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Morehouse student's startup GABA connects medical students to study tools


Candice Blacknall
Candice Blacknall, founder of GABA.
Candice Blacknall

After Candice Blacknall’s first year at the Morehouse School of Medicine, she realized her lack of social capital put her at a disadvantage. As a non-traditional student and an Atlanta transplant, Blacknall said she didn’t have the connections other students may have had. 

“Nobody would say medical school was easy, but, in particular, it was an absolute nightmare,” said Blacknall, who came to Morehouse after nine years in the military. “One of the big barriers of being a medical student was figuring out what you needed to be successful.” 

After her third year in medical school, Blacknall joined a Georgia Tech master’s in business program, which was available through a partnership with Morehouse School of Medicine. For a year, she traded in her white lab coat and focused on entrepreneurship and technology innovation.  

It was in that program that she came up with the idea for GABA, a web application that uses machine learning to connect med and pre-med students with more than 300 resources, such as study tools, career coaching and mental health support. She founded her startup this year through Georgia Tech’s CREATE-X incubator and has more than 400 users on the app.  

Now, Blacknall juggles her fourth year of med school with being a startup founder, something she said is possible in part because of the new virtual landscape.  

"Virtual allowed me to do many things at once while still dedicating those hours to my company,” Blacknall said. “It also taught me to be intentional about the way I interact and cultivate relationships with people.”  

Blacknall’s company raised about $47,000 in investments through CREATE-X, Morehouse crowdfunding and family and friends. With those funds, Blacknall said she started social media marketing, hired a chief technology officer and expanded the GABA development team, which allows GABA to build the product in-house instead of through contractors. GABA has five employees, according to LinkedIn. 

The GABA web app is available to pre-med and med students through a tiered subscription model, ranging from $9-$45. Students take a test about their study habits and get connected to the best resources. The platform also has career coaching and a way for students to connect with each other, similar to a LinkedIn experience specifically for medical school, Blacknall said.  

Blacknall plans to raise a seed round in March, which she said will help the company break even with its revenue.  

It wasn’t only Blacknall’s time in Georgia Tech’s incubator that prepared her to become an entrepreneur. She said demands of medical school, including the rigorous curriculum and mandatory volunteer and clinical hours, helped her “find that 25th hour in the day.”  

“I learned as part of my training, both in the military and in medicine, how to make the most of time and make the most of limited resources,” said Blacknall, who's time as a military medic inspired her medical school dream. 

Blacknall said her mother moved her and her two younger brothers to Georgia from Flint, Mich., for the HOPE Scholarship. But Blacknall was intent on Elon University in North Carolina, so she joined the military to pay for it. She said growing up in Flint contributed to her entrepreneurial spirit. 

“You really have to innovate in a place like Flint,” Blacknall said. “There’s not a lot of opportunity there. The people that are successful coming out of places like Flint are the kind of people who see opportunity in every challenge.” 

Blacknall plans to expand GABA over the next two or three years to also provide resources for nurses, pharmacists and other health-care professionals.  


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