Growing up, Dr. Ramon Resa didn't see any physicians in his community that looked like him.
Resa, now 65, grew up in California's Central Valley. He was abandoned as a toddler and raised by a family with 14 children. He started picking cotton at 3, and continued to work the fields through high school. It was hard work, and Resa often had to miss school; when he was there, he had to fight to be placed in college prep classes.
He persevered, and when it came time to pick a career path, he thought about how meaningful it would be to serve as a doctor in his community. Resa knew many Latino people who were misdiagnosed or ignored by local doctors, and he wanted to break that cycle. "I thought, well, what am I doing in college? I should go be a doctor," he told ABC Los Angeles on Thursday. "My people need a doctor. That was my inspiration."
Resa graduated from the University of California Irvine Medical School, and just like he planned, he returned to the Central Valley, where he has been a pediatrician for more than three decades. He treats the children of migrant workers, and also travels around the country to share his story with young people. Resa, the subject of a recent documentary film, Ramon Rising, told The Mercury News last year that he aims to be a role model for kids who face the same obstacles that once stood in his way.