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T H E

P H A R O S
of Alpha Omega Alpha honor medical society Autumn 2010

´Αξιος ώφελει̂ν τοὺς άλγου̂ντας


Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society “Be Worthy to Serve the Suffering”

Officers and Directors at Large


Editor
President

Editor Emeritus

Associate Editor and Vice President


Managing Editor
(in memoriam)
Secretary-Treasurer
Managing Editor Birmingham, Alabama

Art Director and Illustrator

Designer

Editorial Board

Seattle, Washington

Lynchburg, Virginia

Medical Organization Director

Councilor Directors

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Portland, Oregon

Coordinator, Residency Initiatives

Stanford University

Student Directors

www.alphaomegaalpha.org

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School
Requests for reprints of individual articles should be forwarded directly to the authors.

Circulation information: The Pharos is sent to all dues-paying members of Alpha Omega Alpha at no additional cost. All correspondence

m.celebi@alphaomegaalpha.org
Editorial
Endings are beginnings

Eric Pfeiffer, MD, Interim Editor

T he smiling face of Ted Harris graced the cover


of the Summer  issue of The Pharos. The
editorial page featured a moving memorial for Ted,
fun. Accordingly, I see the following as challenges for
the next editor of The Pharos:
. To participate in the daunting task of helping to
penned by David Dale, former president of Alpha shape the debate about the future of health care; there
Omega Alpha. The issue also contained, fortuitously is little doubt that our current “system” of health care is
or not, my poem “Endings Are Beginnings,” written on in need of reform. This goes far beyond the passage of
the occasion of my retirement from medical practice, a piece of legislation mandating certain desirable goals
fifty years after seeing my first patient as a sophomore for health care to actually making health care change
medical student. The title of the poem, or at least the come alive. It will be in operationalizing reform in
concept, also forms the theme of this editorial for the health care delivery that the real pay-off will come, not
Autumn  issue of The Pharos. This issue marks the only for the benefit of patients receiving care but also
transition from Ted’s stellar leadership at the helm of for the benefit of the men and women delivering such
the magazine to that of a yet-to-be-chosen editor, and care. I think that The Pharos could play an important
prompts the following thoughts: catalytic role in this process.
Endings indeed are beginnings. Future issues will . To never waver from emphasizing the human as-
feature essays, stories, tributes to Ted, and poems, pects of health care delivery.
solicited by the interim editor from the distinguished . To continue and even to expand the role of the
members of the editorial board of The Pharos. They arts and the art of medicine in medical practice.
are thus a further reflection of Ted’s influence on the
stature of the magazine, and may help to point the way To accomplish these goals, I envision an opportu-
for the future direction of The Pharos. nity to expand the audience reached by The Pharos
from its current engaged but circumscribed readership
In trying to discern the major themes championed to a broader and more diverse audience. For I believe
by Ted Harris, I have seen the following: that the potential for good residing in AΩA and its
. A sharp focus on the future of health care policy journal, and the creative fertility of its readers, are
and health care reform in this country. forces that can energize and even potentially redirect
. A strong commitment to the human aspects of the health care debate at this momentous time. The
medical practice, illuminating the humanity of both the need has never been greater. In making these state-
patient and the practicing physician. ments, I am inviting spirited discussion of these ideas
. Steady emphasis on the role of the arts and the through letters to the editor and discussion among the
humanities in the field of medicine, executed through members of both the Alpha Omega Alpha board and
the publication of poems, paintings, illustrations, cur- The Pharos editorial board.
rent literature, and the cinema. Finally, I want to express my appreciation to the
. Ample use of illustrations to enhance the words board of directors of Alpha Omega Alpha for giving
carried in this magazine. me the opportunity to serve as Interim Editor while
the search for a permanent new Executive Director of
In short, Ted made The Pharos both relevant and AΩA and Editor of The Pharos proceeds.

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 1


In This
ARTICLES

Tinsley Randolph Harrison, MD


DEPARTMENTS A legacy of medical education
1 Editorial
Endings are beginnings
K. Tinsley Anderson

4
Eric Pfeiffer, MD

32 Health policy
Cost of a life: Resource
allocation in the current health
care environment
Benson Shih-Han Hsu, MD Stroke in black and white
Srijita Mukherjee
34 The physician at the
movies
Peter E. Dans, MD
Extraordinary Measures
The Hurt Locker
12
39 Reviews and reflections
Dying for Beginners
Reviewed by Jack Coulehan,
A medical ear in the early morning
tennis group—when to advise and
MD what to say
On Being Certain: Believing You
Are Right Even When You’re Herbert Y. Reynolds, MD
Not
Reviewed by John L. Wright, MD Commentary
Technological Medicine: The
Changing World of Doctors Charles M. Plotz, MD, Med ScD
and Patients Herbert L. Abrams, MD
Reviewed by Frederic W. Platt,

14
MD

43 Letter
Page 4
Page 14
48 Commemorating the
fiftieth anniversary
of a medical
landmark

58 Index

Page 12
On the cover

Issue
See page 4

Attuning to equlibrium
AΩA NEWS
Physician as artist, artist as physician
Eliza C. Miller 44 Program announcements
2010 Edward D. Harris
Professionalism Award

18
2009/2010 Visiting Professorships
2009/2010 Medical Student Service
Project Awards
2009/2010 Administrative Recognition
Awards
2009/2010 Volunteer Clinical Faculty
Awards
One simple question can
change the world
George L. Spaeth, MD
50 Alpha Omega Alpha
members elected in
2009/2010

27 50
BACK
COVER
Richard L. Byyny, MD,
appointed Executive Director
of Alpha Omega Alpha

POETRY

11 Quiet Snow among the Dark


Geoffrey B. Crawford, MD

17 Post Chemo Treat


Henry Langhorne, MD

Page 27 25 Wind
Sharon Maas

26 Echocardiogram
Paul Rousseau, MD

29 Hearing
Michael R. Milano, MD

30 Poems by Linda Cantrell


Linda Cantrell
Richard Patterson, MD

33 Adwoa
Julia Geynisman

Page 18
60 Amanda’s Garden
Fredric L. Coe, MD

33
INSIDE Poppies
BACK
COVER Sara Parke
Dr. Tinsley Randlolph Harrison.
Photo courtesy of Dorothy Carpenter Medical
Archives of Wake Forest University.
4 The Pharos/Autumn 2010
Tinsley
Randolph
Harrison, MD
A legacy of medical education

K. Tinsley Anderson
The author is a member of the Class of 2011 at Wake , , to a sixth-generation physician, William Groce
Forest University School of Medicine. Harrison. Groce Harrison was more educated than most of his
nineteenth-century medical contemporaries, having gradu-

T
insley Randolph Harrison is a grand figure in the his- ated from Auburn University and studied at the University of
tory of medicine who touched many lives through his Nashville, with more academic instruction further afield in
teaching, philosophy of education, and personal care. later years. But his early medical education consisted mostly
He is important not only for such seminal works as Principles of lectures from local practitioners and a few examinations.
of Internal Medicine, but because he reached into the future Medical education in the United States in the later part of the
of medicine by establishing a model of internal medicine nineteenth century lacked anatomical dissections and much
departments and medical education that remains largely in- of the scientific instruction like laboratory work that would
tact today. Tinsley Harrison was destined to be a doctor. His come to characterize twentieth-century medicine. Groce
heritage in the medical arts prepared him to refine his skills Harrison recognized his educational deficiencies, and when
at several renowned institutions. After establishing himself money and time afforded, he pursued greater knowledge in
as a dynamic teacher, thought-provoking researcher, and re- his field. In , he enrolled in Baltimore Medical College,
markable physician in sixteen years at Vanderbilt University, his second medical school, and there learned of a new insti-
Harrison made the historic move to Winston-Salem to es- tution in the European model being set up nearby at Johns
tablish the Department of Internal Medicine at the newly Hopkins Hospital. At Hopkins, Groce Harrison met and be-
relocated and revamped four-year Bowman Gray School of friended William Osler, the man who would come to influence
Medicine (BGSOM, now the Wake Forest University School American medicine and the lives and careers of Groce and his
of Medicine). Harrison’s philosophy touched all aspects of descendants.1p26
medicine at BGSOM—medical student education, intern and Groce Harrison and William Osler kept in touch through-
resident schedules and instruction, the in- and outpatient de- out the years and Groce often wrote or met with Osler to ask
partments, research, and more. His model of medical instruc- career advice. In one such encounter, Groce asked for counsel
tion and student integration into the workings of a hospital about taking a chief of Medicine position in Mobile, Alabama,
shaped the future of every student’s experience and learning and giving up general practice. After discussing the young
at BGSOM and ultimately set a model for medical schools Harrison family’s finances, Osler instructed Groce to “get into
everywhere. a small subspecialty that does not involve exposure to all kinds
Harrison was in born in Talledega, Alabama, on March of weather. Go abroad and get a year’s training, if that is all you

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 5


Tinsley Randolph Harrison, MD

Left, Dr. Harrison as full faculty member, bottom left, 1944. Right, the Bowman Gray School of Medicine cornerstone laying cer-
emony: Mrs. Bess Gray Plumly, sister of the late Bowman Gray, had the honor of laying the stone. From left to right: James A. Gray, Jr.,
Smith Hagaman (Superintendent of NCBH), Bess Gray Plumly, Governor Melville Broughton, Gordon Gray, Bowman Gray, Jr., Coy C.
Carpenter. Photos courtesy Dorothy Carpenter Medical Archives of Wake Forest University.

