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Commencement 2004: Yale Medicine article on Commencement
Finding a way to do the right thing
Physicians must go the extra mile for patients, surgeon and writer Atul Gawande
tells the Class of 2004. As a medical student on an internal medicine rotation, Atul Gawande, M.D.,
M.P.H., wasnt particularly worried about the elderly woman with a low-grade
fever who was being watched for signs of pneumonia. She was one of the last
patients hed cover as a fourth-year student at Harvard, and his mind
was on the surgery residency hed soon begin. After rounding in the morning,
he did not decide to check in again with the patient after lunch, recalled
Gawande, a surgeon and writer for The New Yorker, speaking at the
School of Medicine Commencement in May.
Luckily, the womans chief resident was more vigilant. By the time Gawande
stopped in to see her, the patient was gonegone to the ICU in the throes
of a rapidly progressing fulminant pneumonia.
The lesson, Gawande told the 109 graduates gathered on Harkness Lawn, is that
being a physician requires a particular kind of strength. Doing
the right thing is often painful, and yet you find the way to do it anyway, said
Gawande, whose essay collection, Complications, was nominated for
a 2002 National Book Award. Gawande said that physicians must go the extra
mile for patients, even if doing so is a hassle, even if its humiliating,
even though one might make a bad decision and unintentionally do harm. He urged
new graduates to do the right thing because you said you would; because
its what you chose to do.
The graduates listening to Gawandes address, many of them with yellow-and-teal
plastic stethoscopes they had donned whimsically for the main Commencement
ceremony, had processed into the tent led by piper Glenn H. Pryor playing The
Athol Highlanders. Former opera singer (and 2004 graduate) Nduka M.
Amankulor opened the ceremonies by singing The Star Spangled Banner in
his bass-baritone.
The Class of 2004 honored Barry J. Wu, M.D., HS '92, associate clinical
professor of medicine and the nicest doctor in New Haven, with
the Francis Gilman Blake Award for outstanding teacher. They gave the Betsy
Winters House Staff Award to Ashwin Balagopal, M.D., chief resident in medicine,
for his Zen-like brilliance. The class donated $1,000 to the
School of Medicines Society of Distinguished Teachers to underscore
symbolically our commitment to superlative teaching at the School of Medicine, said
class co-president Michael Shapiro.
Joseph E. Craft , M.D., HS 77, professor of internal medicine (rheumatology),
and Auguste H. Fortin VI, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of medicine, won
the Bohmfalk Prizes for teaching. James M. Perlotto, M.D., associate clinical
professor of medicine, won the Leonard Tow Humanism in Medicine Award. The
Leah M. Lowenstein Award went to Eve R. Colson, M.D. 89, assistant professor
of pediatrics, and to Rajlakshmi Krishnamurthy, M.D., assistant professor of
medicine.
Outgoing Interim Dean Dennis D. Spencer, M.D., HS 77, encouraged
the new graduates to adopt a multidisciplinary approach to medicine that incorporates
the continuum from basic research to patient care. Although historically scientists
have spoken of medicine in militaristic termsconquering diseaseSpencer
suggested that the new generation will adopt metaphors other than war:
metaphors of growth, and exploration, and evolution.
By Cathy Shufro
From the Summer 2004 issue of Yale Medicine




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