Medical Student Receives Grant to Empower Women and Train Future Physcians

Fourth-year medical student Rachel Robitz has received a $2,300 "Helping Hands Grant” to continue her outreach at Cincinnati’s Union Bethel "Off the Streets” program—a nonprofit which helps women involved in prostitution move toward safety, recovery, and community reintegration.

The grant comes from the American Psychiatric Foundation, the grant arm of the American Psychiatric Association, and will be used to conduct a 10-week program that serves a two-fold purpose: Educates women in the program about their physical and mental health and also introduces medical students to the challenges and rewards of working with a vulnerable population. 

"My hope is that the women who participate will be able to talk back to medical students and develop their own voice and that the students gain from the experience as well,” Robitz says. 

The class will be co-led by a medical student and an "Off the Streets” graduate, she says, adding that the funding includes a small stipend for the graduate’s expenses. Robitz has been working with the women's program since 2008. 

The encouragement to apply for the grant, she says, came from her faculty advisor, Aurora Bennett, MD, in the department of psychiatry and behavioral neuroscience, who was recently appointed to associate dean of student affairs. 

Tags

Related Stories

1

Make Hoxworth Blood Center’s special holiday events part of your family celebrations this December

December 12, 2025

This December, Hoxworth Blood Center, University of Cincinnati, is inviting families across Greater Cincinnati to add something truly meaningful to their holiday traditions: giving the gift of life. With festive community events, beloved local partners and special thank-you gifts for donors, Hoxworth is making it easier, and more heartwarming than ever, to roll up your sleeves and help save lives close to home.

2

Ohio nurses weigh in on proposed federal loan rule

December 12, 2025

Spectrum News journalist Javari Burnett spoke with UC Dean Alicia Ribar and UC nursing students Megan Romero and Nevaeh Haskins about proposed new federal student loan rules. Romero and Haskins, both seniors, were filmed in the College of Nursing’s Simulation Lab.

3

New combination treatment improves multiple myeloma outcomes

December 11, 2025

The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center's Ed Faber, DO, provided commentary to Medscape on the COBRA study that found the combination of carfilzomib combined with lenalidomide and dexamethasone (KRd) shows significantly greater efficacy than the previous standard of care.