From Classics to Cures

Meet the bioengineering graduate student from Bellevue using ancient inspiration to change the narrative in modern medicine.

Whether Omeed Yazdani, 鈥24, 鈥25, is in the lab designing a prosthetic or researching cancer, he draws inspiration from Greek mythology 鈥 and treads carefully.听

鈥淲hen Asclepius, the ancient Greek god of healing and medicine, began raising people from the dead,鈥 Yazdani explains, 鈥淶eus struck him down with a thunderbolt.鈥 It鈥檚 a classic lesson in overreaching that Yazdani 鈥 as a teacher, medical researcher and future physician 鈥 takes to heart in his interdisciplinary approach to medicine. For Yazdani, the myth 鈥渟hows the fine line between innovation without reason and the ethical considerations we have to think about as researchers.鈥澨

Yazdani wasn鈥檛 taught by a famous centaur like Asclepius was, but he does have a storied education.

Yazdani, a Bellevue native, obtained two bachelor鈥檚 degrees in biochemistry and bioengineering from the 91探花 in 2024 鈥 both before age 20. He just graduated with his master’s degree in bioengineering in June of 2025.

He鈥檚 received various awards and scholarships such as the , and is a 2025 Husky 100 pick in recognition of making the most of his time at the UW.听 He also founded a nonprofit and is researching cancer immunotherapy.

Even though he focused on science and research as an undergraduate, Yazdani was also drawn to the humanities and pursued a classics minor. 鈥淪ome people think it鈥檚 weird, but the classics and medicine are far more interwoven than people realize,鈥 he said, noting he appreciates how the classics and medicine both involve diligent research and offer a nuanced view of metaphysics.听

A young man with curly dark hair wears a gray button-down shirt and smiles.

Yazdani was picked as part of the 2025 Husky 100 in recognition of making the most of his time at the UW. Photo by University Photography.

Yazdani鈥檚 love of storytelling and medicine will take him to Columbia University this fall for medical school, where he plans to focus on narrative medicine. This intriguing discipline involves listening to and understanding patients鈥 stories, something that resonates with Yazdani personally.

After fleeing to the United States from persecution in Iran, his aunt had difficulty trusting the American health-care system due to language and cultural barriers. Because of that distrust, she delayed seeking treatment and died from breast cancer. This loss inspired Yazdani to address health-care inequities arising from patient stories not always shared in the medical field. He hopes to one day create a simple, affordable and effective cancer vaccine for immunotherapy that would make treatment more accessible.

The patient-first approach to care is also why Yazdani created , a nonprofit he founded through a 91探花student organization called .听听

A man wearing purple gloves holds a tool while working in a lab.

Yazdani prepares an experiment for his master's thesis, which is investigating the effects of a potential cancer vaccine his lab has developed on immune cell pH.

"The classics and medicine are far more interwoven than people realize."
Omeed Yazdani 91探花Graduate Student

Yazdani recognized a need in global health care for children in low-resource communities with below-the-knee (transtibial) amputations. Many families can鈥檛 afford to replace prosthetics as their children grow taller, so LegUp Prosthetics designed a prosthetic with adjustable parts that accommodates growth to meet that need.

He鈥檚 excited about the possibility of closing the gap between research and practice. 鈥淎 lot of research is removed from what鈥檚 moving on the ground,鈥 says Yazdani about why he wanted to start this nonprofit. 鈥淚 can give people what they need directly.鈥澨

What鈥檚 next for the double Dawg? After medical school, he hopes to return to the 91探花for a faculty position.听听

鈥淭he classics have really been great for me as a future physician,鈥 Yazdani affirms. Asclepius鈥 story is one that modern medicine still benefits from. The Rod of Asclepius, which has a single snake wrapped around a staff, is still used today as a symbol for healing and medicine, Yazdani says. Asclepius鈥 myth might be a cautionary tale, but it鈥檚 also a lesson in the power of shared stories.

Story by Lincoln McElwee // Photos courtesy of Omeed Yazdani

Five students stand in front of a conference presentation poster and hold up a red piece of a modular prosthetic.

Yazdani (second from left) and other members of LegUp Prosthetics presented the group's prosthetic at the 2023 Hollomon Health Innovation Challenge, where they won the $2,500 Jim & Timmie Hollomon Best Idea for Addressing Health Access & Disparities Prize.

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