can afford. And train those boys [Groce’s sons] to be teachers up the chief resident position there in . His lifelong friend
of medicine.” 1p38 Though Tinsley later said that he had no Alfred Blalock accompanied him. Both served as junior fac-
knowledge of this encounter until after he took his first posi- ulty at Vanderbilt for sixteen years, arriving and leaving on
tion as chairman of Medicine at BGSOM, Osler was obviously the same day.
a great influence in the Harrison household. Of his childhood, At Vanderbilt, Harrison began his research career in
Tinsley later noted, “I believe that learning to distinguish be- earnest, focusing primarily on heart failure and the circula-
tween the synonyms God, Jehovah, Adonai, the Lord, and Dr. tory system. In  he published Failure of the Circulation
Osler are my earliest memories.” 1p2 based on his own investigations. In it he promoted the idea of
Young Tinsley was a good student and his parents were qualitative investigation instead of the descriptive methodol-
willing teachers. From his mother he was imbued with scrip- ogy that had been the norm. After publishing a new edition
ture and Shakespeare; from his father, on their long walks in , he refused to write further editions because he had
together and home visits to the ailing, he learned about biol- no new data to contribute. Though some of his research is
ogy, astronomy, and certainly medicine. Tinsley’s interests not well known, he also made advances in basic science, such
were as varied as his parents’. Groce Harrison wanted only as proving that digitalis shifted potassium out of myocardial
the best education for his son, so Tinsley applied to Harvard cells. He was prolific in his sixteen years at Vanderbilt, ul-
College, planning to study law. He was accepted, but family timately publishing  papers in addition to Failure of the
finances precluded his attending. Therefore, upon high school Circulation.2
graduation, he matriculated at the University of Michigan.
Osler’s and Groce’s influences were strong, however, and after The move to Bowman Gray
one year in Michigan Tinsley transferred to Johns Hopkins. When Bowman Gray died in , the former chairman
Unfortunately for Tinsley, Osler died in , the year Tinsley and president of R. J. Reynolds bequeathed , in stock
arrived in Baltimore.1p15 to Wake Forest University to convert its two-year program
Harrison’s early career was successful and notable for to a four-year medical school in Winston-Salem. The North
the friendships he made. He spent his first two years after Carolina Baptist Hospital was to expand from its -bed fa-
medical school graduation at Peter Bent Brigham’s hospital cility to  beds to serve the school and to allow the program
in Boston, returning to Johns Hopkins for his third year of to grow to the more modern four-year model. Dean Coy C.
internal medicine training. Canby Robinson of Vanderbilt Carpenter of the Wake Forest University School of Medicine
University School of Medicine persuaded Harrison to take worked tirelessly for several years to appoint faculty and

6 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


The expansion of the original medical school building in 1959 doubled the square footage of the school, adding 75,490 new square feet
of space. Photo courtesy Dorothy Carpenter Medical Archives of Wake Forest University.

arrange the structure of the new school. Dr. Herbert Wells, Harrison later said of the Grays, “They indicated to me they
soon to become professor and chairman of the Department were behind the school and were going to stay behind it.” 5p3
of Physiology at Bowman Gray, suggested Tinsley Harrison’s Dean Carpenter’s many appointments strengthened the
appointment to Dean Carpenter. Harrison seemed intrigued fledgling school’s reputation: Dr. Camillo Antom, a world-
when Wells proffered the idea: “I am thoroughly open minded renowned chemist, Dr. Wingate Johnson, clinical professor of
on the subject and the possible prospect of being able to start Medicine and chief of the Private Diagnostic Clinic, and Dr.
from the ground up and build a department .  .  . second to John Williams, a well-known researcher from Johns Hopkins,
none.” 3 among others. Dr. Rusty Holman, chairman of the Department
Harrison’s credentials were as strong as his desire to create of Pathology at the University of North Carolina at the time,
a first-rate school. Vanderbilt’s Dean W. S. Leathers had no said of Harrison’s acceptance of the position, “Now for the first
hesitation, except his unwillingness to lose Harrison, in rec- time, I know you are going to have a first class medical school
ommending him to Dean Carpenter. In a letter to Carpenter, because you’ve got Tinsley Harrison there.” 5p3
Leathers noted: “He is a conscientious and untiring worker Once he decided to take the job, Harrison worked unremit-
and at the same time possesses a degree of brilliancy that tingly to create his ideal department. He and Dean Carpenter
is unusual.” 4 But Harrison was not just an ideal physician. corresponded frequently in the months running up to the July
Leathers also commented, “The students tell me that he has , , beginning of the school year. After one conversation
remarkable ability as an instructor and presents his subject on December , , regarding plans for the school and the
enthusiastically and effectively. In other words, he possesses department for the next few years, Dean Carpenter suggested
marked inspirational qualities as a teacher.” 4 Harrison write him a letter summarizing the details. The next
After being tentatively offered the position of the chair of day, Harrison wrote a twenty-five-page letter detailing the
Medicine, Harrison and his wife visited Winston-Salem. Along outlines of the new department, from the minute to the gran-
with his desire to create a department to his own liking, the diose. Harrison wrote,
charming people the Harrisons met apparently sealed the deal.
Harrison said of Dr. Wingate Johnson, one of a few physicians Aim of the Department of Internal Medicine
who had already committed to be on staff, “The impression he To become the best department of internal medicine
made on me had a great deal to do with my decision to accept anywhere. This should be looked on as not just a praisewor-
the position.” 5p2 He also seemed to be swayed by the charisma thy Utopian dream but as an attainable although difficult
of the Gray family as well as their support of the new school. objective. The velocity of progress toward this aim will

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 7


Tinsley Randolph Harrison, MD

Dr. Harrison in 1944. Photo courtesy Dorothy Carpenter Medical Archives of Wake Forest University.

naturally vary according to conditions, but the direction of new Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Harrison suggested
progress should not be altered under any circumstances. 6p2 a major change in the training of students and house staff.
Traditionally, most of the teaching in medical schools was
In this letter, he described salaries, educational philosophy, conducted by local practitioners who contracted with the
physical layout of the facilities, and much more. In subsequent schools but worked in their own clinics outside of the institu-
correspondence, Carpenter and Harrison discussed such trivia tions for which they taught.8 Harrison believed that proper
as the style of furniture and the color of the walls. Being wily instruction of the trainees required considerable time from
and aware of the limited funds of the school, Harrison was seasoned physicians who were faculty and primarily academic.
clever in his allocation of resources: In Nashville, he had noted the antagonism between the medi-
cal school and private practitioners; he therefore preferred
From a psychological standpoint it is probably better to that his faculty not practice outside of the school. With great
have very inadequate space for the Outpatient Department tact, he refrained from objecting to members of his depart-
rather than moderately inadequate space because in the ment practicing privately, but made it known that he would
former instance the defect will be so apparent that there will not. “The indigent patients will be my patients and I was
be more opportunity to obtain special grants to remedy it.7 happy with that decision and I never regretted it, because I
do not think I made a single enemy for the school during the
years I was there.” 5p5
Educational ethos Harrison also believed in the value of bedside teaching.
As Harrison and Carpenter discussed their plans for the He said, “Teaching was all with patients, so patient care and

8 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


teaching were the same thing.” 5p12 He did not particularly in practice. He implemented significant changes to the fourth-
care for lectures and worked to make the bulk of medical year curriculum. In a letter to Dean Carpenter he wrote,
education at BGSOM patient centered. As well as focusing
on the patient, Harrison concentrated on the students and My notion would be that the fourth-year students should
tried to inspire them: “The purpose of clinics and lectures have perhaps two hours a day of lectures and clinics and the
will be primarily to stimulate thinking rather than to teach rest of the time they should act as rotating internes, having
facts.” 6 One tradition of his was to have several students over somewhat less authority than our present internes have but
to his house about once a month for dinner. After the meal, more authority than students ordinarily have.
one student would present a paper and then the group would . . . . This as I see it, is the greatest defect in medical edu-
discuss it. Harrison apparently enjoyed baiting each side so cation at present—that the boys simply wait around during
that each member would be so convinced of his own position their fourth year for their interneships and don’t really work
that they all pursued the subject to seek an answer or proof. the way they do the other years at medical school.10
Harrison took teaching seriously, saying, “There was a close
emotional bond between teacher and student, not just an To this day in virtually every medical school in the country,
intellectual bond and that’s the difference between education fourth-year students continue to act in this capacity as sub-
and instruction.” 5p9 interns, learning the day-to-day skills of practicing clinicians.
Harrison followed in the footsteps of his father and Harrison was a model for his students and colleagues. His
William Osler by becoming a huge proponent of lifelong work ethic was impeccable and virtually unattainable by oth-
education for both trainees and seasoned physicians. He ers. He tried to instill this into his students:
often ran a Monday night Clinical Pathological Conference
(CPC) in which a case was presented and first the students, You owe me only one thing; I don’t care whether you go into
then the house staff, then a faculty member reviewed the surgery, obstetrics or internal medicine or what, but do it
case and suggested their assessment, diagnoses, and plans. better than anybody else. That’s a feeling I still have, that my
Robert Morehead of Bowman Gray and a former student of boys must do it better than anybody else and they may have
Harrison’s wrote, “Almost without exception, the CPC was to decide what they do, but if they don’t do it better than
regarded as the most stimulating and informative educational anybody else, then I’ve fallen down as a teacher.5p13
exercise conducted at the medical center.” 9 The conference
was given on Monday nights to allow regional physicians, His work ethic permeated his thoughts on medicine as a
who sometimes came from a hundred miles away or more, to profession.
attend. The aisles were especially packed when Harrison was
running the CPC. The CPC at Wake Forest continues to this I don’t believe that a -hour week is compatible with be-
day, but only once a month. Unfortunately for the audience ing a member of a profession. A -hour week is for a man
but definitely benefiting the attending and pathologist who who has a dull job, repetitive, an assembly line sort of stuff,
give the final review, the patient and his outcome are known or heavy labor and that’s ample because this man derives
to those final presenters, unlike in Harrison’s day, when the no satisfaction from his work, he has to get his satisfaction
senior staff was as blind as the students. When Harrison was during his leisure time. But for a person to consider himself
the attending presenter, he was rarely wrong but noted that a professional, which means your client, or your patient, or
he always learned something. a member of your congregation, or your pupil—you come
Besides the CPCs, patient-centered teaching, clinical dem- first, I come second. That’s what a professional person is.5p12
onstrations, and only the necessary amount of lectures,
Harrison also wanted his students to be able to educate Harrison’s reasons for going to BGSOM were the personal
themselves: connections and his desire to establish a department second to
none. His reasons for leaving after two short years were mul-
Our students do not finish school with enough facility in tifold and might have been in part because of his unrelenting
using the library. I believe it would be a good plan if, from attitude towards work. There are suggestions that disagree-
the very beginning, the students were given a list of articles ment about the attending faculty arrangements coupled with
to read, . . . The object of this would be to try to teach the Harrison’s notoriously meticulous nature led him to move to
students that their learning must in the long-run come from Southwestern Medical College in Dallas in .11 However,
the journals rather than from textbooks.10 Harrison also noted that his feeling of responsibility to use his
expertise to help establish another school and more personal
As students progressed from didactics to practice, Harrison family reasons pushed him to move on.5p24 Whatever the
pushed upperclassmen to take on more responsibility and truth, Southwestern Medical College was the benefactor.
learn the skills they would need in their new lives as doctors BGSOM and Winston-Salem remained special places for

