![Sallie Giblin](/sites/g/files/krcnkv361/files/styles/atge_1_1_crop_md/public/2024-06/Sallie%20Giblin.jpg?h=2dbc6b89&itok=5Lk4BR5d)
Rheumatologist and AUC Alumna Sallie Giblin, MD ’16
Board-certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine, Dr. Giblin has extensive experience in the diagnosis and management of rheumatic and inflammatory diseases.
![Doctor showing clipboard to patient](/sites/g/files/krcnkv361/files/styles/atge_default_md/public/migrations/media/HometownDoc.jpg?itok=ttP_nV08)
Many physicians dream of coming home after medical school to serve the communities where they grew up. These are just a few AUC grads who are putting that dream into practice.
![The Wadyals](/sites/g/files/krcnkv361/files/styles/atge_default_md/public/2020-02/Wadyals-Alumni-Couple-Wider-Smaller.jpg?itok=WtrrXrtQ)
More than a decade after they first met at AUC, Raj and Crystal Wadyal, MD '09 now live with their family in South Barrington, IL, practicing psychiatry and obstetrics/gynecology respectively.
Sports neurologist Kate Essad, MD ’12 has been a mentor to student Patricia Henegan ever since they met at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, where Dr. Essad was completing her residency and Patricia was conducting research on amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
![Doctors outside of examination room](/sites/g/files/krcnkv361/files/styles/atge_default_md/public/migrations/media/17123543497_720011f993_z.jpg?itok=3HLbXpZD)
A quick roundup of alumni career moves, awards, and other professional milestones over the past few weeks.
![Students sitting in lecture hall](/sites/g/files/krcnkv361/files/styles/atge_default_md/public/migrations/media/Lecture-Students.jpg?itok=8TQNaw4V)
A student's perspective on hearing from alum Shilp Vaghela, MD '15, PGY-4 radiologist at Cooper University Health Care in New Jersey.
![Sarah Cazorla headshot](/sites/g/files/krcnkv361/files/styles/atge_default_md/public/migrations/media/Sarah-Cazorla.jpg?itok=H3PRqDJS)
Going to the hospital can be a stressful experience for anyone. But for the 8 percent of the U.S. population with limited English proficiency, a hospital visit presents a whole new set of risks—all stemming from the myriad of opportunities for critical medical information to be lost in translation.
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