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New travel restrictions bar Cuba
rotations
Hockfield leaves provost post
for MIT presidency
CME adapts to the Internet age
AIDS researchers targeted on conservative
hit list
Et cetera
Yale joins diabetes trial
Eyewitness accounts flawed


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New travel restrictions
bar Cuba rotations
A program that allowed Yale residents to observe the island nation’s
health care system ends.
For each of the past four years, up to four residents at Yale-New Haven
Hospital have spent six weeks studying health care in Cuba. Those rotations
are unlike other foreign rotations that take residents to more than a
dozen countries, said Michele Barry, M.D., HS ’77, co-director of
the Yale/Johnson & Johnson Physician Scholars in International Health
program, which sends 40 Yale residents abroad each year.

“It’s a little bit different than our other rotations in underserved
areas, where they desperately need doctors,” Barry said. Cuba has
no shortage of physicians and Barry sends residents to Cuba, she said,
to observe the Cuban approach to primary care. “They have a physician
assigned to an entire neighborhood. The physician takes ownership of the
neighborhood’s health and does outreach in a way that we have never
been very effective at,” Barry said.

That exposure to Cuban health care practices is no longer possible because
of new restrictions on travel to Cuba that the U.S. Department of the
Treasury put into effect on June 30. Among other limits on travel by American
citizens, students must stay in Cuba for at least 10 weeks, too long for
hospital residents, Barry said.

The rotations in Cuba were organized through Medical Education Cooperation
with Cuba (MEDICC), a nonprofit organization that has sent almost 900
students from more than 100 medical, nursing and public health schools
to Cuba since 1997. “These regulations will make it very difficult
for health sciences students to study in Cuba, since most academic institutions
do not have the resources to organize a course of 10 weeks,” said
MEDICC’s director, Diane Appelbaum, R.N., M.S.

The new guidelines, she said, restrict MEDICC in several ways. For one,
it’s not an academic institution, the only entity now allowed to
send faculty, staff or students to Cuba. The new guidelines also require
that students wishing to study in Cuba must do so as part of accredited
courses in the institution in which they are enrolled, rather than under
the auspices of other organizations or programs. And the courses MEDICC
offers in Cuba only last between two and six weeks.

For most of Fidel Castro’s reign, which began in 1959, the United
States has restricted travel by U.S. citizens to Cuba. Typically only
scholars, journalists and Cuban-Americans with relatives on the island
have been allowed to travel there. The latest restrictions are based on
recommendations by the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba, which
President Bush created last fall to find ways to move Cuba toward democracy.
The new rules do not affect graduate students pursuing independent research.

Barry sees a political motive for the new rules—a desire to garner
support from conservative Cuban exiles in Florida in the presidential
election. And she believes the restrictions are counterproductive. “I
only see good things coming out of the exchange,” Barry said. I
do not think a country like the United States should foster censorship
and thus prevent an exchange of ideas and cultures which could effectively
promulgate democracy in Cuba.”

—John Curtis

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Neurobiologist Susan Hockfield is leaving Yale after almost two decades
to become the president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Neurobiologist Hockfield
leaves provost post for presidency of MIT
When she embarked on her career as a neurobiologist in the early 1980s,
Yale Provost Susan Hockfield, Ph.D., never imagined that her academic
path would take her from running a laboratory to running a university.
She devoted herself to research, devising novel uses of monoclonal antibody
technology and discovering a gene that may play a role in brain cancer.
“Being a scientist is a wonderful, wonderful career,” she
said in September in her office on Hillhouse Avenue. “I had no aspirations
to move into positions of academic leadership.”

But early on her administrative skills emerged. After she came to Yale
in 1985, she ran a summer program in neurobiology at the Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory on Long Island, where she had previously worked. At Yale, Hockfield,
the William Edward Gilbert Professor of Neurobiology, served as director
of graduate studies in the medical school’s Section of Neurobiology
and on the graduate school’s executive committee. In 1998 she was
named dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (the first member
of the medical school faculty appointed to that post), and in January
2003, she became provost when her predecessor, Alison Richard, Ph.D.,
was chosen to lead Cambridge University.

As provost she has worked to advance science, medicine and engineering
at Yale—initiatives that include a $500 million investment in facilities.
She has also fomented interdisciplinary collaborations throughout the
university.

In August the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) announced that
Hockfield would become its 16th president, the first woman and the first
life scientist so named. She will move to Cambridge, Mass., with her husband,
Thomas N. Byrne Jr., M.D., HS ’81, clinical professor of neurology,
neurosurgery and medicine at the medical school, and their daughter, Elizabeth,
13, in December.

