By David McFadden
Research Writer
From day one of his education at the 91¾«Ę·ŗŚĮĻ³Ō¹Ļ Faculty of Medicine, has met the challenge head on, showcasing serious grit and creativity. Heās been such a standout student that his academic supervisor describes his achievements as āunparalleled.ā
With convocation on the immediate horizon, Richard is on the fast track to a highly successful career as a clinician-scientist, with a level of research productivity thatās remarkable at this early stage in his professional life.
Accolades have piled up. In recent weeks, Richard was selected as the , recognized for his research output and his outstanding leadership. Heās won a prestigious Vanier Scholarship, receiving $150,000 over three years towards his research, and the Dr. Frans Leenen Excellence in Publication Award from the University of Ottawa Heart Institute (UOHI).
Born in South Korea, he moved to Winnipeg with his family when he was 9. As a child, he always wanted to pursue medicine, inspired by the thought of helping people. He learned all about having a strong work ethic from his parents, who owned a grocery store and routinely worked 12- to 14-hour days.
He completed a Biochemistry Honours degree at the University of Manitoba in 2015. Then it was on to the 91¾«Ę·ŗŚĮĻ³Ō¹Ļ Faculty of Medicine and Dr. Benjamin Hibbertās lab at the UOHI, with a focus on vascular biology and experimental medicine.
At the Faculty of Medicine, Richard has always been determined to make the best of the opportunities heās received.
āWhen you work hard people recognize it and they'll give you more opportunities. So I think that cycle kind of perpetuates itself,ā Richard said during a recent interview.
Dr. Hibbert, who describes Richardās success as āunparalleled,ā says the young man has published roughly 50 peer-reviewed papers since joining his team in 2017. This includes a Nature Communications paper on the importance of methodological rigor in COVID-19 research that was cited over 50 times in its first year of publication.
Richard also contributed significantly to the groupās New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) paper and is highlighted as a co-author while publishing impactful sub-analyses. Over the span of the last year alone, he published nine first-authored research papers.
āRichard is a rare breed indeed ā able to blend translational and clinical research all while completing his medical school and a PhD in Biochemistry as part of the MD/PhD program,ā Dr. Hibbert says. āRichard has achieved so much in his MD/PhD training that I really think the sky is the limit for such an ambitious, hard-working and intelligent young man.ā
His string of publication successes from his PhD work isnāt even over: A final paper is coming out shortly in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC): Basic to Translational Sciences.
Richard credits his 91¾«Ę·ŗŚĮĻ³Ō¹Ļ mentors for helping him to prioritize clinical duties, research explorations, and also interests outside of academia.
āHaving the mentors that I had at 91¾«Ę·ŗŚĮĻ³Ō¹Ļ is probably what made a huge impact in terms of my research productivity. There are mentors here who really care about your academic and personal success and help you grow as an individual,ā he says.
Time management is one of the most important skills that he learned from his MD/PhD program.
āThere are definitely long hours ā some days, you don't get a lot of sleep! But you know, it definitely helps because at the end of the day you have the publications and the research to share with the potential to help other people, which I think is very important,ā he says.
Itās been a tough challenge, particularly amid the restrictions of the COVID-19 pandemic. But itās also been deeply rewarding. He says one of the best parts of his 91¾«Ę·ŗŚĮĻ³Ō¹Ļ Faculty of Medicine experience was undoubtedly the clerkship, where rotations allowed him to take part in everything from surgery and internal medicine to obstetrics and gynecology.
āI met some of my lifelong friends throughout that journey. You know, there's good times and then there's always bad times. But going through that journey together is what made it very special,ā says Richard, who has provided mentorship for others embarking on the MD/PhD journey.
The clinician-scientist pathway and its ābench to bedsideā approach - the process of taking research results from the lab into the clinic where it can directly benefit patients ā is something Richard finds fascinating. Soon he will be an internal medicine resident at the University of Ottawa, where heās sure he can continue to grow.
āIt's really my dream institution,ā Richard says.
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The financially assists students and their research in the MD/PhD Program at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Ottawa.

