Hadiyah-Nicole Green: The 1st person who could use laser technology to treat cancer

 Dr Hadiyah-Nicole Green made history when she became the first person to successfully cure cancer with a laser technology

– In 2012, she chalked a similar feat when she became the second African-American woman to earn a PhD in physics from the University of Alabama at Birmingham

– Legit.ng highlights Dr Green’s personal life growing up as an orphan and her admirable achievements

In 2012, Dr Hadiyah-Nicole Green became the second African-American woman to obtain a PhD in physics from the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

Green became the first in her family to attend college. She gained admission to Alabama A&M University with a full scholarship, where she pursued physics and earned her bachelor’s degree in physics and optics in 2003.

After obtaining her first degree, she went on to further her education at the University of Alabama at Birmingham with another full scholarship, where she earned her Master of Science in physics in 2009 and her PhD in physics in 2012.

She spent five years at the Comprehensive Cancer Center and later, a year at the Department of Pathology.

Green had a difficult childhood. She was orphaned at a very young age and lived with her aunt and uncle in St Louis, Missouri while growing up.

Between her undergraduate and graduate work, Green’s aunt, Ora Lee, was diagnosed with cancer but refused to go through treatment.

Green spent nearly three months attending to her aunt until she died. Three months after her death, her uncle, General Lee Smith, was also diagnosed with cancer.

While tending to her uncle, Green watched as her uncle suffered from the side effects of chemotherapy and radiation, which, to her, seemed little better than what her aunt went through.

She realised the impact of chemotherapy on the body and wanted to find a better treatment for cancer.

After she graduated school, Green became an assistant professor at Tuskegee University in the Department of Material Science and Engineering.

Green was a recipient of a $1.1 million grant to further develop a technology she pioneered that uses laser-activated nanoparticles to treat cancer.

Testing her treatment on mice was a success and Dr Green became the first person to successfully cure cancer using nanoparticles.

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In other news, a 21-year-old Cameroonian student, Kem Senou Pavel Daryl, who contracted the coronavirus, reportedly promised never to return to Africa with it.

Daryl, who lives in the Chinese city of Jingzhou, reportedly stated that he would not have left the city even if it was possible for him to do so.

source: legit