Regarding staying humble, for example, he told the graduates that although they were incredibly well-prepared “you won’t have all the answers—and that’s okay. Humility is not a weakness; it is a strength that keeps us open to learning and connected to our colleagues and patients. Be confident, but remain teachable. The moment we believe we’ve arrived is the moment we stop growing.” Reflecting on staying curious, Kilstrom shared that one of the greatest gifts the graduates can give themselves and their patients is a commitment to lifelong learning. “Medicine doesn’t stand still, and neither should you. Let curiosity be your compass. Read the journal article. Ask why. Take the CME you don’t ‘need.’ Follow up on that complex patient.” Staying curious, he continued, “keeps you sharp, engaged, and humble. It’s how good clinicians become great ones.”
Kilstrom spent the most time discussing preventative care, telling the graduates, “And this is my challenge to you all: become champions of prevention. We are facing a chronic disease epidemic in the United States—one that’s silently reshaping the future of health care.” He pointed out that heart disease, cancer, chronic lung disease, stroke, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, and chronic kidney disease are responsible for nearly 75% of deaths in our country, adding, “They are largely preventable or manageable with early intervention.” He described a variety of patients the graduates would encounter daily and said, “Every visit is a chance to plant a seed—about nutrition, movement, screening, smoking cessation, sleep, mental health. Prevention isn’t glamorous, and it doesn’t come with instant results. But it’s where the tide turns. Don't let it be an afterthought.” Kilstrom told the graduates, “If we want to change the trajectory of health in this country, it won’t come from a single cure or new technology. It will come from thousands of moments—conversations you have, encouragement you offer, education you share.”
Kilstrom also praised the Class of 2025 for completing “a rigorous and one of the most innovative PA programs in the country,” noting they also “navigated uncertainty and evolving circumstances within a program that itself was pioneering a new model of PA education.” He told the graduates that their “ability to persevere through ambiguity and rise to each occasion is not only admirable—it’s a skill that will serve you for the rest of your careers.”