JTC 25: Creating a Healthier Future
UM experience, scholarships prepared Caroline Brock for a life of service

This story is part of the 2025 Journey to Commencement series, which celebrates the pinnacle of the academic year by highlighting University of Mississippi students and their outstanding academic and personal journeys from college student to college graduate.
Raised in the Mississippi Delta, Caroline Brock witnessed the devastating impact that health disparities can have on a community.
“Adults and children in the Delta suffer from diseases, such as cancer and diabetes, that are a direct result of a lack of education on healthy lifestyles, extreme poverty and limited access to local care,” the University of Mississippi senior said.
Her interest in addressing these issues is a personal one.
“My mother was diagnosed with breast cancer at 37 years old,” Brock recalled. “Following her diagnosis, my mom lost her parents to cancer within a six-year time span. Then, after I underwent genetic tests, I found out I also have a higher risk of cancer.”
This awareness of the health issues threatening specific communities as well as her friends, family and herself, influenced her decision on where to go to college.
“Those experiences fueled my desire to learn more about these diseases, so I can help the people I love — in the state I love — to live longer, healthier lives,” said Brock, who graduates in May with a bachelor's degree in public health and minors in chemistry and in society and health.

Caroline Brock gives a talk at an Ole Miss Women’s Council event. Submitted photo
The Greenwood native did well academically in high school. She was National Honor Society president, earned the second-highest ACT score and was her class salutatorian. Consequently, she was accepted to several colleges.
One university, however, stood out.
“I chose the University of Mississippi because I knew it would give me the best education and experience for my chosen career path, which would allow me to meet the medical needs of the people in Mississippi,” she said.
Her decision proved right.
Brock was awarded the Lena Mitchell Marquette Council Scholarship by the Ole Miss Women’s Council for Philanthropy and earned 10 more scholarships. She maintained a 4.0 GPA as an undergraduate and garnered 13 academic honors, including membership in Phi Kappa Phi honor society and Who’s Who. She also earned a Taylor Medal, the most prestigious academic award the university gives its students.
At Ole Miss, Brock was an Associated Student Body senator, a member of the Student Alumni Council, a leader in the annual Ole Miss Big Event community improvement project, her sorority vice president and a volunteer for community-based efforts, such as Special Olympics, More Than a Meal and others.
The OMWC scholarship was especially important in preparing Brock for her career after college. The scholars participate in leadership conferences, career development opportunities and cultural experiences.
They also are paired with mentors, who offer career and personal guidance, and they can obtain resources to study abroad and secure national and international internships. Gina Drummonds, who works at HCA Healthcare in Nashville, Tennessee, served as Brock’s mentor.
Brock was an ideal fit as an OMWC scholar, said Karen Moore, a former chair and active member of the Women’s Council, who lives in Nashville.
“I have loved watching Caroline take advantage of all that the Women’s Council has to offer,” Moore said. “She has studied abroad in Paris and traveled in the States. She consistently attended our Red Plate Suppers and met with the program’s scholar advisers.”
The program provided Brock with a community of support and a passion to support others.

Caroline Brock was awarded the Lena Mitchell Marquette Council Scholarship by the Ole Miss Women’s Council for Philanthropy, earned the university’s highest academic honor and maintained a 4.0 GPA. Submitted photo
“As I approach graduation in May and look back at the impact the Women’s Council had on me, I am overwhelmed,” she said. “While leadership training is an integral part of this scholarship program, service is at the core of the OMWC.
"They instill a desire to live a life of service and support philanthropy in all their scholars.”
Drummonds connected Brock with Moore and her husband, Bruce, the couple who Brock credits for helping her obtain a transformational internship at Medical City Healthcare, one of the largest health care providers in the Dallas-Fort Worth region.
“That internship experience broadened my perspective of the health care industry,” Brock said. “Through the Moores’ efforts, I experienced a variety of aspects in the medical field.
"I rode in a medivac helicopter to transport a premature baby, conducted hospital rounds in orthopedics and even learned about hospital administration.”
The internship brought her career path into sharper focus and played a role in her decision to further her education.
“I decided to continue my journey as an Ole Miss student,” she said. “After Commencement, I will start working toward earning my Master of Public Health degree with an emphasis in epidemiology and community health.
"Then, I hope to work in the epidemiological field. I also look forward to learning about the myriad of possible paths for a public health professional.”
While Commencement is fast approaching, Brock sees graduation not as an end, but as a beginning.
“I hope that wherever my life and career lead me, I’ll be able to demonstrate to future UM students that their bonds to Ole Miss do not end with graduation,” she said. “Commencement is merely the beginning of a new chapter dedicated to fostering ongoing growth and leadership for Ole Miss and its students.”
Top: Caroline Brock, a Greenwood native, is graduating in May with a bachelor’s degree in public health with the mission of addressing health disparities. Photo by Srijita Chattopadhyay/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services
See more photos from Caroline Brock's Journey to Commencement
By
Jonathan Scott
Campus
Office, Department or Center
Published
April 20, 2025