Pioneering Surgeon | Eastern NC Now

Brody School of Medicine alumna becomes Lumbee tribe’s first female surgeon

ENCNow
    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of ECU News Services. The author of this post is Rob Spahr.


Brody School of Medicine graduate Dr. Hannah Woriax at the Scotland Cancer Treatment Center in Laurinburg, North Carolina. (Photos by Cliff Hollis)


    For as long as she can remember, Hannah Woriax wanted to be a doctor and a scientist.

    Some of the Pembroke native's earliest memories were scooting around her grandfather's Robeson County family medicine practice in her walker and giving her dolls checkups.

    As a result, she always assumed that she would follow her grandfather - Dr. Frank Woriax, the first Native American to graduate from Duke University's School of Medicine - into practicing family medicine.

    That is why she chose to attend the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University over other medical schools.

    "I really found East Carolina to be more attractive and their values to be more in line with how I wanted to care for patients long term. And when they told me that it was going to be a very patient-centered experience, that we were going to learn how to listen to people and use the information they gave us to come up with a diagnosis and form a treatment plan together, to me, that was the way everything should be done," Woriax said. "And with Brody being an entity that is training people for the purpose of coming back to this area to serve, I had no desire to go anywhere else. So, all signs pointed to East Carolina for me very early on."

    During her time at Brody, however, Woriax began feeling drawn to surgery instead of primary care.

    A series of faculty mentors provided her the encouragement she needed to chart her own path in that specialty, even though she had no other examples of Native American female surgeons to reference.

    These mentors told her that it did not matter if she was the first, she just needed to be "a good first" and serve as the example that she did not have herself.

    "They showed me that you don't have to look like somebody to be their mentor," Woriax said. "You just have to know when to say the right thing."

    That encouragement led Woriax to pursue a surgical residency at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine upon graduating from Brody in 2014 and then a breast surgical oncology fellowship at the University of Alabama Birmingham.

    In August 2021, she returned home to practice in Robeson County as a breast surgical oncologist for Duke Health and as the Lumbee tribe's first female surgeon.

    "It is interesting for me to go back to career days now and have children say to me that they want to be a surgeon and for me to say, 'There is absolutely a way for you to do it. If I can do it, there is no question in my mind that you can do it.' Being able to say that to them in a meaningful way is immeasurable," she said. "When I chose surgery, I didn't have anyone to look at locally and see what it was going to look like for me. I'm thankful that from now on, no one is going to have to say that."

    However, Woriax understands better than most the serious health and socioeconomic challenges faced by patients in Robeson County - one of the state's poorest counties. And she has unfortunately already treated former high school classmates and long-time family friends.

    "The people I see every day are my neighbors. There is often nothing different from me and these patients other than a few years and maybe a few blocks," she said. "So, I have the responsibility of being the voice for that patient - in way that recognizes every struggle that they're bringing to the table - and that is very humbling."

    But she learned very early on in her residency training that the Brody School of Medicine better prepared her than most of her peers for that challenge.

    "There was a distinct difference in the early parts of my training in terms of how many of us had seen large numbers of patients and had large amounts of testing experience with patients. And it was obvious to our attending that a lot of that was taught at Brody," she said. "So, whenever we had to have a thoughtful conversation with a patient, and delicate gloves were needed, they would always send me instead of my counterparts because of the training I received at Brody."

    Woriax also credited the Brody School of Medicine for helping to change her life.

    "Brody is the reason I'm able to practice any type of medicine today, and also the reason why I am able to do what I love, where I love," she said. "I can't say that I would've gone to any other medical school and done surgery. I can't say that I would've gone to any other medical school and come back home. The Brody experience made my experience."
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published )
Enter Your Comment ( text only please )




Funder Spotlight: NC IDEA Foundation East Carolina University, School News, The Region, Neighboring Counties Answering the Call


HbAD0

Latest Neighboring Counties

A North Carolina State Senate race is heading for a recount after the two pro-Trump Republicans come down to a two vote margin.
This is simply a failure of will, and we are here to help impose that will today, so that to me is the simple punchline," said State Treasurer Brad Briner. "I appreciate the leaders of Rocky Mount being here, but we need to get to a place where there is the will to fix a very, very serious problem.”
A federal judge will not issue an injunction blocking local Watauga County election districts created by the Republican-led North Carolina General Assembly.
The FBI has captured Alejandro “Alex” Rosales Castillo, who is on the 10 Most Wanted Fugitive list and wanted in connection with a 2016 murder in Charlotte.
A major redevelopment project planned in Morehead City has been scrapped following strong public opposition over the use of eminent domain.
In the coming months, the North Carolina Supreme Court will decide whether a class-action lawsuit can move forward against Raleigh over water and sewer impact fees.
Former congressman Wiley Nickel made his candidacy for the office of Wake County district attorney official this week, with his Tuesday announcement.
Groups representing North Carolina's travel and tourism industry support a lawsuit against Currituck County at the North Carolina Supreme Court.
Plaintiffs in a $16 million class-action lawsuit against Raleigh challenged the city's legal tactics in a new state Supreme Court filing.

HbAD1

 
 
Back to Top