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 9


Tinsley Randolph Harrison, MD

Harrison. He wrote to the members of the class of , the misanthrope may become a smart diagnostician of organic
last class he taught at BG, disease, but he can scarcely hope to succeed as a physician.
The true physician has a Shakespearean breadth of interest
I still look back on the period in Winston-Salem as one in the wise and the foolish, the proud and the humble, the
of the peak periods of an academic life that has now lasted stoic hero and the whining rogue. He cares for people.1p8
nearly one-half century. The greatest thing about it was the
smallness of the classes which enabled me to know, person- References
ally, every one of you.12 . Pittman JA Jr. Tinsley R. Harrison, M.D.: Teacher of Medi-
cine. Subject file: Harrison, Tinsley. Winston-Salem (NC): Dorothy
He said Winston-Salem was Carpenter Medical Archives, Wake Forest University School of
Medicine.
the greatest community I’ve ever lived in. .  .  . The people . Dalton ML. William Osler’s influence on the career of Tins-
there, the friendliness, the open-armed attitude they had ley Randolph Harrison. South Med J ; : –.
toward our faculty. I’ve never encountered this anywhere . Harrison TR. Letter to Dr. Herbert Wells of October ,
like it was in Winston-Salem.5p25 . Subject file: Harrison, Tinsley. Winston-Salem (NC): Dorothy
Carpenter Medical Archives, Wake Forest University School of
Beyond BGSOM Medicine.
Harrison achieved much in his long career. Besides his . Leathers WS. Letter to Dr. Coy C. Carpenter of December
accomplishments at Vanderbilt, his remarkable influence as , . Subject file: Harrison, Tinsley. Winston-Salem (NC): Doro-
chair of Medicine at BGSOM, Southwestern Medical College, thy Carpenter Medical Archives, Wake Forest University School of
and the University of Alabama at Birmingham, he achieved Medicine.
many other eminent positions—president of the American . Morehead R. Oral History Interview No.  with Dr. Tins-
Society of Clinical Investigation, founder and first president of ley Harrison, interviewed by Dr. Robert Morehead, February ,
the Southern Society of Clinical Investigation, President of the . Subject file: Harrison, Tinsley. Winston-Salem (NC): Dorothy
American Heart Association, founding member of the Council Carpenter Medical Archives, Wake Forest University School of
of the National Heart Institute, and recipient of the Kober Medicine.
Medal, one of the greatest honors an internist can receive.2 . Harrison TR. Letter to Dr. Coy C. Carpenter of December
Beyond these, his most well known contribution to medicine , . Subject file: Harrison, Tinsley. Winston-Salem (NC): Doro-
is Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, first published in thy Carpenter Medical Archives, Wake Forest University School of
 and now in its seventeenth edition. Arguably his greatest Medicine.
gift to medicine is the spirit and philosophy he gave to U.S. . Harrison TR. Letter to Dr. Coy C. Carpenter of December ,
medical education. His forward thinking ideas still propel . Subject file: Harrison, Tinsley. Winston-Salem (NC): Dorothy Car-
BGSOM’s current curriculum for students and house officers. penter Medical Archives, Wake Forest University School of Medicine.
His ethos of medicine still hums in the principles and objec- . Eddleman EE Jr. Tinsley Randolph Harrison: Medical investi-
tives of American medical education and in our personal and gator, physician, and educator. Clin Cardiol ; : –.
professional development. His words say it best, as he writes . Morehead RP. The contribution of a great man to Wake For-
in the introduction to the first edition of his seminal work: est University and its Bowman Gray School of Medicine—Tinsley R.
Harrison, M.D. N C Med J : : –.
No greater opportunity, responsibility, or obligation can . Harrison TR. Letter to Dr. Coy C. Carpenter of April ,
fall to the lot of a human being than to become a physician. . Subject file: Harrison, Tinsley. Winston-Salem (NC): Dorothy
In the care of the suffering he needs technical skill, scientific Carpenter Medical Archives, Wake Forest University School of
knowledge, and human understanding. He who uses these Medicine.
with courage, with humility, and with wisdom will provide a . Dalton ML. The friendship and letters of Alfred Blalock and
unique service for his fellow man, and will build an endur- Tinsley Harrison. Am Surg ; : –.
ing edifice of character within himself. The physician should . Harrison TR. Letter to Dr. John R. Ausband of December ,
ask of his destiny no more than this, he should be content . Subject file: Harrison, Tinsley. Winston-Salem (NC): Dorothy
with no less. . . . Carpenter Medical Archives, Wake Forest University School of
Tact, sympathy, and understanding are expected of the Medicine.
physician, for the patient is no mere collection of symp-
toms, signs, disordered functions, damaged organs, and The author’s address is:
disturbed emotions. He is human, fearful, and hopeful, seek- 1409 W. 4th Street, Apartment D
ing relief, help, and reassurance. To the physician, as to the Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27101
anthropologist, nothing human is strange or repulsive. The E-mail: tianders@wfubmc.edu

10 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Quiet Snow among the Dark
The cold and bitter night.
Alone.
Sometimes I think about death.
And sometimes,
I yearn for something
Beyond the reason
Of my being,
And beyond
The being of my reasoning.
Alone.
I am not really
Thinking
About anything
Except the beating of my
Heart.
Geoffrey B. Crawford, MD

Dr. Crawford (AΩA, Albany Medical College, 2007) is a resi-


dent in Preventive Medicine at the University of Maryland.
His address is: 649 Washington Boulevard, Apt. A, Baltimore,
Maryland 21230. E-mail: mumer@hotmail.com.
Photo courtesy of the author.

The Pharos/Date 11
A medical ear in the early morning tennis group–
when to advise and what to say
Herbert Y. Reynolds, MD

A
The author (AΩA, University of t   our early-birds group times a week. Exercise is extolled as
Virginia, 1965) is Medical Officer in assembles to play tennis and the main reason for playing, but talk-
the Division of Lung Diseases at the talk. The exercise is invigorat- ing has increasingly crept in. It first
National Heart, Lung, and Blood ing and the tennis is quite good, given occurs as the group assembles in the
Institute of the National Institutes of some foot faulting with serving and clubhouse, then before the warm-up,
Health; Adjunct Professor of Medicine occasional confusion about keeping and during court changeovers on odd
at the Uniformed Services University the game’s score. Players are trim, with games. Conversation gets to the essence
of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, bags full of rackets, and often carry- of what is becoming more important as
Maryland; and Professor of Medicine, ing a cup of coffee or Gatorade; but a the years pass along. Individuals in the
Emeritus, at the Pennsylvania State closer look shows some with a wrist group are in academics, the professions,
University College of Medicine in support or a knee strap stabilizer. We and government leadership. There are
Hershey, Pennsylvania. are all older. The group, numbering seven other physicians, two of whom are
about twenty-three men and women, in clinical practice; two of us volunteer
has been together for almost a decade in free medical clinics.1 Thus, getting
with little turnover. Most play multiple advice or hearing opinions on a variety

14 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


of topics is an unexpected bonus pro- court, so he doesn’t have to move much? say, and how much to get involved, are
vided by the group. t )PXFWFS  B DPNQMBJOU NBZ TFFN the more difficult issues to consider. I
The interaction of our tennis group more urgent and force a decision. At a didn’t anticipate that medical questions
probably mirrors the dynamics found in court changeover, my opponent com- would be so intertwined with a sport-
other groups of collegial people doing mented, “My chest feels tight and I ing or social activity. Sometimes it is
something together. Our group might need to cough; I think I am wheezing.” difficult to refrain from offering advice
be similar to book discussion groups, “I’ve had a cold for a few days; should or comments on a suggested diagno-
investment clubs, bridge tables, musical I worry?” Ouch. For a pulmonologist TJT .PSFPWFS  UIF )JQQPDSBUJD 0BUI
ensembles, or just social friends. You familiar with dealing with upper respi- gives some assurance that getting too
may find yourself in one or a number ratory infections that might settle in the involved is not appropriate,3 but curbing
of these group situations. My inten- chest, perhaps this was all, and a few the impulse can be hard. What advice
tion is to stimulate reflection about the questions might clarify the symptoms. and experience might you share about
appropriate role for one with special The need for a direct ear auscultation this dilemma?
health care knowledge to assume in the on the chest wall, obviated by Laennec’s
group: Just listen? Say little or nothing? invention2 that I usually carry in my References
Give personal advice as appropriate? tennis bag for such a possibility but ï 3FZOPMET ): 'SFF NFEJDBM DMJOJDT
These are not our patients, so offering didn’t have then, seemed excessive. But helping indigent patients and dealing with
official medical advice is not the issue, the late sixth-decade age of my partner emerging health care needs. Acad Med
or shouldn’t be. made “let’s sit down awhile” seem the ; : –.
better option than resuming tennis play. ð 3FZOPMET):35)-BÑOOFD .%‰
Court medicine Fortunately, nothing untoward subse- Clinicopathologic observations, using the
As chatting is frequent, a spectrum quently happened. stethoscope, made chest medicine more
of health-related topics have been pre- scientific. Trans Am Clin Climatol Assoc
sented and some actual health issues Wrap up ; : –.
encountered, as a few examples briefly My example is a tennis group where ñ 4JNNPOT+()JQQPDSBUFT<Dòôoñõî
illustrate: friends get to know each other through B.C.]: Rational Medicine. In Doctors and
t (FOFSBM PGGUIFDVGG DPNNFOUT playing a sport, socializing while doing Discoveries: Lives That Created Today’s
may be made, such as “I worry about so, and develop a comfort for picking at .FEJDJOF#PTUPO)PVHIUPO.JGGMJOðîîð
the future health of my children and each other’s expertise in the context of a –.
grandchildren who tend to be gaining familiar environment. Candid questions
weight and don’t exercise enough.” can arise and unexpected circumstances The author’s address is:
t 0OFSBJTFTUIFUPQJDPGFMEFSMZQBS- develop; one’s medical opinion can be )FBUIFSUPO-BOF
ents with a recent significant health sought. Other readers can extrapolate Potomac, Maryland 20854
event. They may require relocation, this to similar groups you are involved E-mail: reynoldh@nhlbi.nih.gov
reluctantly, to a retirement complex. with where you develop an easy rap-
t "O FYQPTJUJPO PG B IFBMUI SFQPSU  port with other members. As part of a
which seems to be a rehearsal of a pre- broader message, there are two things
sentation for others, is bounced off you; to consider: First, physicians often get
my giving some technical explanation accustomed to and even enjoy a rather
about the kind of imaging study done, formal medical persona, as found in
and correcting pronunciation of several the academic or clinical practice of-
tests and parts of the procedure seems fice setting with the white coat, re-
appreciated. stricted accessibility, and salutatory
t 8JUI B UFOOJT QBSUOFS XIP IBT B “Doctor.” But playing a sport or engag-
knee meniscus tear and is awaiting ar- ing in a common activity helps strip
throscopic surgery, but still wants to hit away the veneer of formality, making
tennis and get some exercise, the situa- one more approachable. Second, in
tion becomes more immediate when I this informal atmosphere medical
see him favoring his leg and appearing questions or concerns may come
to limp a bit. Should I offer the advice forward more easily. It is a gratify-
“let’s stop and rest your knee and not ing feeling to be asked, but there
aggravate things,” or continue the tactic are obligations to consider. Beyond
of hitting balls down the middle of the empathy, how to respond, what to