At MIT she replaces Charles M. Vest, Ph.D., who announced his retirement
last year after 14 years leading the school. (In October, President Richard
C. Levin appointed Deputy Provost Andrew D. Hamilton, Ph.D., to succeed
Hockfield.)

“MIT is an inspiring place, populated by inspiring people,”
Hockfield said. “From my first conversations in the search process,
the Institute’s central themes—the pursuit of truth, integrity
and the great meritocracy—have resonated with my own core values.”

Although MIT, with its strong reputation in engineering, has never before
named a biological scientist as its leader, Hockfield said that the school’s
grants and contracts supporting research in the life sciences, largely
from the National Institutes of Health, have grown at a remarkable rate
over the last decade. And the school is constructing a three-building
complex devoted to neuroscience. With its strengths in engineering, the
physical sciences and the biological sciences, she believes MIT is well-positioned
for collaborative, interdisciplinary science. “I am hoping to do
what I can to encourage bridge-building among these disciplines,”
she said.

She also plans to continue the practice of past MIT presidents who have
served as advocates for sound national policies on science, technology
and higher education. (The school maintains an office in Washington, which
she will visit once a month.) One of her main concerns is that American
students are falling behind their peers around the world in math and science.
She’d like to see improvement in math and science education from
kindergarten through high school, to engage and inspire students. “Almost
every child gets a thrill from building and inventing things that work,”
she said. “Math and science in our schools can do a better job in
tapping and encouraging that creative energy.”

For now, though, her attention is on MIT. “My overarching goal is
to help MIT to be an even greater MIT,” she said. “I hope
that MIT is increasingly seen as among the very best places in the world
for people—faculty, staff and students—who are enormously
inspired by innovation in both teaching and research.”

—J.C.

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Yale CME gets a new lease
on lifelong learning as it adapts to the Internet age
Nearly 25 years ago, when Continuing Medical Education (CME) at Yale
was created to develop programs that present the most current information
and research to a broad range of medical professionals, the practice of
medicine was very different. Advances in medicine did not occur at such
a rapid pace, managed care had not permeated the medical landscape and
15-minute office visits were not yet the norm.

Today, as physicians try to keep up with their profession in a changed
medical environment, Yale CME is overhauling its continuing education
activities, which include courses and conferences, regularly scheduled
grand rounds and two newsletters (The Medical Letter and Diabetes
Newsletter) that include tests on their content for CME credit. Its
goal is to build CME at Yale into an educational clearinghouse that acts
not only as a resource, but as the facilitator of new information.

“One of the challenges in the environment is that physicians, because
of managed care, find it increasingly difficult to leave the practice
and go to a meeting,” said Lawrence S. Cohen, M.D., HS ’65,
the Ebenezer K. Hunt Professor of Medicine, special advisor to the dean
and chair of the CME Faculty Advisory Committee. In response, Yale CME
is taking advantage of the Internet to streamline many of its activities.
A revamped website allows participants to register for conferences online
and access The Medical Letter and its corresponding exams at their
convenience. (The Diabetes Newsletter will be available online
sometime next year). In addition, physicians will be able to take online
courses and examinations for CME credit within the next few months.

“On a practical basis, we are formalizing activities that have been
ongoing at the School of Medicine, such as grand rounds and tumor boards
(which meet to discuss cancer cases), and making them easily accessible
to CME for credit,” said Cohen. “Most importantly, we are
uncovering, not surprisingly, a wealth of investigators/educators who
are in the process of putting together programs appropriate for CME at
Yale.”

A major issue is compliance with guidelines set by the Accreditation Council
for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), including standards for commercial
support that outline the steps that must be taken when accepting financial
support from sources such as drug companies and device manufacturers.
Two years ago the program’s accreditation was at risk over shortcomings
in its record keeping and compliance with ACCME rules. Then Mary D. Marcarelli
became director of CME, which is now up-to-date on ACCME standards and
has trained almost 50 departmental coordinators to ensure compliance.
In July the Yale CME program learned it received full accreditation from
the ACCME through June 2008.

Plans under consideration for the future include video coverage of grand
rounds on the Web; a lecture series focusing on research that can be directly
translated to patient care; and the production of a CME program through
the cable channel Discovery Health to offer CME credit to those unable
to travel to conferences. The next few years may also usher in the use
of handheld personal digital assistants to deliver CME course materials
and the revival of the Mini-Med School Program, begun in 1995, which presented
a series of lectures to the general public.

CME at Yale has become a high-profile project, and will continue to evolve
as new technologies, research and treatments become available. “Medicine
moves forward,” said Marcarelli. “We’re moving with
it.”

Jill Max

Yale CME can be found online at cme.yale.edu/.

