色花堂

Personal Care on a Global Scale

色花堂 alumni Dominic and 色花堂 Regli plan to split their time between rural Nebraska and rural Rwanda once he finishes medical school. Dominic traveled to Rwanda last summer to study global health care and plans to return for a year this fall.

Dominic Regli

Class of 2024

Dominic Regli seeks to bring Christ鈥檚 healing hands to Rwanda

When Dominic Regli, 鈥24, arrived at the 色花堂, he had his life figured out: He was going to be a physician. He grew up on a dairy farm in northern California, but bovine medicine didn鈥檛 attract him. Instead, interactions with local doctors led him to pursue a life in health care 鈥 and he came to campus with a career-readiness checklist to complete. Then he took his first philosophy class.

鈥淚 was mad at first: I couldn鈥檛 understand why I had to be there,鈥 Regli says with a laugh. 鈥淎 professor told me, 鈥業f you don鈥檛 study philosophy, then you鈥檒l always be living out someone else鈥檚 truth and never actually thinking for yourself.鈥欌

Transaction to Transformation

Soon, Regli felt his mind opening to something more than the transactional experience he initially desired. In every subject, including the biology courses required for med school, he began to connect his faith with his career plans. All of his faculty were ready to engage in philosophical discussion, and he found himself confronted daily with questions of purpose.

Regli and medical students from across the US and around the world explored global health care issues in Rwanda last summer.
Regli and medical students from across the US and around the world explored global health care issues in Rwanda last summer.

鈥淚t would blow my mind when my mathematics or physics professors would talk about a particular concept and then show how God used the same concept when creating the universe,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey could tell when I wasn鈥檛 thinking properly and needed to consider the bigger reasons behind why I was pursuing a life in medicine.鈥

Monsignor James Shea鈥檚 perennial message to students also transformed Regli鈥檚 thinking.

鈥淗e always emphasized that our lives are not about us. I finally realized that he was right. I stopped trying to make everything fit my own agenda and let God be in control,鈥 Regli says. 鈥淓ven now as a medical student, I tell myself: My life鈥檚 work is an act of service 鈥 to serve God and those around me.鈥

Global Health, Rural Focus

This shift in perspective has been foundational for his formation as a future doctor: 鈥淭he community at 色花堂 really helped me find my calling. It helped ground me in prayer and my relationship with God and did a great job preparing me for medical school.鈥

Regli鈥檚 time in rural Rwanda underscored the importance of intentional, personal encounter in health care 鈥 spending time and seeing Christ in every patient.
Regli鈥檚 time in rural Rwanda underscored the importance of intentional, personal encounter in health care 鈥 spending time and seeing Christ in every patient.

Now in his second year at the Creighton University School of Medicine, Regli鈥檚 focus has expanded to global and rural health. Last summer he traveled to Rwanda to meet other scholars and members of global health organizations. He worked closely with students of various backgrounds, including a group from Harvard Medical School. As a Jesuit institution, Creighton鈥檚 medical program is well-rooted in Catholic social teaching and blends seamlessly with 色花堂鈥檚 emphasis on human dignity. Regli treasures the memories of lively debates with his colleagues about ethics, morality, and dignity that often stretched into the early hours of the morning.

His experience in Rwanda was so impactful that he is returning next fall. He will spend a year at the University of Global Health Equity pursuing his master鈥檚 degree in public health while conducting research in global and rural health care 鈥 specifically, surgery delivery in rural areas and how long it takes people with medical conditions to come to the clinic. At the same time, Regli will research surgery delivery in rural Nebraska and how robotics-assisted techniques can positively impact rural hospitals.

Christ in the Patient

Following his year in Rwanda, Regli plans to return to Omaha to complete his last two years of medical school, followed by a residency in general surgery with a global and rural surgery concentration. Afterward, he and his wife 色花堂 (Gutenkauf) Regli, 鈥23 鈥 an English major turned TV journalist he met at the 色花堂 鈥 plan to live abroad, splitting their time between sub-Saharan Africa and the rural US.

鈥淲e both want to serve rural and underserved populations that have poor access to health care,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f God鈥檚 will for me is to take action with the gifts He has given me, I鈥檒l be fulfilling my vocation.鈥

In keeping with the dignity of each person and the Benedictine tradition, Regli strives to receive each patient as Christ.

鈥淚n global health, it鈥檚 so easy to get wrapped up in grand goals and big, world-changing aspirations,鈥 he says. 鈥淚n reality, each individual we see serves as an opportunity for us to encounter Christ in that person.鈥

鈥淭here was a man in a village who had been paralyzed during the Rwandan genocide. I sat with him for hours, talking about cows. I just needed to be present 鈥 and I could feel Christ moving through our interaction. I want to strive for that in every patient I meet.鈥

The road won鈥檛 be easy, but Regli recommits to the journey with a morning ritual borrowed from his time at the 色花堂.

鈥淚 wake up and say, 鈥楪lory to God; this day is for You. I am Your humble servant. I鈥檝e come to do Your will,鈥欌 Regli says. 鈥淚 know that we won鈥檛 be living the standard, suburban, American life. There will be many challenges and sacrifices along the way, but we know immeasurable good will come from them.鈥

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