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 15


A medical ear in the early morning tennis group

Commentary
First of all, congratulations to Dr. direct answer is avoided. In the very tend to span the panoply of chronic
Reynolds for being part of a long-term rare instance in which you believe disease and more: osteoarthritis,
tennis group where “players are trim” that harm is being done, or about to heart disease, cancer, hips, knees,
BOE iUIF UFOOJT JT RVJUF HPPEw )F JT be done, it might be wise to remark shoulders, headaches, and general
far ahead of my game. that: “I guess that if it were I with that aches and pains. Should my wife
The tennis, however, is just a problem I’d get another opinion.” continue with mammograms each
symbol for any group of friends who year? My memory is going down-
Charles M. Plotz, MD, MedScD
meet regularly and include several hill: should I be worried? What will
(AΩA, State University of New York,
physicians along with a majority of become of the younger generation?
Downstate Medical Center)
XFMMFEVDBUFE MBZ QFPQMF )PX CFTU 4PNFPOF‰* GPSHFU XIP‰BOTXFSFE
Professor Emeritus of Medicine,
to respond when medical questions that question, “They’ll grow up and
SUNY Downstate
arise? This can sometimes be a deli- start worrying about the younger
Brooklyn, New York
cate problem. generation.”)
Some time ago, in The Pharos, I I try to respond to each and every
longed for a return to the Doctors’ medical question (and a few planetary
Dining Room where physicians from matters) as helpfully as possible, al-
varying specialties could cross- I can evade questions ways with a caveat: “I don’t give advice
fertilize with speculative conversa- to anyone based on partial informa-
UJPO 4VNNFS ðîîõ  QQ ñôoñõ
 5IF without help; what I need tion. I will sometimes indicate what
Reynolds problem is quite different I would do if I were in your position.
since it involves predominantly lay is answers. More importantly, if this keeps both-
people in a non-professional environ- —John F. Kennedy ering you, see your primary physi-
ment. cian.” If it’s clearly a special problem, I
The problems Reynolds warns of don’t hesitate to name a doctor whom
are quite familiar to most physicians. The score is -, you’re changing I consider outstanding in that area.
Casually met lay people often ask sides and having a sip of water at My buddy with the prostate cancer
one’s specialty and then proceed to the net, and your tennis buddy says, had no symptoms, no palpable mass,
ask a question clearly personally re- i)FSC  * IBE B TMJHIUMZ FMFWBUFE 14"  and a normal bone scan. I went into
lated. Dermatologists in particular then a bunch of biopsies, and now, at some detail as to the options, the
are susceptible to the person in the the age of seventy-nine, they want to risk/benefit of each, age and prostate
next airplane seat rolling up a sleeve cut out my prostate. Whaddya think?” cancer, and the meaning of a PSA. I
and asking: “Doc, what do you think " WPUF PG UIBOLT UP )FSCFSU told him that if I were in his position,
this is?” (I myself insulate myself by Reynolds for articulating a question I would hold off on surgery, radia-
declaring myself a proctologist, thus that comes up every day across the tion therapy, and hormones, and en-
ending the questioning.) planet and evokes a different response joy his grandchildren, life in general,
It is almost always more prudent, from everyone who’s asked. and tennis in particular as central to
however, in a social situation such We have thirty-four fellows in maintaining his good spirits and good
as described here, to avoid anything our tennis group in Palo Alto, locally health. That was four years ago, and
which could be interpreted as specific known as the “Termites” because we he’s still hitting unreturnable drop
advice, positive or, worse, negative. used to play at Terman Park. The shots.
Always include the caveat that one median age is about seventy-eight,
)FSCFSU-"CSBNT .%
should rely on the opinion of one’s the range sixty-five to ninety. Each
(AΩA, State University of New York,
personal physician. of us plays two or three times a week
Downstate Medical Center, )
In Dr. Reynolds’s enviable tennis at  .
Professor Emeritus of Radiology,
club there are several other physi- The issues that arise cover the
Stanford University School of
cians, so it is easy to manage a diffi- future of the planet, the economy,
Medicine
cult question by passing it around and immigration, Afghanistan, and doz-
Palo Alto, California
creating enough multiplicity so that a ens of others. The medical questions

16 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Post%Chemo%Treat Home again after chemotherapy—
low white blood count
and anemia
mandate solitude
and no virus exposure,
so she curls up
in a mohair throw
on her American Sheraton sofa
and reads a favorite,
Henry James,
fortified
with a bowl of popcorn
and a glass
of chardonnay.
Henry Langhorne, MD

Dr. Langhorne (AΩA, Tulane Medical School, 1957) is in private practice in cardiology at Cardiology Consultants in Pensacola, Florida. His address is:
1910 Seville Drive, Pensacola, Florida 32503. E-mail: bardwhl@aol.com.
Wind
And so it has come to you too.
The winds of
death
brushed past your door;
scraped the
paint away.
Long shreds hang helplessly
Bare wood stares through
And I, who seek to
form my life
in the shape
of a shield
against the wind
I search for paint and brush
And find none.
Sharon Maas

Ms. Maas (AΩA, West Virginia University, 2009) is a


resident in Family Medicine at Albany Medical Center.
Her address is 7 Englewood Place, Albany, New York
12203. E-mail: sharonmaas@mailstack.com.

Illustration by Jim M’Guinness

The Pharos/Date 25
Echocardiogram
A caricatured performance reminiscent of an
old black and white movie
with an occasional Doppler rainbow
muscular walls thrusting with duty
valves fluttering like industrious butterflies.
Whoosh, whoosh, whoosh,
tricuspid I’m told, then pulmonic
followed by mitral and
lastly, the Grande Dame,
the aortic
like the mouth of a
puffer fish blowing human surf
without the ebb, just the flow.
Paul Rousseau, MD

Dr. Rousseau is associate professor of General Internal


Medicine and Geriatrics and medical director of the Palliative
and Supportive Care Program at the Medical University of
South Carolina. His address is: Medical University of South
Carolina, 135 Rutledge Tower, MSC 591, Charleston, South
Carolina 29425. E-mail: rousseau@musc.edu.

26 The Pharos/Date
One$simple$question$can$
change$the$world

George L. Spaeth, MD

The author (AΩA, Harvard Medical School, 1959) is the well-dressed woman, “What are you doing to make the world
Esposito Research Professor at the Wills Eye Institute and better?” Her response was one of stunned amazement. Why
professor of Ophthalmology at Jefferson Medical College. would I possibly ask that question? The issue seemed never to
have crossed her mind. There was no answer. She immediately

M
any patients in my practice today are elderly, a started describing her visual symptoms. For the rest of the day,
good proportion of them are comfortable from a I asked every patient the same question, interspersed among
financial point of view, and many live in retirement other routine parts of history, such as, “Are you having any
homes. The overwhelming majority previously had a produc- trouble using the eye drops?” “Do you think your visual ability
tive vocation. In response to a question that is a routine part is the same, better or worse than it was when I saw you last?”
of my history taking, specifically, “What are you doing with and other routine and expected questions. The query, “What
your time now?” the answer is almost always, “Nothing.” Many are you doing to make the world better?” was presented just as
feel bored, and almost none are involved in activities directed if it were a usual part of history taking.
toward the well-being of others. A few people were so dumbfounded that they simply
These individuals could be doing much that would help our ignored the question. Most were doing nothing that they
world’s needs. Other people have had a similar thought, as a thought was making the world better; they justified this by
result of which there are a variety of opportunities for “retired” detailing the difficulties they were having in just taking care of
individuals to be active in a constructive way. themselves. A small portion mentioned volunteer work such
Several months ago, I asked an eighty-five-year-old, vibrant, as being “active in my church,” but on further questioning this

