Vegas physician chosen by toy company as Barbie role model
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LAS VEGAS (AP) — As a Las Vegas physician, wellness advocate and lifestyle blogger, Dr. Audrey Sue Cruz is a lot of things. And now she’s a Barbie doll.
Toy company Mattel chose her as a role model for one of six new Barbies honoring women the company identi- fied as heroes during the coronavirus pandemic.
Cruz, the 31-year-old mother of a young son, recalled playing with Barbie dolls as a child. She told the Las Vegas Sun she was in shock when Mattel contacted her.
“I was just in shock,” she said. “I was like, ‘What? I’m just this person. I don’t think that I’m special. I don’t feel like my story is that unique.’”
During the pandemic, Cruz worked as a front-line worker in hospital and clinic settings for Intermountain Healthcare in Las Vegas.
Her doll has long, brown hair and is wearing a white doctor’s coat, blue scrubs, stethoscope and tiny mask.
Cruz also blogged about her life as a doctor, posted wellness content and collaborated with other Asian- American physicians during a rise in anti-Asian-related crime to create a video accompanied by the hashtag #IAmNotAVirus.
Mattel credits her with fighting racial bias and discrimination.
Cruz has “made a positive impact in her community, inspiring current and future generations for years to come,” a news release from the company said.
“I’m so incredibly honored to be a Barbie Role Model, shining a light on the com- mitment and compassion all frontline workers exhibited over the past year and a half and every single day,” Cruz said in a statement reported by the Las Vegas Review- Journal.
Cruz and Amy O’Sullivan, a registered nurse from New York who helped treat the first COVID-19 patient at Brooklyn’s Wyckoff Heights Medical Center and contract- ed the virus, were the only U.S. models for dolls.
Other honorees are Canada’s Dr. Chika Stacy Oriuwa, professor Sarah Gilbert of the United Kingdom, Dr. Jaqueline Goes de Jesus of Brazil and Dr. Kirby White of Australia.
Mattel Inc. called the women “experts in their fields who have shown unprece- dented courage during a chal- lenging time,” and inspirations for current and future generations.
Cruz began blogging during her medical residency at Loma Linda University in California. She now has more than 112,000 Instagram followers.
Cruz recalled daily 12-hour shifts with little personal pro- tective equipment and hospi- tals across the country filling near capacity.
She sent her infant son, JJ, to live with her parents to protect him from potential exposure to the virus.
Cruz “made a positive impact in her community, inspiring current and future generations for years to come,” the company said in a statement.
Cruz was 5 when her father moved the family from Hawaii to Las Vegas for a job at Nellis Air Force Base. She has elec- trical engineering and medical degrees from the University of Nevada, Reno.
She called her blog a thera- peutic outlet to talk about her experiences as an internal medicine physician and mother. But she also posts tips about fitness and well- ness.
Mattel said it will donate $5 for each of the limited edition dolls sold at Target stores to the First Responders Children’s Foundation. The charity provides college schol- arships, grant and funeral expenses, and paid for hotel rooms to help first responders self-isolate.