High School Students Prep for Healthcare Careers Opportunities Academy at PCOM South Georgia

Staff Report From Georgia CEO

Friday, June 13th, 2025

A record 34 high school students from Colquitt County and the surrounding area gathered on campus the first week of June for PCOM South Georgia's sixth Opportunities Academy, a weeklong summer enrichment program that brings together teens to explore potential career tracks in medicine and health care.

This year participants came from Colquitt, Thomas, Ben Hill and Lee counties. The students, all of whom are interested in healthcare careers, participated in activities to help prepare them for academic pursuits and their future careers. PCOM South Georgia second-year Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine students, who served as mentors for groups of participants, created each day's agenda, ranging from activities such as CPR training to simulated medical emergencies. Three previous participants, one who is still in high school and two who are now undergraduate college students, returned to serve as junior mentors.

Participants came from different backgrounds and with different goals.

“I decided to come to Opportunities Academy because I love the healthcare field,” said Rylee Kilgore, a rising senior from Moultrie. “It's like one of my many passions, and I just wanted to learn more.”

She wants to be a pediatric cardiologist.

“I have heart problems,” she said. “I want to help other people who have heart problems.”

Perhaps that's why Kilgore's favorite activity at Opportunities Academy involved the heart.

“I liked dissecting the sheep heart,” she said. “It was pretty fun to me. I wanted to know what the anatomy of the heart really looked like, and they said it looks pretty similar to the human heart.”

Cruz Martinez, also a rising senior from Moultrie, said, “My favorite activity was probably when we were intubating a dummy patient in the simulation lab.”

Martinez continued, “My mentor, LaKaiya, was very helpful. She gave me a lot of information, like how to better prepare for college.”

Zyrlan Clark, a rising junior from Thomas County Central High School, wants to be a pediatrician.

“I came to Opportunities Academy because I want to be in the healthcare field, and I love being around other people, other peers that want to be in health care,” he said. “I love being around kids and helping out in the community. I also like working with children at the Thomasville Resource Center. It's a great place.”