For biology major Kenya Espinoza, her dream of attending graduate school and earning a dual M.D.-Ph.D. degree is now one step closer to reality.
Espinoza has been selected as a 2025-26 Sally Casanova Scholar as part of the California Pre-Doctoral Program, which helps prepare students for success in a doctoral career. Fellow student Dayana Aguilar-Hernandez received an honorable mention from the program.
Espinoza is receiving a $5,000 scholarship to help pay for her graduate school application fees and will also receive support for her research through opportunities to work with faculty from doctoral-granting institutions.
“Being a first-generation student, I am very grateful programs like this exist,” she said. “It helps people like me overcome the obstacles that we face. I won’t have to worry about where the money is going to come from when I apply to these programs. Being able to have that kind of support from people who want to see us succeed is very important.”
Espinoza is set to graduate from CSUB next spring with her bachelor’s degree in biology with a concentration in biotechnology. She is planning to apply for M.D.-Ph.D. programs as she pursues her goal of becoming a doctor specialized in the areas of gynecology and oncology.
Espinoza was first exposed to research over two years ago through her participation in CSUB’s Summer Undergraduate Research Experience program, after which she joined an organic chemistry lab led by Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry Dr. Danielle Solano. The lab focuses on synthesizing potential inhibitors for lysyl oxidase, an enzyme associated with breast cancer.
“I really wanted to get involved in some kind of research with biomedicine, because that’s what I’m most interested in,” Espinoza said. “The experience has been great. (Dr. Solano) is able to support all of her students and lets us kind of explore and come to her with ideas.”
Espinoza has also been involved on campus as a Student Research Scholar and through CSUB’s Undergraduate Research Training Initiative for Student Enhancement (U-RISE) program, which provided training in the biomedical sciences through research, coursework, service-learning opportunities and faculty mentoring to help prepare students for pursuing a doctoral degree in the field.
It wasn’t until she joined the U-RISE program that Espinoza first thought about getting an M.D.-Ph.D. degree. She had originally planned to just get an M.D., but her faculty mentors in the program suggested that she should consider a dual degree.
“I didn’t know that dual degrees existed, so I was really thankful for being led to another path,” she said. “It opened my eyes to the M.D.-Ph.D. program. I’m able to see how medicine is not only done in a clinical setting but also how it’s done in a laboratory, how doctors and scientists work together to provide the best treatment or therapies for patients.”
Espinoza was able to get more hands-on experience through an internship last summer at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, where she was able to work in a lab focused on research about ovarian cancer. She was also able to shadow an oncologist during her time there.
“I was able to see both the clinical side and the laboratory side of a M.D.-Ph.D., which I really came to enjoy,” she said.
Espinoza has also participated in research internships at the University of California, San Diego, first in the summer of 2023 and again this summer. On the medical side, she has also had the opportunity to interact directly with patients as a research associate in Kern Medical’s Emergency Medicine Research Associate Program.
All of these experiences led Espinoza to decide that she not only wants to be a doctor but also be able to do biomedical research.
“I want to be a physician scientist, where I’m able to research and investigate current diseases but also, at the same time, treat patients,” she said.