April Fredian, MD
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Bayside Clinician Profile |
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April Fredian, MD
BS, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MD, St. George's University School of Medicine
Family Practice Residency, Brown University, Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island
Board Certified, Family Medicine
Alameda Berkeley
I was born and raised in the Northeast, with a wonderful family who instilled in me the belief that anything is possible. Because of them, I believed in myself, and tried things I otherwise would not have tried. I joined an all-boys soccer team because there wasn't one for girls, I ate liver and onions for dinner, I joined the volleyball team despite my short stature, I applied to top-tier colleges and wound up obtaining a BS in biology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
After college, I had trouble finding work in the field of biology, and took a job working the cash register at a fine wine and gourmet food store for several months. It was fun at first, but soon grew tiresome, and the itch for adventure overtook me. At the time, Amtrak had a deal: for a set fee, I could travel anywhere in the country for 30 days. I took them up on their generous offer, and, pillow and backpack in tow, hopped on the train. I visited friends in Washington DC, Winston-Salem North Carolina (where, by the way, you could still smoke in the grocery stores!), Arizona, Southern California, and lastly, San Francisco. It wasn't until I reached the Bay Area that I felt at home. I lived here for nearly 6 years, working at Genentech, playing in a competitive pool league, making lifelong friends, and falling in love with the area.
Towards the end of my 6 years, though life was grand, I felt that career-wise I had stagnated. Life in the laboratory did not bring me enough of the human-interaction that I needed. It was at this time that a postcard from St George's University School of Medicine graced my doorstep. It showed a beautiful school atop a magnificent cliff overlooking turquoise water, and, needless to say, I took it as a sign. I spent the first two years of medical school on the islands of Grenada and St Vincent, where I learned a great deal of patience, living on 'island time'. My two clinical years were then spent at The Brooklyn Hospital alongside Cornell students, after which I graduated from medical school summa cum laude.
I then went to Brown University in Rhode Island for my residency in Family Medicine. As the first doctor in my family, I wasn't sure what I was in for, but I've found that Family Medicine really is the perfect career for me. It allows me to listen to people's stories, care for newborns and 101 year-olds, teach people about themselves, and help them take better control of their lives by helping them also to believe that truly, anything is possible.
I look forward to meeting you and your family, and hope to know you for years to come.

