Luminis Health Surgical Resident Drew Broda Returns Home

On June 12, 1996, the Rebecca M. Clatanoff Pavilion — Anne Arundel Medical Center’s brand-new maternity services center — was getting its finishing touches. Also on that day in the new birth center, a six pound, one ounce baby boy took his first breaths upon entering the world. His parents named him Andrew Lawrence Broda.

Twenty years later, Andrew, who goes by Drew, was a sophomore in college studying engineering at the University of Maryland, College Park. Luminis Health Anne Arundel Medical Center (LHAAMC) was near his house, and the medical center had a summer research internship available at its simulation center. As a budding engineer, Drew was interested in the opportunity because it involved designing and building medical devices. He returned to the summer research project each year until he graduated with a Bachelor of Science in bioengineering in the spring of 2018.

After receiving his bachelor’s degree, Drew became a student volunteer at LHAAMC’s James and Sylvia Earl Simulation to Advance Innovation and Learning (SAIL) Center. At the SAIL Center, he helped surgeons get their medical research published and mentored high school and undergraduate students in their research projects. This time spent immersed in surgical research at LHAAMC shifted Drew’s focus from a career path in engineering to one in medicine. He was hooked.

“I found a lot of parallels between engineering and surgery,” he says. “I enjoyed the immediate satisfaction of finding solutions for patients and helping people get better. It was more satisfying than working at a computer all day.”

Drew spent an average of three days a week at the SAIL Center, earning the Outstanding Student Volunteer Award at the end of 2019 for over 200 hours of volunteer service.

In August 2019, Drew headed to medical school in Orlando at the University of Central Florida. During his time there, he continued collaborating with research fellows at the SAIL Center, publishing medical research with Anne Arundel while simultaneously studying to become a doctor.

After graduating from medical school, surgeons complete a five-to-seven-year residency at a hospital, practicing under the supervision of attending surgeons who have completed their residencies and are board-certified in their roles. Drew knew that he wanted to return to LHAAMC for his residency — it was the place where he first became interested in medicine and where he could train under the surgeons who first mentored and guided him.

“I wanted to be a part of the program that nourished me and helped get me to where I am,” he says. “The surgical department at LHAAMC has always been a home for me—there is a real sense of community.”

Match Day at medical school is the day when the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) releases the results of all the applicants who have applied for residency or fellowship training positions in the U.S. It’s when graduating medical students find out which hospital they’ve been “matched” with for their residency. At noon on March 17, 2023, Drew was elated to learn that he had been matched with LHAAMC. Within 30 minutes of receiving this big news, he received multiple phone calls from current LHAAMC residents and attending physicians to say they were so happy to have him.

On June 19, 2023, Drew Broda, M.D. — one of the first babies born at LHAAMC’s Rebecca M. Clatanoff Pavilion in 1996 — returned home to the very place where he took his first breaths to begin yet another journey: that of a five-year surgical residency.

“I’m coming home to the place where I’ll be working,” Drew says. “I consider many of the attending surgeons and a lot of the residents a part of my family after spending so much time at LHAAMC prior to my residency. I will be in an environment where I can learn and thrive, and I know that, because of this, I will be a great surgeon and a better person after completing my residency.”