On Saturday mornings, the tools of creativity get loaded onto a push cart in a quiet corner of Orlando's Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children and Women.

Crayons, markers, glue sticks, modeling clay and construction paper are the instruments of peace for Madison McNamee.

"I try to find crafts to go along with the nearest holiday or season,” the high school sophomore said as she fills up "the art cart" on wheels.

Soon, the 16-year-old student is mobile, not on her phone, rather cruising through hospital corridors, pushing her vehicle of creativity, ready to entertain.

"I just do it for the kids because, I feel like no kid should have to spend their weekend in the hospital," Madison said.

Madison willingly spends her weekends gearing up to calm down little nerves.

"Want help again?” she asks a youngster struggling with a marker cap while coloring.

Each Saturday, Madison makes the 90-minute drive with her mom or sister from Melbourne to downtown Orlando's Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children and Women.

"Depending on how traffic is,” Madison says with a grin, referencing how many of Central Florida’s roads are currently under construction.

Madison enjoys reassuring nervous youngsters whose weekend includes an unexpected trip to the hospital through arts and crafts.  It's her "bedside manner," already at work.

She sits in the waiting room, waiting to entertain patients, brothers, sisters and even kids at heart before doctors will see them.

"Ready?" Madison asks, helping a child clean up an art project as a nurse is ready to take the child for treatment.

"I've always enjoyed the medicine side of things,” Madison admitted. “When I was little, putting BandAid's on siblings, or something as simple as that. I grew to like kids. I love spending time with kids.”

While it may be coloring today, Madison's crafts have already lead to getting one foot in the door for the bright career she's designing for herself.

I want to be a pediatric oncologist, so I want to work with the kids that have cancer."

After high school, Madison would like to head to the University of Florida for college and eventually return to work at Central Florida hospital. Until then, her spirit of caring for others continues.

"If I could just do anything to make it a little fun for them, it's worth it for me,” she concluded.