At a Glance
Year: 鈥25
Major(s): Public health (English minor)
Activities: Lowell House internship
Marcus Whitlow was valedictorian of his graduating class at Jeremiah Burke High School in the Dorchester section of Boston. He got offers of full scholarships from four colleges and chose Northeastern University.
But three-quarters of the way through Whitlow鈥檚 first year, he had to leave because his grandfather became ill and could no longer work.
His grandparents had adopted Whitlow and his two older sisters after their mother had lost custody due to a mental illness. Whitlow鈥檚 grandmother had died six years earlier, and many of his aunts, uncles and cousins, as well as one of his sisters, had died from complications of MELAS syndrome, a genetic disorder. Other relatives were disabled by the syndrome and unable to help.聽
Whitlow, who is healthy, had been taking care of family members since childhood. He couldn鈥檛 let his grandfather down.
鈥淚 was always just 鈥榯he doctor鈥 in the family, the one who noticed if somebody had a symptom,鈥 he says.
For a decade, Whitlow worked multiple jobs simultaneously, primarily in retail management, while caring for his grandfather and taking classes at Quincy College. His grandfather died in 2019, the same year in which Whitlow graduated with an associate degree in behavioral sciences and got engaged to his longtime boyfriend.
Whitlow decided to transfer to UMass Lowell because the Zuckerberg College of Health Sciences offers such a wide range of programs, and because he had good friends and colleagues who had attended.
I鈥檇 heard really great things,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd I knew if they picked UMass Lowell, then it had something special.鈥
Whitlow started out majoring in applied biomedical sciences, thinking he鈥檇 like to work behind the scenes on medical testing and diagnostics. His classmates and professors quickly persuaded him that his outgoing personality was better suited to a people-facing role.
He switched to the health sciences concentration within public health, with the goal of completing the prerequisites for a physician assistant program. He continued working full time, first at Lowell Community Health Center as a health navigator and educator and then for Community Teamwork as the overnight counselor at a family shelter. Meanwhile, his other sister died, and he adopted her son.
Then, 鈥淐hemistry happened,鈥 Whitlow says.
He struggled to keep up in Physiological Chemistry and eventually dropped the class, which is one of the prerequisites to be a physician assistant and a requirement in the health sciences concentration.
鈥淚t completely destroyed my whole confidence in anything I could ever do,鈥 he says.
But Whitlow鈥檚 professors wouldn鈥檛 let him give up on his dream of becoming a physician assistant. They advised him to switch to the community health and health promotion concentration and keep going.
鈥淚鈥檝e gotten a lot of support here. All of my professors have reached out to me at some point or offered opportunities to me,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y professors see something in me that I still don鈥檛 see in myself, and they鈥檙e telling me to take advantage of it.鈥
In 2023, his Research Methods teacher, Public Health Asst. Prof. Cassandra Hua, nominated him to go to the American Public Health Association鈥檚 national conference in Atlanta. One of the speakers talked about the need for more Black leaders in the field.
鈥淭hat was an eye-opener,鈥 says Whitlow, who is Black.
That callout made him realize that his whole life, growing up surrounded by economically disadvantaged people in Dorchester and witnessing their struggles to access consistent, high-quality medical care, led up to his decision to pursue public health and advocate for others.
In 2024, he was awarded a paid grant-writing internship with Lowell House, which offers addiction treatment and education as well as outreach to unhoused people with substance use disorders. It focused his interest on the need for support services geared toward LGBTQ youth and the overlapping issues of substance use, homelessness, and sexual and domestic violence.
鈥淚 feel like my leadership is needed in the city of Lowell, and I didn鈥檛 feel that way before,鈥 he says.
As for chemistry? He鈥檒l tackle that again in the university鈥檚 new Post-Baccalaureate Pre-Physician Assistant Certificate Program. He says he鈥檚 already completed many of the requirements.
鈥淚鈥檓 very motivated 鈥 because I鈥檓 raising a son (his nephew),鈥 he says. 鈥淓verything I鈥檓 doing now is for him and his future.鈥