Illustrations by Erica Aitken

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 27


One simple question can change the world

involved arranging flowers, counting the money in the collec-


tion boxes, cooking for the parish get-togethers, etc. Where to go to help
What was certain was that none of those thirty or so pa- change the world
tients that day were thinking beyond themselves.
I left that day discouraged. Here was a group of relatively Action Without Borders (www.idealist.org)
wealthy, intelligent, productive people who were for all practi- American Red Cross (www.redcross.org)
cal purposes essentially ignoring the current state of the world. America’s Promise—The Alliance for Youth
The hundreds of thousands of Iraqi citizens dying as a result (www.americaspromise.org)
of an ill-conceived and probably unnecessary war were just AmeriCorps (www.americorps.gov)
too far away to be of concern, the millions of abused woman Elderhostel (www.elderhostel.org)
too distant, the millions of undernourished, sick children with The Executive Service Corps (www.escus.org)
no reasonable hope for things getting better just too remote. Experience Corps (www.experiencecorps.org)
One month later, when at the same office, I saw several of the Generations United (www.gu.org)
patients again. One told me that, as a result of the question Habitat for Humanity (www.habitat.org)
I had asked, she had signed up to go work with Habitat for Mentor (www.mentoring.org)
Humanity in New Orleans. “It was the best week I have ever National Retiree Volunteer Coalition (www.nrvc.org)
spent,” she added. Another, Mrs. B told me that she had de- Peace Corps (www.peacecorps.gov)
cided to use extra land she had for a camp to which she would Points of Light Foundation & Volunteer Center
invite young Palestinian and Israeli boys and girls to come National Network (www.pointsoflight.org)
spend a month together in order to get to know each other. Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE)
Two out of thirty is a relatively low percentage, but much (www.score.org)
higher than zero. Senior Corps (www.seniorcorps.org)
Most of us who live in the United States consult a physi- United Way of America (www.unitedway.org)
cian at least once yearly. If all physicians asked, “What are USA Freedom Corps (www.usafreedomcorps.gov)
you doing to make the world better?” as a routine part of the Volunteer Match (www.volunteermatch.org)
examination, my hunch is that it would have a significant ef- Volunteers in Medicine (www.vimi.org)
fect on the patients, helping them to get past their fixation on Volunteers of America (www.volunteersofamerica.org)
themselves and their tiny surroundings. That in itself would
probably help them to become healthier, happier people.
Probably such a question would help broaden the physicians
and their staffs, as well. Additionally, the medical profession
would come to be perceived as a group of people sincerely
concerned about the well-being of the world, as well as their
individual patients.
Let’s all take that additional thirty seconds with each pa-
tient to ask, “What are you doing to make the world better?”

The author’s address is:


Wills Eye Institute/Jefferson Medical College
840 Walnut Street, Suite 1110
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107
E-mail: gspaeth@willseye.org

28 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Hearing In seventh grade my teacher said,
“If no man hears, there is no sound.”
What of the honking goose, the howling wolf?
Does human absence still their voices, make them mute?
How like ourselves to hear a world
defined by just our presence.
Yet goose and wolf speak for themselves,
about themselves, but with an aural modesty.
They cannot dictate that their sounds, their words,
are those that only merit hearing.
Somewhere an ancient elm falls dead.
Honor its demise. Grant that it too makes a sound.
Michael R. Milano, MD

Dr. Milano (AΩA, Albany Medical College, 1964) is a psychiatrist


living and practicing in Teaneck, New Jersey. His e-mail address is:
milanovinonos@aol.com.
Illustration by Erica Aitken

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 29


Poems by Linda Cantrell
I n my thirty-one-year career as a
pediatric hematologist/oncologist I
received many heartrending letters
and poems from patients and their
parents, but my greatest treasure
came from seven poems written in
the late s by a teenaged girl who
had acute leukemia from which she
later died. Seeing inside the mind of
a teen with a known fatal disease is a
rare and unusual gift. To be allowed
to share this is even more unique.
I have read enough in Pharos over
many years to know this is not your
usual source. Yet I guess I am search-
ing for a way not to lose this unusual
insight from a teen. Linda gave me
permission to use her poems before
she died, and her parents welcomed
the idea.
Richard Patterson, MD
(AΩA, Wake Forest University, )
Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Address reprint requests to:


Richard B. Patterson, MD
Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics
Department of Pediatrics
Wake Forest University School of Medicine
Medical Center Boulevard
Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157
Why Oh, God
Oh, God, why are you doing this to me? Those threats of people’s lives, please make no more.
I can’t handle it, can’t you see? I care too much for life to let it slip away.
You closed me out like a jammed door. Oh, God, I need you to comfort me, each and every day.
This thing you do, do it no more! Please, tell me the reason why.
A hospital room for a home? All life is important to me. I can’t sit and watch it go by.
Something about that is cruel and wrong. I don’t have all the answers to these awful things.
My friends, they’ll never look at me the same, You’ll never know how much sorrow and sadness they bring.
each day I live is like playing a game. I’ve got too many problems hanging over me.
Win or lose? Dreams and visions are all that I see.
What is for me? It says in the Bible you’re what we’re here for.
Win So think of us before you take any more.
or
lose . . .
The Prom
Fighting Don’t guess I’ll go to the prom this year.
Don’t think I can stand the glare.
Will there be another day? Tim says that this isn’t so.
To you, oh, God, that’s what I pray. But he’s one of a kind, you know.
To let me live and do my best, He says that they won’t care,
Tell me now, is that my test? and will love me just the same.
Or to try and make others see Pity is the word—not love.
how unimportant little trials can be. I wonder if that’s why he’s playing the
They don’t mean too much to me. dating game.
I’m fighting, just to be . . . After all, what will people say?
If he dumped my bald head and walked away.
No—think I’ll stay home.
Dreams Anyway I don’t feel all that strong.
Lord, give me a dream tonight. Think I’ll get him a date with Pam.
One my soul won’t have to fight. Tell him I don’t want him around.
About guys and cars and rings. So he won’t feel guilty when he walks away.
Any of those teenage things. Oh, God, give me a Prom someday!
Tonight, dear God, don’t make me scream.
Just a plain ole staying alive dream. Not Alone
If ever you should walk down the road alone, someday,
Hearts Break Know you are not that way, and nothing is wrong.
Mike’s passed away and Teddy’s gone. “ ’Cause you are not alone!”
This whole world has gone all wrong. You may not see me, but I am there by way of my love.
Parents’ hearts break and the children ache. Sincere, real and pure, as we felt the sensation of touch,
Up here Leukemia is just like a popular song. I am there!
You play it for a while, until you grow tired,
then you quit and tag along. I grew in my love, just as a flower, to full blossom!
Most don’t give in or die, they really, really do try. I may in the same way fade and not be there.
But it seems like everything goes wrong. But my love was as beautiful as the flower!
With their little bald heads and puffed out tummys. Wise thoughts I cannot give you, to continue alone.
Maybe with Jesus they’ll belong, You’re something special, chosen, you alone, chosen by me.
Me—I don’t know where I belong. Look beside you, darling, though I may not be there, I will
I’m just so tired of playing this song. never be gone.
Don’t let my memory make you blind to love you have
inside to give—the love that was mine.
The love that was good—so, darling,
Want to live!
Health policy
The editors invite original articles and letters to the ing address:  Middlefield Road, Suite , Menlo
editor for the Health Policy section, length  words Park, CA . E-mail submissions preferred. All es-
or fewer for articles,  words or fewer for letters. says are subject to review and editing by the editorial
Please send your essays to board of The Pharos.
info@alphaomegaalpha.org or to our regular mail-

Cost of a life
Resource allocation in the current health care environment
Benson Shih-Han Hsu, MD
The author is a fellow in Pediatric failure. Knowing the overall poor prog- than enough suffering.
Critical Care at the University of nosis of this condition, I wondered if his Although numerous ethics consul-
Wisconsin School of Medicine and continued medical care was appropri- tants discussed the futility of JR’s care,
Public Health. ate—not from a perspective of futility I wondered whether his treatment was
but from one of resource allocation. This a just use of our limited health care

JR
had trisomy , a chromo- was the question I battled as I took care resources—a topic that was rarely, or
somal disorder affecting three of him over the next several years. even peripherally, discussed. No one
in , births. Patients with To have any chance for survival, JR wanted to consider limiting care based
trisomy  possess a characteristic set of required repair of his cardiac defects. on an abstract view of scarce resources.
physical findings including small size, A  study in the American Journal JR had been admitted over fifteen times
clenched hands with overlapping fin- of Cardiology reported that most tri- to the wards as well as the neonatal and
gers, short sternum, prominent occiput, somy  patients undergoing cardiac pediatric intensive care units. He under-
low-set ears, micrognathia, and rocker repair averaged about four months old.3 went numerous operations and proce-
bottom feet. For the overall trisomy  JR was thus discharged home to grow dures. He received consultations from
population, a recent case series from until cardiac surgery was more likely to more than eight separate pediatric ser-
Japan showed fifty percent mortality be successful. Unfortunately, given his vices. He suffered countless infections and
within one month and less than ten per- heart failure and feeding difficulties, was mechanically ventilated on several
cent survival within one year.1 Cardiac he suffered multiple medical setbacks occasions. He spent most of his life in the
abnormalities are the primary source of over the following eighteen months, hospital and the cost of his care exceeded
morbidity and mortality.2 undergoing several operations including that of most hospitalized patients.
JR was born with significant congeni- gastric and duodenal tube placements, JR was a beautiful child who brought
tal heart disease. His cardiac anomalies central lines placements, and pulmo- happiness to his parents and family. He
included a PDA, an ASD and a VSD nary artery banding. His postoperative was aware of his environment, with-
with left to right shunting. Secondary to recovery was constantly fraught with drawing from pain, having vital sign
his cardiac lesions, he developed severe complications as he developed mul- changes with stress, and even occasion-
pulmonary hypertension. The already tiple infections and respiratory failure. ally smiling. At the same time, JR was
dismal prognosis for trisomy  became Despite the repeated setbacks, his par- one patient in a population of millions.
even worse once his cardiac anomalies ents maintained their resolve to not He had a dismal initial prognosis with
were diagnosed. Nevertheless, his par- limit his care. an incalculable but small chance for sur-
ents were clear that there be no limita- I continued to care for JR as I finished vival. Millions of dollars were spent on
tions on care. residency and began a fellowship in crit- his care. In treating patients like JR, are
I met JR within the first few ical care. When he reached eighteen we denying resources to others?
weeks of his life. I was a senior months, he was finally deemed medi- Health care economists try to quan-
resident on the wards when cally ready, and underwent the success- tify the best method for resource alloca-
I heard that a child with ful repair of his VSD and ASD. But after tion. Cost effectiveness analysis (CEA) is
trisomy  was to be over four weeks in pediatric intensive one of the most commonly used evalu-
admitted for failure care with multiple failed extubations, ations. CEA defines the quality adjusted
to thrive and con- his parents decided to withdraw care, life years (QALY) saved for a given cost
gestive heart convinced that he had endured more of intervention.4 For instance, to justify

