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Marshall medical students bring neuroscience education to rural high school students

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Medical students at the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine are helping rural West Virginia high school students explore careers in health care through NeuroAppalachia, a student-led outreach initiative that uses neuroscience education to spark curiosity and introduce new health career pathways. 

NeuroAppalachia strengthens engagement between future physicians and students from underserved communities by pairing interactive lessons with real-world applications. Using neuroscience as its foundation, the program helps students better understand how science connects to health care while introducing a wide range of career opportunities across the medical field. 

The program is led by third-year Marshall medical students Dami Adeshina and Jordyn Torrens and hopes to draw more student volunteers from across the medical school who serve as mentors and facilitators to continue and cement the initiative as recognized running program. 

By introducing students to hands-on neuroscience activities and meaningful mentorship, NeuroAppalachia ignites the spark that helps rural youth discover their passion and envision a future in health care,” Adeshina said. “In the face of a growing national shortage of health care providers—most acutely felt in underserved and rural communities—this program empowers the next generation of medical professionals to rise from West Virginia and serve where they are needed most.” 

 Since May 2025, NeuroAppalachia has completed multiple teaching cohorts at the Boone Career and Technical Center, serving students from Scott, Sherman and Van high schools in Boone County, West Virginia. The program works primarily with eleventh-grade students to support career exploration as they prepare for post-secondary education.  

“NeuroAppalachia is an innovative program that brings health literacy to rural communities in West Virginia,” Torrens said. “Its mission extends beyond creating future physicians to highlighting the full spectrum of health care careers—from radiologic technologists to EMTs—equipping the next generation with knowledge, access and opportunity. It is a program I am proud to lead and be a part of.” 

NeuroAppalachia is supported by a rural health grant from the Marshall University Robert C. Byrd Center for Rural Health, with funding through the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission ‘s Rural Health Initiative. The program has received approval to expand into Lincoln and Wayne counties in West Virginia, with additional school visits scheduled in early 2026. 

For more information, contact adeshina1@marshall.edu or torrens@marshall.edu.

PHOTO CAPTION: Third-year medical student Dami Adeshina visited Wayne High School through NeuroAppalachia, bringing hands-on neuroscience and real-world insight into health care careers straight to the classroom.


Date Posted: Friday, February 13, 2026