Author: Staff Writer | March 17, 2026 | 8 minutes of reading |
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MD/MBA student Akash Patel helped develop a sustainable nutrition curriculum that is reshaping how future doctors are trained at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
Akash Patel grew up in Long Island, New York, surrounded by a loving family and a quiet sense of expectation. His parents immigrated from India with little money but a clear direction in their search for stability from the generation before them.
Many of their relatives did it through medicine. Akash’s parents chose different paths – engineering and IT – and deliberately gave their children freedom of choice in their career paths.
“You have a choice,” they told Akash and his sister. “Pick whatever you want.”
Akash and his elder sister both chose medicine. Their choice is motivated by conviction, not obligation.
Systems, motivation and decision making
During high school, Akash already began to see medicine as an intersection of everything that interested him: science, problem solving and service. He was fascinated by the human body, but also by relationships at the center of attention.
At George Washington University, Akash pursued a business degree with his initial medical course. He was drawn to the idea that good medicine required more than just clinical knowledge. He believed that understanding systems, motivation, and decision-making was so important.
That philosophy led him to the four-year University of Miami Miller School of Medicine’s MD/MBA program, a choice driven partly by instinct.
“It just clicked,” he said. “It felt like my place.”
Miami would become a fixture for an idea that had been formed since childhood.
Personal health travel raises a big question
Growing up, Akash struggled with food allergies and severe dietary restrictions. For years, he survived on fried foods like French fries until routine labs revealed high cholesterol before he was a teenager. The connection between food and health was impossible to ignore. As his knowledge grew, he began to apply what he learned to his cooking, then shared his newfound knowledge with his family.
“I saw how food changed my health,” he said. “And how it changed the well-being of my family members as well.”

These experiences led to his belief that nutrition and lifestyle medicine are powerful, underutilized tools, especially in oncology, where patients often feel they have little control over their outcomes. Even when diet can’t change the course of the disease, he believes, it can restore a sense of agency.
In his second year of medical school, Akash sought more formal training in nutrition. He appealed to the Medical Education Department of Miller High School to include these topics in the curriculum.
He said: “I just took the first step.
From a lecture to a school-wide curriculum
This step led to a meeting with a cardiology professor, then a challenge—to create a complete, 45-minute lecture for first-year students. Aakash spent countless hours refining it and was surprisingly asked to deliver the lecture to 200 classmates.
The students responded immediately. The faculty was notified. Soon, Akash was invited to help develop additional lectures for the gastroenterology and endocrinology modules. The content eventually evolved into a lecture series, and in his third year, faculty encouraged him to think long-term. Passion projects, they warned, often disappear when students graduate. Sustainability requires structure.
Developing a sustainable model for nutrition education
Akash responded by working with the agency to design a permanent, integrated nutrition curriculum, incorporating case-based learning content, writing disease-specific nutrition modules and coordinating with national medical education platforms to make the content accessible beyond Miami. The initiative was supported by a 50-member team of students, residents and faculty colleagues.
What still amazes him the most is how far the work has traveled. Medical students from other institutions called for advice. Faculty from around the country, including Stanford University, arrived to advise on their programs.

“I was just a student with an idea and passion to help people get better,” he said. “The agency listened to me and helped me make it a reality.”
As match day approaches, Akash sees the moment less as an ending than an inflection point. He plans to pursue oncology, stay in academic medicine and continue to learn how to train future doctors.
“I thought the route was fixed,” he said. “But I knew how personal you could be.”
For Akash, medicine is now a platform to serve patients, to educate future doctors and to prove that meaningful change can start at a moment’s notice, and be taken seriously.
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Tags: Community Health , Match Day , Match Day 2026 , Medical Students , Miller School of Medicine , Newsroom , Nutrition , Public Health , Student Leadership
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