32 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


a treatment costing  million that will thus had little immediate impact on the Tenth Edition. Springfield (MA): Merriam-
increase your life by ten years (at the care for others. Webster; .
presumed normal quality of life), a year After JR died, I felt comfortable in . Fry-Johnson YW, Daniels EC, Levine
of life must be worth at least ,. saying that his care was necessary. As R, et al. Being uninsured: impact on chil-
But how much is a year of life worth? In physicians, our duty to our individ- dren’s healthcare and health. Curr Opin
Great Britain, the National Institute for ual patients. Resource allocation and Pediatr ; : –.
Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) rationing will be debated for years to
has determined that the national health come as our society heads toward im- The author’s address is:
care system would not support any in- proving health care coverage for all. Department of Pediatrics
tervention costing more than , Until then, limiting care on arguments University of Wisconsin School of Med-
per one year of life.5 This decision has of allocation makes no sense, ethically icine and Public Health
led to cries of rationing. or economically. 600 Highland Avenue
Rationing is defined as “to distrib- H4/442 Clinical Science Center
ute equitably” by the Merriam-Webster References Madison, Wisconsin 53792
dictionary.6 Although many dispute that . Imataka G, Nitta A, Suzumura H, et bhsu@uwhealth.org
health care rationing occurs here in the al. Survival of trisomy  cases in Japan.
United States, Peter Singer noted in Genet Couns ; :
his  New York Times article that –.
“health care is a scarce resource, and all . Bay CA, Steele
scarce resources are rationed in one way MW. Genetic Disorders
or another.” 5 Rationing in the United and Dysmorphic Condi-
States is not based on public policy as tions. In: Zitelli BJ, Davis
it is in countries such as Great Britain; HW, editors. Atlas of
instead, our rationing is based on the Pediatric Physical Diag-
ability to pay. As Dr. Singer points out, nosis. Fourth Edition.
rationing in the United States is hidden. Philadelphia: Mosby;
With our substantial uninsured popu- : –.

Adwoa
lation, rationing is based on who has . Graham EM, Brad-
insurance and who does not. Instead of ley SM, Shirali GS, et al.
determining what appropriate care is, Effectiveness of cardiac
we have created a class of uninsured cit- surgery in trisomies 
izens who generally do not receive any and  (from the Pedi-
type of health care outside of emergency atric Cardiac Care Con- (Born on a Monday in Ghana)
care.5 This leads to well-documented sortium). Am J Cardiol
Golden apples on a dress two sizes too big,
declines in overall health outcomes.7 ; : –.
Adwoa picks at her scab(ie)s.
JR was born in the United States, . Griebsch I, Coast
An illiterate girl
which lacks a nationalized health care J, Brown J. Quality-
An inaudible voice
system, so considerations of cost were adjusted life-years lack
Without currency to live in her bankrupt country.
not addressed in his treatment. I won- quality in pediatric care:
Like a doll that was left in the rain,
dered what would have happened if he a critical review of pub-
A drab child‘s toy—a troll
had not had virtually unlimited health lished cost-utility studies
with a round belly but no rhinestone gem
care. Would others have benefited? in child health. Pediatrics
in the center to wish on, just a fleshy pink diamond
Would the money and resources have ; : e–.
under the frayed edge of apples
been used to save another child who . Singer P. Why
from which children will ripen and fall
lacked care? We Must Ration Health
and return
Nationalized health care systems al- Care. New York Times
to the red dirt from which they came.
locate resources by determining what  Jul . www.ny-
is appropriate before treatment starts, times.com//// Julia Geynisman
allowing equitable distribution of re- magazine/healthcare-t.
sources. In the United States, restricting html. Accessed July , Ms. Geynisman is a third-year medical student at the University of
Michigan. Her address is: 1607 South University Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan
treatment for one does not necessarily .
48104. E-mail: jgeynis@med.umich.edu.
lead to the gain of another. The re- . Merriam-Webster’s Photo courtesy of the author.
sources spent or not spent on JR’s care Collegiate Dictionary.

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 33


The physician at the movies
Peter E. Dans, MD
Extraordinary Measures either lacked or were deficient in the enzyme acid alpha-
Starring Harrison Ford, Brendan Fraser, Keri Russell, and glucosidase (GAA), which breaks down glycogen. As a result,
Meredith Droeger. glycogen builds up in muscles, the liver, heart, and other
Directed by Tom Vaughan. Rated PG. Running time 106 min- organs, leading to progressive weakness, and respiratory and
utes. other systemic disorders. Dr. Rochelle Hirschhorn, a profes-
sor of medicine at NYU, published a description of a portion

B ased on Geeta Anand’s book The Cure1 and said to be “in-


spired by true events,” this film takes considerable license
with the story of John Crowley (Brendan Fraser), who quit a
of the genome in . Two years later, Dutch researcher Dr.
Arnold Reuser described the rest of the genome.1p26 Efforts to
produce a suitable replacement enzyme that could be tolerated
high-paying job at Bristol-Myers Squibb to join a biotech com- by patients and penetrate the target cells proved elusive.
pany aimed at finding a cure for Pompe disease. This takes us to , when Crowley’s story begins. The
A form of muscular dystrophy, Pompe disease affects film opens at the eighth birthday party of Megan Crowley
about , to , children and adults worldwide. It was (Meredith Droeger), one of two of Crowley’s children who has
discovered in  by J. C. Pompe, a Dutch pathologist who the disease. Haunted by the fact that the usual life expectancy
autopsied a seven-month-old child who died of heart is nine, Crowley is unwilling to heed the doctor’s advice that
disease and found the heart muscles to be filled with he and his wife Aileen (Keri Russell), in the absence of a cure,
glycogen.1p26 Pompe joined the Dutch Resistance at should take the children home and enjoy them, and regard
the outset of World War II, and when the Nazis death as a blessing. In real life, the afflicted children were fif-
found a secret radio transmitter in his lab, teen months and seventeen days old when Crowley, a devotee
they arrested and executed him. of Churchill, vowed never to quit in his search for a cure. He
The next breakthrough was by began a journey of almost five years to get his children a pos-
Belgian scientist Henri Hers, who sibly effective therapy.
in  discovered that patients Crowley, a hard-driving graduate of Georgetown’s School

Keri Russell and Diego Velazquez in Extraordinary Measures.


CBS Films/Photofest.

34 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Zymogen now has four pro-
totype enzymes to test head-
to-head in what is dubbed the
“Mother of all experiments,”
consisting of  experiments
over two months with the iden-
tities of the candidate enzymes
blinded.1pp257–58 When one clear
winner surfaces (not the one
Crowley touted), it is decided
that only one will go on to hu-
man trials. Because the prod-
uct is in short supply, the initial
study will involve only infants,
excluding Crowley’s children,
Brendan Fraser and Harrison Ford in Extraordinary Measures.
CBS Films/Photofest.
who are too old. Crowley first
tries to steal enzyme (actually he
of Foreign Service, Notre Dame’s law school, and Harvard thought about it but didn’t try it because of the obvious lo-
Business School, with one year at the Naval Academy, 1p8 gistical and medical problems).1pp270–71 Then he works out a
tracks down Dr. Robert Stonehill (Harrison Ford) a reclusive sibling study with Portland Rose Hospital (actually Children’s
PhD studying the disease in Nebraska. Stonehill is portrayed Hospital of Philadelphia1p279 and later the University of Florida
as an irascible, eccentric, cocksure, workaholic with two ex- Hospital1pp285–86) but both are nixed because of nepotism
wives. (“Because I’m so easy to get along with.”) Over dinner, and a conflict of interest given that Crowley is a company
Stonehill explains that attempts to infuse the missing enzyme executive. Finally Stonehill suggests a compromise involving
have been ineffective because it doesn’t get into the cell. When Crowley’s being terminated by the company and the study
asked to help find a cure, Stonehill says that he is just an proceeds at Portland Rose Hospital (actually at St. Peter’s
academic at the University of Nebraska, which pays a football University Hospital in New Jersey under the auspices of Dr.
coach more than what his lab costs for a year. Finally, he agrees Debra-Lynn Day-Salvatore on January , ).1pp301–302
to work with Crowley if he comes up with half a million dol- The film is worth seeing primarily for the acting, especially
lars, and then goes off bass fishing. Crowley meets with other of young Megan, who is as spunky in the movie as in real life.
Pompe families, challenging them by saying, “Do we accept It is full of scientific jargon, formulas on blackboards, and
our fate and listen to these well-meaning doctors?” Still, he is PowerPoint presentations, presumably because the director
only able to raise about ,, but Stonehill agrees to work wanted to be sure “that the scientists acted in a way that would
with him because he’s “tired of begging bread crumbs from the be realistic to real scientists.” I’ll let you judge whether he suc-
university while they keep my patents.” He says, “I can’t cure ceeded; whatever the case, Ford’s over-the-top portrayal of
your kids but I can sure make their lives better.” a scientist is entertaining. His performance joins the rogue’s
Crowley and Stonehill form a love-hate partnership and gallery of arrogant and abrasive cinematic scientists, including
establish biotech company Priazyme (actually Novazyme), such gems as when he refuses to cash the large buy-out check
even though Crowley is cautioned that nine out of ten such until the experiments succeed, saying, “I don’t care about
ventures fail. When Crowley sees Stonehill’s college-aged money. I’m a scientist. I care about more important things.”
lab assistants, he worries that no venture capitalist will take Or when, after another outburst, he walks out of an investor
them seriously. Stonehill responds, “Scientists get all sensible meeting, telling Crowley, “Nobody is going to tell me how to
and careful when they get old. Young ones like risk and are run my lab. I’m a scientist!”
not afraid of new ideas, and you can pay them less.” There As I noted, the film is highly fictionalized, so the major rea-
are some harrowing setbacks such as when the electricity son I’m glad I saw it was that it led me to read the book, which
goes out in the lab during a storm and they must scramble to is a very interesting and readable chronicle of the business side
get a backup generator to save the precious enzyme. Finally, of drug development, replete with biotech companies, venture
Crowley, without Stonehill’s knowledge, makes a deal with capitalists, Harvard MBAs, and an orchestrated buyout, as well
Eric Loring (Patrick Bauchau), an investor whom Stonehill had as competing patient support groups and the pressures by des-
alienated, to sell Priazyme to a larger company, Zymogen (ac- perate parents trying to get life-saving drugs for their afflicted
tually Genzyme). The company gets a cash infusion and avoids children. In fact Crowley had to watch while precious enzyme
bankruptcy, while making millions for Stonehill, Crowley, and was sent to Italy and Spain after government-to-government
the venture capitalists who had invested in the company. involvement, before his kids could be treated.1pp270–71

