Latina Accepted By 11 Med Schools Has A Message For Those Who Credit Affirmative Action

"I am proud of my background and ... of what I have overcome to get here."

All Chelsea Batista wanted was to get into one of the 18 medical schools she applied to. Instead, she got into 11. 

“I was absolutely surprised,” the 21-year-old senior at Macaulay Honors College at Brooklyn College told The Huffington Post via email. “When I received my first acceptance, I was golden. When more acceptances started coming in, I was astounded.”

The student was accepted to Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York University, Tufts University School of Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Drexel University College of Medicine, Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Howard University College of Medicine, SUNY Downstate College of Medicine and SUNY Stony Brook School of Medicine. At least two schools offered her a full-tuition scholarship.

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Chelsea Batista was accepted to 11 medical schools.
Courtesy of Brooklyn College/David Rozenblyum

“I was absolutely terrified that I wasn’t going to get into even one school,” she told HuffPost. “That’s why I filled out so many applications. Even with that fear, though, I made sure to aim high. I always said, the worst they can say is no, and it’s automatically a no anyway if I never apply. So I did.” 

Batista is the daughter of Dominican immigrants, but she was born and raised in Brooklyn. The Latina says she knew her journey to become a doctor would be more difficult because of her heritage and gender, and because she comes from a low-income background. 

“Pursuing a medical career is difficult for anyone who wants it,” she said. “However, as a young Hispanic woman, I had to confront some harsh realities about my individual path toward medicine. My family came from poor backgrounds in the Dominican Republic. They came here in order to provide a better life for their children. It took a higher level of initiative and ambition for me to aim for higher goals, especially because I had less access to the resources that many other applicants were able to pay for.”

“I realized early on that I was entering a field where I would truly be the minority,” Batista said of the figure. 

She added that because of her socioeconomic background and ethnicity, many people have credited her medical school acceptances to affirmative action policies. 

“I had to remind myself that I was not chosen because I am a Hispanic woman who fulfills the requirements. I was chosen because as a Hispanic woman, I had to struggle through more obstacles and resistance than the typical medical school applicant and I still managed to excel.””

“Several naysayers have attributed my successes to affirmative action, as opposed to discipline and hard work,” Batista said. “At some points, I had to remind myself that I earned these accomplishments. That I worked just as hard as those around me and that I had to break through a prominent glass ceiling to get here. I had to remind myself that I was not chosen because I am a Hispanic woman who fulfills the requirements. I was chosen because as a Hispanic woman, I had to struggle through more obstacles and resistance than the typical medical school applicant and I still managed to excel.”

“I am proud of my background and I am proud of what I have overcome to get here,” she added. “I am proud because, in spite of the disadvantages I may have been born into, I never let that stop me from pursuing my goals.”  

Batista says she’s narrowed down her choices to a few schools in New York, where she will be able to stay close to family. Once in medical school, she plans to specialize in pediatric oncology. 

“I have always wanted to work in a field that enables me to advocate for those who cannot advocate for themselves,” she explained. “Children are especially subject to the decisions their parents make about their health. With long-term, aggressive illnesses like cancer, I believe it is important to consider what the child wants and needs, as well as what the parents think is best for them. I want to be the kind of physician that fights for each and every one of my patients.”

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Before You Go

11 Books By Latinas Every Feminist Should Add To Their Collection
Juliet Takes a Breath by Gabby Rivera(01 of11)
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Juliet Takes a Breath follows the story of Juliet Palante, a queer puertorriqueña who leaves the Bronx bustle (and her mami’s delicious arroz con maíz) for a summer in Portland, Oregon, where she interns for her fave feminist author Harlow Brisbane. During this time, the naïve, passionate and always hilarious Juliet comes out to her Latinx familia, gets some textbook and real-life instructions on feminism, queer terminology and radical politics, experiences the ups and downs of first romances and realizes that noisy subways, jam-packed dining rooms and speakers blasting Big Pun rhymes can actually be more serene than birds chirping on the West Coast." -- Raquel Reichard, Latina magazine (credit:Kobo)
You Don't Have To Like Me: Essays on Growing Up, Speaking Out, and Finding Feminism by Alida Nugent(02 of11)
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"In this series of entertaining essays, popular blogger and author Nugent (Don’t Worry, It Gets Worse) documents her journey to feminism while skewering misogynist tropes and delivering some painful truths. Using her own experiences to expand on larger issues, Nugent bravely confides the details of her battle with bulimia and society’s ever-shifting idea of the perfect body ... More jovial moments are dedicated to the power of female friendships ('the salted caramel ... of the relationship world'), the bacchanalia of girls’-night-out wine benders, and learning to love her looks with help from an unflattering $15 lipstick." -- Publishers Weekly (credit:Amazon)
A Cup of Water Under My Bed by Daisy Hernández(03 of11)
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"[Hernández] examines the warmth and pain she found in her relationships with her family, the varied reactions they had when she came out as bisexual, and the cognitive dissonance she experienced as she became upwardly mobile.

