Shelley has been competing with cancer鈥擧odgkin鈥檚 lymphoma鈥攕ince her diagnosis in 2007 at age 15. While she has had setbacks over the last five years, Shelley hasn鈥檛 let the disease get the best of her. Despite 15 rounds of chemotherapy, a course of radiation therapy and a bone marrow transplant, Shelley was chosen a Governor鈥檚 Scholar in her junior year and a Mayor鈥檚 Outstanding Senior in 2010. She graduated high school with a 4.0 grade point average and is maintaining her perfect GPA at UofL as she works her way toward her goal of becoming a physical therapist.
For the past four years, UofL medical students have paid tribute to the grit and determination of Shelley and other UofL Pediatrics cancer and blood disorders patients by running the Kentucky Derby Marathon in their honor as part of the Medals4Mettle program based in Indianapolis.
Pediatric oncologist Alexa Cheerva, MD, considers it a positive experience for patients and students alike.
鈥淭his program celebrates mettle, or courage, a character trait that sustains a marathon runner, a medical student and all of our patients and their families,鈥 she said.
The doctors-in-training give their medals to their patient partners and spend time with them online and in person. The students believe the experience helps them reach beyond the classroom to learn about critical illness. Many of the runners find that it also helps them be more accepting of the rigors of medical school.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an opportunity for the students to see what it鈥檚 like from the perspective of the patient and it鈥檚 good for the patients to know there are people thinking about them,鈥 Shelley said.
A three-year program participant, each of Shelley鈥檚 Derby Marathon medals marks a leg of her journey. The petite brunette received her first medal in the hospital. Chemotherapy made her too weak and vulnerable to other peoples鈥 germs to attend the 2010 awards ceremony so her medical student runner brought the prize to her later.
She received her second Derby Marathon medal last year. She was able to attend the award ceremony but, because her cancer had relapsed, she had a bone marrow transplant a few weeks later.
This year鈥檚 Kentucky Derby Marathon marks the close of her recovery from the transplant. Her cancer is in remission. She is slowly regaining energy and is back to her UofL classes full time. Shelley joined nearly 100 other patients at the Medals4Mettle award ceremony Sunday, April 29, on Belknap Campus, receiving her 2012 medal from first-year medical student Megan Bedolla.
鈥淓rica is really a driven person,鈥 Bedolla said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 obviously a lot more to her than a diagnosis or statistics. She has aspirations and goals and is really driven to accomplish them.鈥
The UofL Medals4Mettle program began four years ago with 13 medical students. It was the brain child of first-year medical student Riley Jones, who is about to graduate and begin a surgery residency. He鈥檚 grown the program to nearly 100 student runners and now is turning the reigns over to Meagan Holtgrave, a rising second-year medical student who expects Medals4Mettle to be a formative experience for another generation of doctors-in-training.
鈥淎 good percentage of this year鈥檚 runners are finishing their first-year of medical school like me. Many had never done a marathon before. We were moved by the idea of running in the name of a child and a patient and wanted to give it a try,鈥 she said.
鈥淚f you don鈥檛 have firsthand knowledge of childhood cancer, it doesn鈥檛 have a name, it doesn鈥檛 cry, it doesn鈥檛 have a family. Medals4Mettle takes diseases like cancer out of the textbook and makes them real for these students. That鈥檚 why this program has grown so dramatically,鈥 said Salvatore Bertolone, MD, chief of the UofL Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology and Blood and Marrow Transplant.





















