Nick Faraci still remembers a common question he received from his patients in a Pittsburgh spinal cord injury unit: 鈥淒o you think I鈥檒l ever walk again?鈥 Friday, as he graduated as a UCF-trained physician, he said those patients 鈥 and his life as a former rehab nurse and college football star 鈥 will make him a better doctor.

鈥淭hose experiences gave me tremendous life lessons,鈥 Faraci says. 鈥淭eamwork, perseverance, being dedicated to something bigger than yourself.鈥

Faraci was among 121 College of Medicine students to receive their M.D. degrees May 21 in a socially distanced in-person commencement ceremony. Over its nine-year history, the UCF College of Medicine has graduated 847 physicians. Physicians from the Class of 2021 now enter residencies across Greater Orlando, Florida and the nation in specialties that include pediatrics, surgery, internal medicine, psychiatry and diagnostic radiology.

Faraci started his medical career as a registered nurse after graduating from Robert Morris 海角直播 outside Pittsburgh, where he played Division I football as an offensive lineman. Clocking in at 6-foot-2 inches and 290 pounds, he jokes that he was the 海角直播 of Pittsburgh Medical Center鈥檚 鈥渂ig guy鈥 of the spinal cord injury unit. Nursing showed him how much he loved physiology and the science of what made the body work. So he decided to take on medical school, where he graduated with top academic honors.

Now he will return to the same medical center as a Physician Knight specializing in internal medicine. He says the specialty allows him to get to know people and become part of their lives, just as he did as a nurse.

鈥淚nternal medicine is all about the relationship with a patient, understanding what they go through day-to-day,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檒l take those qualities with me as I go home to care for the community that raised me.鈥

Friday鈥檚 College of Medicine commencement was different this year because of COVID-19. The ceremony was held in the 10,000 square-foot Addition Financial Arena to encourage social distancing. Speakers commented on how the pandemic had changed the world. As Deborah German, vice president for health affairs and dean, told graduates, 鈥淢edicine has never needed you more.鈥

UCF President Alexander N. Cartwright talked about how the pandemic had shown the university鈥檚 resilience and spirit. 鈥淲hile our graduates鈥 final year at UCF did not go as any of us had planned, the optimism, compassion, and determination they have shown illustrate that Knights can always be counted on to rise to every occasion 鈥 no matter the obstacles,鈥 he said.

This year鈥檚 M.D. graduates chose Faraci as their class speaker and he talked about how the pandemic had tested students鈥 determination and passion for serving others. He reminded them of their first class at UCF鈥檚 medical school where Dr. German asks students to list the qualities of 鈥淭he Good Doctor,鈥 the physician they want caring for the person they love most in the world.

As students provide traits, the dean writes them on a blackboard that is displayed year-round in the College of Medicine rotunda. Faraci ended his speech with some of the words his class had selected:聽Resilient. Innovative. Patient. Compassionate.聽 Knowledgeable. Brave.

鈥淣ow more than ever, the world needs exactly what we directed Dean German to write on the chalk board four years ago,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t needs the UCF College of Medicine, Class of 2021.鈥