Throughout, she talks about the power of reshaping your experiences through narrative, of taking the past apart and putting it back together in a way that makes sense to you and makes it truly your own." -- Braden Goyette, The Huffington Post
(credit:Amazon)
Loose Woman by Sandra Cisneros(04 of11)
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"In her second book of poems, Cisneros (My Wicked Wicked Ways) presents a street-smart, fearlessly liberated persona who raves, sometimes haphazardly, always with abandon, about the real thing: 'I am ... / The lust goddess without guilt. / The delicious debauchery. You bring out / the primordial exquisiteness in me.' As if breaking all the rules ('Because someone once / said Don't / do that! / you like to do it'), she delves with urgency into things carnal -- sequins, cigars, black lace bras and menstrual blood." -- Publishers Weekly (credit:Amazon)
How to Be a Chicana Role Model by Michele Serros(05 of11)
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"In her second book ... [Serros] refines her wicked humor and observations of being Chicana in the U.S. Billed as a book of fiction, Serros is clearly at the center of the 13 pieces in Role Model, identified by name in many of them. This hybridization of the personal essay and fiction will befuddle some readers. But the casual reader will ignore the labeling, and relish Serros' observations from a perspective steeped in the culture of her Mexican family, while saturated in the popular culture that both invites and alienates. How she traverses these two worlds is often the source of Serros' humor." -- Belinda Acosta, The Austin Chronicle (credit:Amazon)
In The Time of the Butterflies by Julia Alvarez(06 of11)
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"The butterflies [known in real-life as, Las Mariposas] are four smart and lovely Dominican sisters growing up during Trujillo's despotic regime. While her parents try desperately to cling to their imagined island of security in a swelling sea of fear and intimidation, Minerva Mirabal -- the sharpest and boldest of the daughters, born with a fierce will to fight injustice -- jumps headfirst into the revolutionary tide. Her sisters come upon their courage more gradually, through a passionate, protective love of family or through the sheer impossibility of closing their eyes to the horrors around them. Together, their bravery and determination meld into a seemingly insurmountable force, making Trujillo, for all his power, appear a puny adversary." -- Kirkus Review (credit:Amazon)
Women with Big Eyes by Ángeles Mastretta(07 of11)
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"Thirty-nine indomitable aunts are captured in a series of lyrical snapshots in this autobiographically inspired collection, a bestseller in the award-winning author's native Mexico. Mastretta (Lovesick) originally conceived these brief stories as a way of telling her daughter about her long line of powerful female ancestors; the resulting fictional series of portraits delivers charming lessons in life and love." -- Publishers Weekly (credit:Casa del Libro)
Bird of Paradise by Raquel Cepeda(08 of11)
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"Bird of Paradise is [Cepeda's] story of redemption, of a her search to understand her identity in a society that told her over and over again that she did not matter ... As a memoir, it is not simply a story of herself, but of Latina women growing up in New York City (and the Dominican Republic) in the 1970s and 1980s. It is a story of migration and stagnation, love and sorrow. It is a story of blackness and whiteness; it is a tale of borderlands and isolation, race and ethnicity, struggle and perseverance." -- Dr. David J. Leanord, The Huffington Post (credit:Amazon)
This Bridge Called My Back by Cherríe Moraga, Gloria Anzaldúa(09 of11)
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"When it was published in 1981, This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color was a vermilion ink bloom on the crisp white wedding dress of the U.S. feminist movement. It was meant to be shocking. This anthology of prose and poetry by Black, Latina, Asian, and Native American women was the first to express loudly, clearly, bilingually that the 'sisterhood' could not be colorblind. Women of color are not the same as white women. They experience America differently." -- Nisha Agarwal, The Huffington Post (credit:Amazon)
Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel(10 of11)
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Set in turn-of-the-century Mexico, it tells the romantic tale of Tita De La Garza, the youngest of Mama Elena's three daughters, whose fate, dictated by family tradition, is to remain single so that she can take care of her mother in her old age ... As we witness the nurturing Tita's struggle to be true both to family tradition and to her own heart, we are steeped in elaborate recipes for dishes such as turkey mole with almonds and sesame seeds or quail with rose petals, in medicinal concoctions for ailments such as bad breath and gas, and in instructions on how to make ink or matches." -- Kirkus Reviews (credit:Kobo)
Almost a Woman by Esmeralda Santiago(11 of11)
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"Almost a Woman continues Esmeralda's saga as she proves herself bright enough to transfer to New York's Performing Arts High School and discovers how differently others can live. She writes of her blossoming physically, intellectually and artistically using her second language with lyricism and skill. And she writes poignantly of her inevitable loosening of family bonds and her growing independence.Santiago captures the chaos and warmth of barrio living as well as the struggle to both retain elements and move beyond.

She leaves the reader with a greater understanding of immigrant life through her use of detail and humor. These are good books for both the young and the mature woman." -- Judith Helburn, Story Circle Book Reviews
(credit:Amazon)