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 35


The physician at the movies

Besides the wrong age of the children, the actual scientist Oklahoman  Jan . blog.newsok.com/okccentral////
Dr. William Canfield was a physician at the University of extraordinary-measures-takes-extraordinary-measures-to-rob-okc-
Oklahoma, not the University of Nebraska, which has every of-credit-for-scientific-breakthrough/?searched=extraordinary
right to be upset at the cheap shots taken by the filmmak- measures&custom_click=search.
ers. Whether they are or not, Oklahomans certainly resented
the way Canfield was fictionalized but Crowley was not, and The Hurt Locker
Oklahoma City and its pioneering lab were airbrushed out,
Starring Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie, and Brian Geraghty.
along with Canfield. Although described as being “surly” or
Directed by Kathryn Bigelow. Rated R. Running time 130 min-
“shy and quirky” at times, Canfield appears to be nothing
utes.
like the arrogant cinematic portrayal.2,3 If anything, it was
Crowley who was consistently described as arrogant, irascible,
and peremptory, much of which was excused because of his
concern about his children. Actually, it was Canfield who
T he film opens in Baghdad in , the worst period of the
Iraq war when improvised explosive devices (IEDs) were
the predominant means of killing American soldiers. The title
founded Novazyme in Oklahoma City and hired Crowley as comes from the expression for being injured and being sent
its CEO. Independently, Genzyme developed Myozyme (called to the “hurt locker.” The screenwriter (Mark Boal) draws on
“special medicine” in the film) and the two other prototypes in his six-week experience as an embedded journalist with an
collaboration with Dr. Y. T. Chen at Duke University1p27 and
Dr. Reuser at Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands.2
Jeremy Renner in the
Although unfavorably portrayed in the film, it was the medi-
Hurt Locker.
cal director at Genzyme, Dr. Hal Landy, who came up with CBS Films/Photofest.
the sibling study, not Crowley or Canfield.1p272 In addition,
Genzyme let Crowley retire with a generous severance pack-
age, including coverage of  million in medical expenses
to supplement COBRA and what Bristol-Myers Squibb had
provided.1p301 All in all, not only did Crowley become wealthy
but he was treated very well by his employers, who hardly fit
the stereotype of ruthless capitalists.
Finally, the book gives a much more balanced picture of the
effects of this devastating illness on the family, especially the
older sibling and the mother who, in my opinion, is the real
heroine. She tolerated her husband’s behavior, which at one
point almost led to divorce, while being the primary caregiver
for two children on respirators, often with inadequate help un-
til a saintly woman named Sharon Dozier became almost part
of the family. Usually I agree that the deleted scenes provided
as extras on DVDs should have been deleted, but in this case
I do not, because they show the tough times and frustration
that the family suffered through and their inclusion would
have provided a realistic counterbalance to the heroic portrait
of Crowley and the “feel-good” storyline. Still, Nina Raben, an
NIH doctor who grew up in the former Soviet Union, summa-
rized the story best: “This is a very American story. It’s about
hope, it’s about will power, it’s about money, it’s about a belief
in happy endings.” 1p321

References
. Anand, Geeta. The Cure: How a Father Raised  Million
and Bucked the Medical Establishment in a Quest to Save His Chil-
dren. New York: HarperCollins; .
. Genzyme website: Myozyme Product Information. www.gen-
zyme.com/pompemovie/.
. Lackmeyer Steve. Extraordinary Measures takes extraordinary
measures to rob OKC of credit for scientific breakthrough. The

36 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


explosive ordnance disposal company (EOD). The film follows when the bomb went off prematurely. He goes off the base
three EOD technicians who have thirty-eight days left in their at night into the heart of Baghdad to find the boy’s relatives
rotation, as the filmmakers countdown each of the days. and barely escapes with his life. This scene is so improbable
When a radio-controlled roadside bomb is detonated, that it detracts from the film. Later, James is shown with his
killing the unit’s leader, Staff Sgt. Matthew Thompson (Guy wife and their young son, trying to be a father. He tells his
Pearce), the screenwriter plays off the Army recruiting slogan, son, “You love playing with all your stuffed animals. You love
“Be all you can be in the Army,“ adding, “what if all you can your mommy and daddy. You love your pajamas. You love ev-
be is dead on the side of an Iraqi road?” The film conveys the erything, don’t you? You know what, Buddy, as you get older,
differing rhythms of the war, where conditions can turn from some of the things you love might not seem so special any
calm to chaotic without warning. It also portrays the stress of more like your Jack-in-the-Box. Maybe you’ll realize it is just
having to cope with sandstorms, torrid temperatures exacer- a piece of tin with a stuffed animal inside. And the older you
bated by the need to carry heavy equipment, and especially get, the fewer things you really love, and by the time you get
the difficulty in identifying enemies when every minute may to my age maybe it’s only one or two things. With me, I think
possibly be one’s last. it’s one.” This attempt to humanize James while having him
The major character is an intrepid EOD technician Sgt. confess that it’s war that he loves seems a little forced.
First Class William James (Jeremy Renner), who has defused The only medical aspect of the film is the portrayal of a
 bombs. Under his bed he keeps a box of parts from bombs doctor, Major John Cambridge (Christian Camargo), who
that nearly killed him as he was dismantling them. James is decides to go on a mission with the technicians. When asked
engaged in a running conflict with Sgt. J. T. Sanborn (Anthony why, he says that going to war is a once-in-a-lifetime experi-
Mackie), who insists on doing things by the book. The ence and can be fun. He also says that it will help him better
third member of the team, Specialist Owen Eldridge (Brian understand people like Sgt. Eldridge whom he is counseling. It
Geraghty), is a rookie who is not only introspective but not turns out that he is also very naive and when he insists on talk-
afraid to say he is scared. He has never killed an enemy and is ing to a bunch of Iraqis rather than getting into the Humvee,
put to the test when faced with that choice. As Iraqis silently he is blown up.
watch, Sgt. James dons his elaborate equipment and walks The film was nominated for nine Academy Awards and
down the street towards a suspected bomb vehicle. By creating won for best original screenplay, best sound editing, best
an archetypical High Noon moment, the director successfully sound mixing, best film editing, best film, and best director.
puts the viewer in his shoes and transfers the tension. The latter was particularly noteworthy in that Bigelow was
While defusing the bomb, James takes off the headset that the first woman to win an Oscar for directing. An interesting
connects him with his mates in the Humvee so he can ignore bit of intrigue played out on Oscar night in that she is the ex-
any warnings to abort the mission. On his return to the vehicle wife of director James Cameron, who was pitted against her
after successfully defusing the bomb, Sanborn chews him out in both categories for Avatar, which was an enormous box
for being a “hot dog.” When commanding officer Colonel Reed office success, whereas Hurt Locker was the lowest grossing
(David Morse) later asks him what’s the best way to disarm a best picture ever.
bomb, James answers “The way you don’t die”. The Colonel Bigelow chose well in casting three unknown actors in the
admiringly responds, “Spoken like a wild man. That’s good.” pivotal roles. This allowed the viewer to focus on the story
This fits what the screenwriter intends to convey at the film’s rather than on a celebrity like a Clooney, a Cruise, or a Gibson.
beginning, using a quotation from Chris Hedges’s  book, There were two better known actors in minor roles: David
War Is a Force that Gives Us Meaning: “The rush of battle is Morse and Ralph Fiennes. The latter gives a rather uncon-
a potent and often lethal addiction, for war is a drug.” While vincing performance as the head of a private British company
perhaps partially true, some knowledgeable EOD veterans probably patterned on Blackwater. The film also benefited
have criticized the portrayal of the EOD technician as being from Bigelow’s insistence on filming in Jordan (in some cases
rather cavalier and unrepresentative. only a few miles from the Iraq border), where she could use
James’s personal life is as chaotic as his military life. He many Iraqi refugees as extras. The climatic conditions further
talks about having gotten a girl pregnant back home and mar- enhanced the film’s authenticity, especially since Bigelow did
rying and then divorcing her, at least he thinks he divorced the location shots without air-conditioned trailers or private
her, although she is still living in the house. He’s asked how bathrooms, keeping everyone uncomfortably in character.
he takes the risks. He admits that every time he goes out he Although the film got many awards, it was not immune to
rolls the dice, but can’t explain why. His softer side is shown criticism. Many veterans liked the film but some cited inac-
in two scenes with young boys. James takes a liking to a boy curacies. They were best expressed by Jonathan Foreman,
who sells black market CDs and is so enamored of soccer that who was embedded with the troops for six weeks in  and
he calls himself Beckham (Christopher Sayegh). Later James .3 He believed that The Hurt Locker was the best film yet
comes to believe that the boy is a suicide bomber who died made about post-/ wars and praised many of the things

