by Luminis Health
Luminis Health Anne Arundel Medical Center (LHAAMC) is practically a branch on Liz Hahn’s family tree. Her grandfather, Richard N. Peeler, M.D., F.A.C.P., joined the medical staff of what was then called Anne Arundel General Hospital in 1957. He served the Annapolis community for over 45 years as an internal medicine specialist with an emphasis on infectious diseases. In addition, her uncle—Dr. Mark Peeler, a vascular surgeon—and aunt—Dr. Susan Peeler, OB/GYN—are both current practitioners at LHAAMC.
“I remember being at a ribbon cutting ceremony at the big hospital opening with my grandfather and my family,” Liz says. “And I remember growing up, how patients’ family members would stop my grandfather on the street and say, ‘You treated my mom and helped her — thank you.’”
For Liz, these interactions with grateful patients were what first garnered her interested in medicine:
“I started to really want to be part of the medical community in Annapolis—specifically, serving the people who I grew up with, the families that I knew,” she recalls. “It is such a tight knit community and being part of that community is so special.”
One of the first steps in her journey toward a career in healthcare came in 2010 when the Annapolis High School sophomore began shadowing LHAAMC’s Dr. Savitha Chengappa, infectious disease specialist. Then, in 2011, Liz’s junior year of high school, she began volunteering as a research intern at LHAAMC’s Outpatient Infusion Center under the supervision of Lynn Graze, RN. The summer after her senior year of high school, Liz participated in a summer internship program at LHAAMC for high school students who were considering careers in medicine. It was through this program that she became acquainted with Dr. Barry Meisenberg, LHAAMC’s Department of Medicine chair who later became an important mentor to her.
After graduating from Clemson University in May 2016 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Language and International Health, Liz returned to LHAAMC to take a job in the Health Outcomes Research Division where she researched ways to improve medical care for the populations served. She worked in this position for a year before enrolling in Johns Hopkins University’s Bloomberg School of Public Health, where she graduated in May 2019 with a master’s degree in public health with a concentration in global disease epidemiology and control.
After receiving her master’s degree from Johns Hopkins, Liz made the decision to apply to medical school. She was accepted at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine in Greenville and started in the fall of 2019. The problem? Knowing what area to specialize in! It was difficult to choose an area of specialty after having been influenced by so many talented mentors who each practiced in distinctly different areas of medicine. Ultimately, she settled on surgery.
“It’s such a privilege that each surgical patient puts their life in your hands,” Liz says. “There is no greater honor than to have someone put that level of trust in you; it’s something that is very dear to me and important to remember in patient care.”
Liz’s grandfather played an important role in this viewpoint. When he graduated from medical school at Johns Hopkins University in 1951, one of the speakers at his graduation ceremony spoke about how patients bare their souls to their doctors, putting trust in them each day. The young Dr. Richard Peeler was so moved by these words that he asked the speaker to send him the speech, which he kept with him his entire career.
“When my uncle graduated from medical school, my grandfather printed and framed copies of the speech for him and his closest medical school friends,” Liz shares. “In turn, my uncle gave it to me when I was accepted to medical school. It has been on my desk for the last four years—a reminder every day when I’m studying that each patient’s trust and vulnerability is a privilege that I’m earning.”
Liz felt a true sense of homecoming when she found out that she matched with LHAAMC for her surgical residency. She will be the third generation of her family to practice medicine at LHAAMC.
On May 5, 2023, Liz graduated with a degree in medicine from the University of South Carolina, and on June 19 she will officially start her first year of residency beside some of the same people at LHAAMC who have played such integral roles in shaping her future.
“I will be learning how to remove gallbladders in the same place where I had mine removed when I was 23!” Liz reflects. “What better way for me to give back to the community that has made me the person who I am today than to come back and someday be the mentor for a future high school student who is interested in a career in medicine.”