{"id":23370,"date":"2022-02-17T20:31:04","date_gmt":"2022-02-18T01:31:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/biology.mit.edu\/?page_id=23370"},"modified":"2022-02-21T18:51:51","modified_gmt":"2022-02-21T23:51:51","slug":"profile-dig-bijay-mahat","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/biology.mit.edu\/postdoctoral\/life-as-a-postdoc\/postdoc-testimonials\/profile-dig-bijay-mahat\/","title":{"rendered":"Profile: Dig Bijay Mahat"},"content":{"rendered":"
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When Dig Bijay Mahat arrived at MIT in 2017 to begin his postdoctoral studies, he had one very clear goal: to become an expert in cancer research and diagnostics so he could improve healthcare in Nepal, where he was born. In 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic laid bare additional discrepancies in resource equity around the world, his goal did not waiver. But it did expand to fill a more immediate need \u2014 help Nepal find the best way to navigate widespread COVID testing requirements and vaccine rollouts.<\/p>\n
Mahat was born in the western region of Nepal, where his family has owned a large swath of land for generations. Before Mahat was born, his grandfather passed away unexpectedly. And, as the eldest son, Mahat\u2019s father assumed responsibility for his five of siblings at the age of 21. As a result, Mahat\u2019s father missed his chance to pursue the education he\u2019d envisioned. Perhaps because of this, he made it his mission to give Mahat the education he never received. However, no school was quite good enough, and he shuffled Mahat between nine different institutions before the age of 18.<\/p>\n
While his father wished him all the success and prestige that would come with pursing a medical career, Mahat had other plans. Toward the end of high school, he became captivated by song writing, and even secretly used his school tuition money one semester to record an album. \u201cIt was a disastrous flop,\u201d he now recalls with a smile.<\/p>\n
Although his foray into the music industry provides comic relief today, at the time Mahat was dismayed to be back on the medical track. However, he did convince his father to let him go to the US for college. He ended up at Towson University in Maryland, living with his aunt and uncle and delivering pizzas to support his nuclear family back in Nepal. Some weeks, he clocked in over 100 hours of deliveries.<\/p>\n
As a molecular biology, biochemistry, and bioinformatics major, he took every research opportunity he could get, and became enthralled by breast cancer research. Shortly thereafter, his mother was diagnosed with the same disease, which further strengthened his conviction to learn as much as he could in the US, and return to Nepal to help as many patients as he could.<\/p>\n
\u201cThe state of cancer diagnostics is very poor in Nepal,\u201d he explains. Patient biopsies must be sent to other countries such as India \u2014 a costly practice at the mercy of politics and travel restrictions. \u201cThe least we can do is become self-sufficient and provide these vital molecular diagnostics tools to our own people,\u201d Mahat says.<\/p>\n