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A conservative “hit
list” targets aids researchers, including some at Yale
In the fall of 2003 Margaret R. Weeks, Ph.D., got a call from her project
officer at the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). Weeks, an anthropologist
and the associate director of the Institute for Community Research in
Hartford could hear the stress in her project officer’s voice. The
National Institutes of Health (NIH) needed an immediate report on her
study that recruits drug users to spread a message about how to prevent
HIV/AIDS.

“We were two and a half years into a four-year study. We didn’t
have findings,” Weeks told the audience at aids Science Day in April,
describing her response. She said, ‘Give me anything you can.’
”

Weeks and her project, which is affiliated with the Center for Interdisciplinary
Research on aids based at the School of Public Health, were on what came
to be known as the “hit list” of about 200 federally funded
studies deemed by the conservative Traditional Values Coalition to be
“prurient,” “smarmy” and having “little
or no bearing on public health.” The list found its way to Congress,
which demanded explanations. Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D., director of the
NIH, looked into the studies and went back to Congress with a vigorous
defense.

The project Weeks is leading recruits active drug users and trains them
to become peer health advocates who can introduce harm reduction measures
into drug use sites. Weeks was one of four panelists at aids Science Day
to discuss the implications of this list.

Michael H. Merson, M.D., dean of public health and moderator of the panel,
said the list made him think back to the 1950s and another politician
with a list. “As someone who has his name on this list, I immediately
recalled the words of Senator Joseph McCarthy,” he said. Merson
appeared on the list as principal investigator of studies on drug use
in high-risk settings and aids in China.

Panelist Judith Auerbach, vice president for public policy at the American
Foundation for aids Research (amfAR), placed the “hit list”
in the context of other assaults on science. She noted that the Union
of Concerned Scientists issued a report in February that cited examples
of what it called the administration’s distortion of science, and
scores of scientists, including 20 Nobel laureates, issued a statement
accusing the administration of misrepresenting scientific findings.

Studies on air pollution, mercury emissions, lead in water and global
warming—which affect key industrial constituents of the Bush administration—have
been questioned, Auerbach said. Religious views have dominated discussion
of condom use, sex and the sale of contraceptives over the counter. “All
of this misuse or misinterpretation of science is happening in a very
political context,” Auerbach said. “The goal of the attacks
is to disallow certain kinds of research.”

“Some of what is going on is not entirely new,” said Kevin
Cranston, M.Div., acting director of the HIV/AIDS bureau at the Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, “even if in a matter of degree it is
entirely unprecedented.”

Ana Oliveira, executive director of Gay Men’s Health Crisis in New
York, said organizations in Washington and San Francisco have undergone
audits of their grant funding. “The kind of threat and intimidation
an audit represents is unbelievable. It diverts precious time and resources.”

Indeed, Weeks said her entire office mobilized to gather information for
the NIH. “Everyone stopped what they were doing and helped,”
she said. Apart from the waste of time and energy, Weeks said, targeting
individual projects and scientists has the effect of chilling studies
of controversial topics. “We absolutely cannot use this as a reason
to shy away from this research,” she said.

—John Curtis

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Et Cetera
Yale joins diabetes trial
The School of Medicine has joined 11 other medical centers in a national
study that will compare three treatments for type 2 diabetes in children
and teenagers. The study is the first clinical trial to look at the impact
of intensive lifestyle change designed to lower weight by cutting calories
and increasing exercise. It is also the first trial sponsored by the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases to focus on type
2 diabetes in youth.

The five-year trial will look at how each treatment option, including
drugs currently used in adults, controls blood glucose levels in younger
patients. It will also evaluate safety and the effects of treatments on
insulin production, insulin resistance, body composition, nutrition, physical
fitness and risk factors for disease.
The principal investigator at Yale is Sonia Caprio, M.D., associate professor
of pediatrics (endocrinology).

J.C.


Eyewitness accounts flawed
Soldiers engaged in survival training had trouble identifying people
they encountered during threatening and stressful events, according to
a Yale study published this Spring in the International Journal of
Law and Psychiatry.

“Contrary to the popular concept that most people would never forget
the face of a clearly seen individual who had physically confronted them
and threatened them for more than 30 minutes, a large number of subjects
in this study were unable to correctly identify their perpetrator,”
said Charles A. Morgan III, M.D., associate clinical professor of psychiatry.

Morgan studied more than 500 soldiers who were subjected to stress modeled
after the experiences of prisoners of war. For 48 hours prior to questioning,
they were deprived of food and sleep. Asked to identify their guard and
interrogator a day later, those who experienced less stressful interrogations
had better recognition.

“The present data have a number of implications for law enforcement
personnel, mental health professionals, physicians, attorneys and judges,”
Morgan said.

J.C.

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