Jonathan Belman. MArie Bewley, Adriana Blakaj and Gregory Blanton
Richard Belitsky

Beyond the white coat: training great doctors

The deputy dean of education discusses outstanding physicians and what they must be able to say to their patients.

In his welcoming speech to 100 members of the Class of 2010 at the White Coat Ceremony on August 29, Richard Belitsky, M.D., reminisced about his own introduction to medical school. His role models, he said, were the television doctors of his youth. “I wanted to be smart like Dr. Casey. I wanted to be compassionate like Dr. Welby. I wanted to be good-looking like Dr. Kildare,” he said, provoking laughs from the audience.

Turning serious, Belitsky, the deputy dean for education and associate professor of psychiatry, acknowledged that the students have much to learn. “But so much of what you need to be really good doctors, you already know,” he said.

Belitsky went on to list the qualities he believes are essential to being a good doctor. “Becoming a great doctor begins not with what you know, but who you are. Being someone’s doctor is about a relationship. That relationship is built on trust,” he said. “Being a great doctor begins not with what you have to say, but your ability to listen.”

He concluded with what doctors need to be able to say. “First, ‘I’m sorry,’ ” he said. “Things go wrong. Sometimes it’s your fault. Sometimes it’s nobody’s fault. ... Things go wrong. Sometimes the most healing thing that you can do is to acknowledge that by saying ‘I’m sorry.’ ”

The other things doctors need to know how to say include “ ‘I don’t know,’ ” he said. “Being great doctors doesn’t mean you have to know everything. You can’t. What is the main thing you need to know? The limits of what you know. You can’t just say ‘I don’t know.’ Something else has to happen. ‘I don’t know … yet. But I will find out.’ ”

John Curtis

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Winter 2007
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Jerome Kassirer
Rebecca Pooley, Catherine Rabbitt and Anne Flitner
Kolby Vaughan and Dean Alpern

 

 


“You are the guardians of your profession,” speaker tells new Physician Associates

Twenty-nine students in the Physician Associate Class of 2006 received their degrees at Commencement in September, entering a profession that has grown from small beginnings in the 1960s to more than 60,000 practitioners with their own national and specialty organizations. In his address, Commencement speaker Jerome P. Kassirer, M.D., noted advances in the profession but sounded a note of caution for all health care practitioners, including physician assistants. They face challenges, he said, over conflicts of interest, the influence of the pharmaceutical industry and ethical standards not designed for what he called a “market-driven” health care system.

“What is the antidote to all of these threats? How do we respond as individuals?” asked Kassirer, editor in chief emeritus of the New England Journal of Medicine. “The only antidote I know for these threats is professionalism.”

He defined professionalism as a combination of technical competence, a commitment to self-improvement and a requirement to use knowledge and competence in the best interests of patients. “You alone,” he said, “are the guardians of your profession.”

Dean Robert J. Alpern, M.D., Ensign Professor of Medicine, then presented a challenge to the new physician associates.

“I challenge you to strive to be great. There will be many times in your careers when you will make a choice, when you strive to be your best or just try to get by. I hope you will strive to be the best,” he said. “You can be smart. You can be hard-working. But you have to care for your patients.”

Student awards went to Maura Brennick, M.M.Sc., PA ’06, who received the Academic Achievement Award, Anne Flitner, M.M.Sc., PA ’06, who received the Clinical Excellence Award, and Scott McKay, M.M.Sc., PA’ 06, who was given the Dean’s Humanitarian Award for his work with the Student-Run Free Clinic.

The Didactic Instruction Award for dedication and excellence in the classroom went to Kalpana Gupta, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of medicine (infectious diseases). The Clinical Instructor Award, for a clinical rotation site that provides exemplary clinical teaching, was given to two preceptors in geriatric medicine, Chandrika Kumar, M.D., of Harborside Healthcare Arden House in Hamden, Conn., and assistant clinical professor at Yale Geriatric Services, and Gerard Kerins, M.D., section chief of geriatric medicine at the Hospital of Saint Raphael. The Jack Cole Society Award, for significant contributors who support the physician associate profession, was given to Claire Hull, PA-C, a former academic coordinator of the program who is now at Oregon Health & Science University.

J.C.

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Originally published in Yale Medicine, Winter 2007.
Copyright © 2007 Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved.