Vineeth Vaidyula is a graduate of the Honors College at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) where he majored in biology with a minor in chemistry. In his time at VCU, he explored his interests in public health and medically underserved populations. Passionate about refugee resettlement and immigration advocacy, Vineeth has worked with local resettlement agencies and anti-detention groups as healthcare mentor, youth tutor, public benefits assistant, and detention hotline volunteer. He has also directed the Richmond Refugee Health Partners student volunteer program, an initiative he founded to: address the unmet health advocacy needs of Richmond-based refugees; and improve the cross-cultural, person-centered-care abilities of pre-health undergraduate students at VCU. Moreover, he has served as the president of Students Together Assisting Refugees at VCU (STAR@VCU), an organization he founded which focuses on campus-wide awareness campaigns on migrant issues.
He has also been significantly involved in qualitative and quantitative research, including population-based research and wet-lab virology research. Vineeth’s long-term career goal is to be a physician-advocate, serving the culturally diverse U.S. community that raised him. After completing his Fulbright-Nehru stint, Vineeth is set to matriculate from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
Vineeth’s Fulbright-Nehru project is studying the Hyderabad vitiligo population using survey instruments, with a focus on investigating how social class impacts the prevalence of the condition and the quality of life of the vitiligo patients. Vineeth hopes that his research in India will help him become globally informed about the social attitudes and structural disparities associated with illness that exist within different sociocultural groups so that he can better serve the diversity of U.S. patients.