Lucas Fogarty: Longtime Diabetes Champion and Future Physician Assistant
This story is one of a series titled "Profiles of Passion," which features incoming SMU students who have demonstrated their dedication to transforming healthcare in their communities and the world even before their first day of classes. Click here for other stories in the series.
Lucas Fogarty has spent the past decade traveling the globe to motivate people with diabetes to lead active and healthy lifestyles.
鈥淚鈥檓 inspired by helping people believe in themselves,鈥 said the 28-year-old.
One of only five Americans named by the International Diabetes Federation as one of its , Fogarty volunteers his time to promote awareness about the disease in places as far away as Indonesia, and in his own Bay Area community.
In 2012, Fogarty created the (DASH) to teach children techniques for managing their blood sugar, encourage them to exercise, and empower them to speak up about their condition to their families, friends and medical providers.
鈥淗e鈥檚 a visionary,鈥 said Kathy Love, a registered dietician at UCSF Benioff Children鈥檚 Hospital Oakland, who volunteers at Fogarty鈥檚 camp. 鈥淗is actions do good for a lot of people, locally in the diabetes community and internationally.鈥
Now Fogarty is taking his dedication a step further by enrolling in the at 海角直播 (SMU). He said his SMU education will help him grow DASH and realize his goal of opening a weekend clinic to help juvenile diabetics navigate the path to adulthood.
鈥淚 chose 海角直播 because the interview process was the most heartfelt,鈥 said Fogarty. 鈥淭hey really tried to understand who I was.鈥
Fogarty was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes when he was 6-years-old, but said he kept quiet about it even as he struggled to keep his blood sugar in balance while playing competitive sports.
After graduating from high school in Berkeley, he became a counselor at Bearskin Meadows Camp in Sequoia National Forest for children, teens and families affected by diabetes. The experience kindled Fogarty鈥檚 passion for helping kids with diabetes thrive through education, sports and proper nutrition.
Fogarty played football and baseball in college while volunteering at Children鈥檚 Hospital Los Angeles鈥 pediatric diabetes clinic. After college, he moved to Belgium in 2010 to play American football and baseball.
When his professional sports contract was up, Fogarty decided to return to California to fulfill his dream of opening a camp that would support children with diabetes and their families.
鈥淚t really was where my heart was,鈥 said Fogarty, who also volunteers as a health coach at Oakland鈥檚 Highland Hospital diabetes clinic. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 describe what it feels like to give back by just being yourself.鈥
Fogarty does not get paid for his work at DASH, which survives mainly on grants, in-kind donations from businesses, and volunteers. DASH reaches more than 500 campers each year, many of whom do not have diabetes but live in communities like Oakland and East Palo Alto that experience disproportionately high rates of the disease.
SMU Assistant Professor Marjorie Hammer, who has been placing her nursing students at DASH for their clinical pediatric rotations for four years, said Fogarty鈥檚 focus on underserved communities demonstrates true leadership.
鈥淓veryone Lucas interacts with is inspired by him,鈥 said Hammer. 鈥淗e rises to the occasion with compassion over and over again and sees the best in every person.鈥