very involved during his time at Creighton. He served as president of Creighton’s chapter of Beta Alpha Psi, an accounting honor society, and vice president of Creighton’s chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma, an international society for business students and scholars. He also was a senior leader for Creighton’s Ratio Studiorum freshman orientation program, a four-year participant in the Anna Tyler Waite Leadership program, and a walk-on with the baseball team for two years.
Ortega also reached out in service to the community. He was co-director of the Youth Leadership Omaha program, cosponsored by the AIM Institute and the College of Business. As an intern with Qwest Communications, he organized Phones for Life, a project through which donated phones were distributed to the elderly, the disabled and victims of domestic abuse. Ortega also established the Paul S. Ortega Foundation in his grandfather’s name; the non-profit organization is dedicated to supporting and assisting the elderly in their daily lives. He is active in Campfire, Inc., especially in the mentoring of at-risk Hispanic youth. He has been an intern in the offices of former President Bill Clinton and Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.). Ortega plans to attend law school and pursue a career in politics.
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For more School of Medicine News, please click here. May 13, 2008