Joxel Garcia
Kristin Noell-Casey

PA grads urged to keep learning

Only through constant learning can health professionals keep up with medicine.

At their Commencement in September the 29 members of the Physician Associate Program’s Class of 2005 heard words of encouragement from Joxel Garcia, M.D., M.B.A., former commissioner of public health for the state of Connecticut and current deputy director of the Pan American Health Organization.

“These are exciting times to be in the health care field,” Garcia said, citing new technology and new medical discoveries. But this day, he continued, would be a benchmark in the new graduates’ careers. “Anything you do from today on is going to have an impact five, 10, 20 years from now. Today is all about you and how you are going to fulfill yourself as a person. Just make sure you do what you love to do. Never compromise yourself for things that are going to be short-lived or are not going to make you happy.”

His closing admonition to the graduates was to “keep learning. … If you are not learning you won’t be able to adapt yourself … to the new realities of life.”

In keeping with Garcia’s advice, Robert J. Alpern, M.D., dean of the School of Medicine and Ensign Professor of Medicine, said, “Medicine is changing so fast that what you’ve learned will probably be completely out of date five years from now.” Noting the unequalled academic achievements of the Class of 2005, he said, “People will look to you for leadership—not just to practice health care, but to lead it.”

This year’s Didactic Instructor Award for dedication and excellence in the classroom went to J.G. Collins, Ph.D., professor of anesthesiology and lecturer in pharmacology. David Spiro, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of pediatrics (emergency medicine), and John Roney, PA-C, lecturer in pediatrics, shared the Clinical Instructor’s Award, given to recognize exemplary teaching at a clinical rotation site. John P. Hayslett, M.D., HS ’65, professor of medicine (nephrology) and of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences, received the Jack Cole Society Award for contributions in support of the physician associate profession.

John Curtis



Go to top


Autumn 2005.
Yale Medicine.

Yale connections around the world.
The virus behind the cancer.
The final chapter.
When animals sound a warning.
Letters.
Chronicle.
Rounds.
Findings.
Books & Ideas.
Capsule.
Essay.
Faculty.
Alumni.
Students.
In Memoriam.
Follow-Up.
Archives.
End Note.
Home.
Contents.
Awards.
Download PDF.
Search.
Back Issues.
Yale School of Medicine.
Yale University.



 
Sayaka Ogata
 

Proposing a new paradigm as international health hits close to home

Each October, students in medicine, nursing and public health present their findings from a summer of research abroad at the Committee on International Health Symposium Poster Session and Reception. But last year Hurricane Katrina cast a shadow as Curtis L. Patton, Ph.D., director of International Medical Studies and professor of epidemiology, suggested that health issues once thought to occur only in the developing world have emerged in this country.

“The United States is clearly part of the globe,” Patton said. “We have all thought of ourselves as separate and distinct and immune from disasters. We should seriously consider having students who want to do international health, do international health in the United States. Problems we have had this past fall suggest that there are opportunities to do in the United States the kind of work that is truly international.”

Three students made oral presentations at the symposium. Sayaka Ogata, a nursing student, described the integration of HIV/AIDS services with family planning in rural China. Public health student Vidya Angundi studied placental malaria in western Kenya. The placenta, she noted, is susceptible to the most severe form of malaria. Carolyn Graeber, a medical student, measured central corneal thickness, a gauge of intraocular pressure that is a factor for the development of glaucoma, in Puerto Rico.

J.C.

Go to top

 
 
Matty Vestal

 

 

Still going strong—Hunger and Homelessness Auction nets $32,000 for local groups

Thirteen years ago a second-year student asked his classmates to join him in a fund-raising activity in which he’d participated as an undergraduate at Haverford College. Now that activity, the Hunger and Homelessness Auction, has become a tradition at the medical school, growing from a one-day affair to a flurry of activities spread over several days, including a football game, a dinner and a silent auction with hundreds of offerings. This year the auction raised $32,225 for seven organizations in New Haven.

The first auction in 1994 netted $3,500 and had far fewer activities, recalled Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, M.D. ’97, who organized it. “The silent auction,” he said, “was just two tables.” Meyerhardt, now at Harvard Medical School and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, returned to Yale in November to relate the history of the auction. Some things don’t change, he said in a subsequent interview. William B. Stewart, Ph.D., associate professor of anatomy, is still auctioning off his trademark bowtie, and Frank J. Bia, M.D., M.P.H., FW ’79, professor of medicine and laboratory medicine, is still called upon, as he was this year, to serve as an auctioneer. Richard Belitsky, M.D., associate professor of psychiatry, shared this year’s auctioneering chores.

Items on the block included, as in past years, weekends in faculty vacation homes, meals at restaurants or faculty homes, baby-sitting services, rides in planes and on yachts, various types of lessons (language, sports, music, art) and lots and lots of food items. Perhaps the most unusual offering, with a starting price of 50 cents, came from second-year student Maggie Hatcher: “Former rugby champ will tackle you three times this year when you least expect it.” Her offer netted $50 from a bidder who preferred to remain anonymous.

J.C.

Go to top

  Yale Medical Bookstore ad
 
Mallika Lakshmi Mendu
 

Medical student receives psychiatry fellowship

Second-year medical student Mallika Lakshmi Mendu has received a 2005 Jeanne Spurlock Minority Medical Student Clinical Fellowship in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry from the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. The fellowship provides minority medical students with opportunities to work with outstanding child and adolescent psychiatrist mentors. James F. Leckman, M.D., the Neison Harris Professor of Child Psychiatry in the Child Study Center and professor of pediatrics, will serve as her mentor.

Go to top

   
  Go to top  


Originally published in Yale Medicine, Spring 2006.
Copyright © 2006 Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved.