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Somali refugee named director of Seattle clinic that cared for her as a child

(King5) – Dr. Ibrahim moved to the U.S. in 1993. Her family fled unrest from the Somali Civil War. She now leads Harborview Medical Center’s Pediatrics Clinic.

A woman who came to the United States as a young refugee in the 1990s now leads the Seattle clinic where she was cared for as a patient.

Dr. Anisa Ibrahim was recently promoted to medical director of Harborview Medical Center’s Pediatrics Clinic. She said the promotion brings her story full circle.

“It’s one that I’m honored and grateful for, but it’s also one that I’ve worked really hard, to be in a clinic that I am passionate for” said Dr. Ibrahim.

Dr. Ibrahim was brought to the U.S. in 1993 from Somalia when she was six years old. She said her family fled unrest from the Somali Civil War that began in 1992.

“We got to Kenya in 1992, and by 1993 we were resettled to Seattle,” said Dr. Ibrahim. “That is a very short amount of time. The average amount of time a person spends in a refugee camp right now is 17 years.”

She said she remembers a tuberculosis outbreak at her refugee camp, and her sibling getting the measles. When she arrived in Seattle, she and her sibling were treated at Harborview Medical Center’s Pediatrics Clinic.

It was those experiences that made her want to become a doctor. 

“I can say I know life is tough in a refugee camp,” she said. “I know life is tough settling into a new country and not speaking English and not knowing where the grocery store is and being isolated from the rest of your family.” 

Dr. Ibrahim attended the University of Washington’s School of Medicine and graduated in 2013. From there, she continued to do internships and her residency at the UW Department of Pediatrics. 

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