As a teenager, Jameel Alausa loved playing basketball for the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools. But his teachers and family had a different mindset: You can’t play sports and do well in school, so pick one.
“I was always at odds with them on this,” said Alausa, 25, whose parents emigrated from Nigeria. “I thought I could do both.”
Alausa persevered and balanced both pursuits, ultimately playing for Yale University while earning a degree in economics. As his educational career blossomed, leading him to the Pritzker School of Medicine, he watched others struggle when their basketball dreams ended without a backup career plan.
“A lot of my teammates and friends saw basketball as their only outlet to success, and when they weren’t able to reach the NBA, they were severely impacted,” said Alausa, who is now a second-year student at Pritzker. “Some of them ended up engaging in activities that unfortunately led to them passing away or going to jail.”
Those scenarios set Alausa and a group of college and former professional athletes studying medicine off on a mission to provide underserved students with exposure to medical careers and mentoring.
Their organization, Sneakers to Scrubs, aims to increase the number of Black men in the field by tapping into a deep well of potential: the youth football and basketball teams on the south and west sides of Chicago.
‘We’ve walked the same path’
Dressed in scrubs, the group’s volunteers visit schools and sports leagues to conduct training sessions on topics like concussion awareness and first aid, and to discuss a wide range of careers in medicine — a field their audiences may not have considered for many reasons.
“Someday, the ball stops bouncing for everyone, so student-athletes have to ask themselves what’s next,” said 24-year-old Solomon Egbe, a second-year Pritzker student and former Harvard University football player.
With Alausa, he manages Sneakers to Scrubs alongside Marcus Allen, also a second-year Pritzker student, and Lord Hyeamang, who is in his second year at Rush Medical College.
“The magic really happens when we put medicine as a career option in front of students who had never considered it before or thought it was a field not accessible to them,” Egbe said. “As former athletes and men of color, we can relate to their experiences and challenges they may be facing now or in the future—we’ve walked that same path.”
The path might appear less traveled. Although Black people make up roughly 12% of the country’s population, only 5.7% of its doctors are Black, according to 2022 data from the Association of American Medical Colleges.