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 37


The physician at the movies

of anarchists planting bombs in New


York City, which led to the forma-
tion of the New York Police bomb
squad in . This includes the
bombing on Wall Street protesting
the Sacco-Vanzetti verdict, which
killed and injured many; the plant-
ing of a bomb in the British Pavilion
at the  New York World’s Fair,
where two bomb squad members
were killed; the New Year’s Eve 
bombing by the Puerto Rican ter-
rorist group FALN, which led to the
serious maiming of two detectives
whose interviews are particularly
poignant; and the  World Trade
Tower bombing,
An ex-IRA bomber discusses
what led him to plant bombs and
why he tried to warn authorities,
whereas other bombers were less
concerned with the deaths of inno-
cent people. EOD veterans discuss
Jeremy Renner in the Hurt Locker.
CBS Films/Photofest.
the mentality of those who take on
this risky job. One says, “We don’t want
to say we’re in it for the adrenaline rush
that the filmmakers got right despite a low budget. However, but that plays into it.” Another says that the typical EOD tech
he noted that: is not “living on the edge” because you have to keep your com-
. You’d never see a single Humvee driving around Baghdad posure. He added that there were “no experts, no one knows
or into the desert. it all, and if you ever get to that point, you’re dangerous.” The
. The idea of a soldier running around town at night in a good news is that they now have dogs and robots to try to
sweatshirt and finding his way through the unmarked streets expedite detection and defusing of bombs, minimizing the
of a neighborhood he doesn’t know was impossible. possibility of loss of life of the technician. There’s also a joint
. The whole sniper scene with the British mercenaries Army/FBI Hazardous Devices school in Huntsville, Alabama,
was absurd. that works with police departments. In short, I recommend
. No EOD team would be left alone in the school or an ex- the film and also encourage those interested in the subject to
plosion site, which happens during the film a number of times. check out Danger UXB.
. The noncommissioned officers in the film would have
had to answer to officers they would meet with regularly and References
not be allowed to act as Lone Rangers. . Internet Movie Database web site. The Hurt Locker. www.
The film reminded me of the excellent  television imdb.com/title/tt/.
series starring Anthony Andrews called Danger UXB. Set . Hedges C. War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning. New York:
in London during the Blitz, it follows bomb squad members Random House; .
whose job was to dig up and disarm unexploded bombs . Foreman J. The Corner: An Oscar Encounter. National Review
(UXB). It shows how little the people knew at the time about Online.  Mar . corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=YzlhMjgO
defusing bombs and how scant was their training and thus GEzNMYjANjhjNmQyNDRhYTgYmIMDM=.
how many got killed. The DVD set has a fascinating bonus
History Channel documentary entitled “Bomb Squad.” The Dr. Dans (AΩA, Columbia University College of Physicians and
narrator points out that there are an average of  bombs per Surgeons, 1960) is a member of The Pharos’s editorial board and
year in the United States. The most famous of them were at has been its film critic since 1990. His address is:
Columbine High School where the bombers who killed them- 11 Hickory Hill Road
selves hid about sixty-five bombs that had to be retrieved, Cockeysville, Maryland 21030
with one person killed in the process. They trace the history E-mail: pdans@comcast.net

38 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Reviews and reflections
David A. Bennahum, MD, and Jack Coulehan, MD, Book Review Editors

this experience, he concludes, “Suddenly, The American whose action killed the
I find all my wounds are turning into peasant’s son would survive.
blessings.” This inversion of categories In another place, Clary writes about
is not an exotic, one-off event for Clary, taking care of patients from earthquake-
but a new way of looking at the world. prone and war-torn El Salvador.
It’s a perspective in which events in
the poet’s life, carefully observed and They say war is another kind of
described, suddenly reveal deeper mean- earthquake, worse,
ings that can only be expressed by meta- The real earthquake, the one that has
phor or paradox. For example, in “Days lasted years.p66
I Don’t Remember,” Clary reflects, “And
all my roads are turning into rivers.” p27 This earthquake can reach into your
Or, in “Meditation on the Pays d’Oc,” own home,
he observes, “Instead of dying, I cough
Dying for Beginners
up a butterfly, watch it/dry its wings in Bind your son with wire in front of you,
Patrick Clary the sun.” p74 Or the essential quietism of cut off
Lost Borders Press, Big Pine, California “That silence moving through our lives His genitals and stuff the organs into
2006, 86 pages was me” (“The Translator”).p33 his mouth.p66
The poet learned his first lessons in
Reviewed by Jack Coulehan, MD
dying during the Vietnam War, in which The Vietnamese peasant had lost one
(AΩA, University of Pittsburgh, 1969)
he served as a medic with U.S. infantry of his hands in the explosion. In a dif-
units. During “Orientation at Bien Hoa,” ferent poem (“Three Variations”), Clary

W hen a palliative care physician


publishes a book of poems en-
titled Dying for Beginners, you’d think
he discovers,

Yes, gentlemen
calls to mind his own hands

. . . square,
most of the poetry would focus on his This little war here Filled with themselves, professionally
clinical experience in the hospital and Exists only Tender on demand, but still uneasy
hospice. Vignettes of patients and their For one reason: At your easy tenderness.p35
families, for example, or didactic po- To give you all the pleasure
ems about the value of palliative care. You can handle.p10 The words “professionally tender on
After all, the title suggests a handbook demand” evoke his work in palliative
of sorts. Nonetheless, the reader soon He is also taught how easy it is to kill medicine, although the same words
discovers that Patrick Clary’s Dying for with an M rifle, which can could—and should—apply to medical
Beginners is actually a collection of vi- practice in general. But Clary recognizes
brant poems about life and living, about Put eighteen holes in that the human capacity for compassion
family, friends, music, loss, war, and Whatever you point it at is not inexhaustible. There will always be
love. The book’s title is more evocative Inside of two seconds.p11 a tension between the work that needs
than it initially appears, for it conveys to be done (“another pair of hands in the
the countercultural insight that dying Meanwhile, the human tragedy of emergency room” p63) and our limited
is an essential part of living. We only Vietnam takes place all around him. For reserves of kindness and empathy.
become fully human by coming to grips example, Vo Vanh Thom, a Vietnamese “Five Tasks Taught by Hospice
with our own mortality. Our engage- peasant whose son died in an explosion Nurses” pp72–73 is among the most mov-
ment with mortality emerges from love set off by a careless American soldier ing poems on love and death I’ve ever
and humor, as well as from pain and loss. who threw a match into the “firebase read. Dedicated to the poet’s brother
This is a lifelong project. Patrick Clary’s dump,” observes two bodies being who died in an accident, the poem con-
poems speak to what he has discovered loaded onto a Chinook helicopter: sists of five sections, each expressing
about himself, as a beginner to his one of the tasks of “successful” dying: say
fellow beginners. Though now they lay on the floor goodbye, express forgiveness, request
Clary’s route to discov- Of the gray Chinook together, forgiveness, affirm affection, and express
ery traverses Death Valley, The man with the match would be gratitude. In this case, Clary performs
where he undertakes a alive in each task in turn, as he reflects on inci-
retreat and vision America tomorrow, my child dead in dents in his and his brother’s lives. The
quest. In an open- Da Lat. p15 poem speaks with clarity, dignity, and
ing poem about compassion. True to the central theme

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 39


Reviews and reflections

of Dying for Beginners, Clary affirms that tion of observing the mind in action.
forgiveness, affection, and gratitude are His “you must go on, I can’t go on,
tasks for the living, as well as the dying. you must go on, I’ll go on,” under-
He concludes, scores the paradoxical and philo-
sophically irresolvable relationship
Now I see: living is a kind of slow between thought and biology.p106
burning,
And love is what we salvage from the Finally, Burton contends that,
fire. p73
A stance of absolute certainty that
I can think of no better way to end precludes consideration of alterna-
this review than to quote a section of the most enjoyable and informative nonfic- tive opinions has always struck me
book’s eponymous poem, which refers to tion I’ve read in several years. It’s enjoyable as fundamentally wrong.pxiii
a chaplain’s visits to a dying patient: because the writing smoothly integrates
personal narrative, historical reference, These personal revelations, and the data
The engineer with end-stage cancer and anecdotes from literature and pop presented in On Being Certain, suggest
lived for their visits, culture, along with hard data from clinical that human beliefs span a bell-shaped
not only meandering with the chaplain medicine and laboratory studies; informa- curve with aggressive conviction on one
through memories— tive because it sheds light on the enor- end and dysfunctional ambiguity on the
his loving marriage, work well done, mous subjectivity with which we come to other. However, in his enthusiasm for
well-educated children— our opinions and decisions. As an example Godot, Burton seems to overlook the
he prized the weekly chance to scoff at of the latter, in a discussion of the role paralyzing stasis that the play also por-
angels and any possibility of heaven. of DNA and its influence on the way we trays.
His last word? “Wow!”p78 think about religion, Burton, comments on In the preface, Burton states his goals
his own “idiosyncratic world-view” p105 and in writing the book: () “I have set out to
Dr. Coulehan is a Book Review Editor for his “overwhelming existential bent.” p105 provide a scientific basis for challenging
The Pharos and a member of the journal’s He uses a personal experience from high our belief in certainty,” pxiv () “My goal is
editorial board. His address is: school to illustrate his belief that his mind to strip away the power of certainty by
Center for Medical Humanities, Com- is “programmed” to shun black and white exposing its involuntary roots,” pxiv and
passionate Care, and Bioethics answers for the most difficult questions. () “To dispel the myth that we ‘know
HSC L3-080 As a high school student, Burton what we know’ by conscious deliberation
State University of New York at Stony worked as an usher in a San Francisco .  .  . [by showing] how the brain creates
Brook theater that featured Samuel Beckett’s the involuntary sensation of ‘knowing’
Stony Brook, New York 11794-8335 Waiting for Godot, a play depicting the and how this sensation is affected by
E-mail: jcoulehan@notes.cc.sunysb.edu meaninglessness of man’s existence. everything from genetic predispositions
Burton writes of that purely accidental to perceptual illusions common to all
exposure, bodily sensations.” pxiii In other words
Burton is convinced that certainty (or
On Being Certain: Believing
I left the theater stunned. The res- the need for certainty) is a serious deter-
You Are Right Even When
onance was unnerving, as though rent to problem solving
You’re Not
Beckett had slipped inside my In two interesting chapters (“Neural
Robert A. Burton head and written what I hadn’t yet Network s and Modularity ” and
St. Martin’s Press, New York, 2008, 223 thought. Yes, this is how the world “Emergence”), Burton builds the foun-
pages is. The pleasure was profound and dation for a deeper understanding of
comforting, as though I’d discovered the individual neuron and its triggering
Reviewed by John L. Wright, MD
a kindred spirit.p106 impact on the vast neural network, such
(AΩA, Hahnemann Medical College,
that sensory input eventually emerges
1956)
And here again he writes seamlessly into the conscious mind. In
discussing the neural network, he uses

O n Being Certain by Robert A. Burton,


MD, former chief of Neurology at
Mt. Zion-UCSF Hospital and author of
After fifty years my admiration per-
sists. More than any other artist (or
neuroscientist), Beckett has captured
the term “hidden layer,” partly I sus-
pect to avoid the baggage carried by
such terms as “unconscious” and “sub-
three acclaimed works of fiction, is the the wondrous and amusing frustra- conscious.” He illustrates the “hidden

40 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


layer” with an in-depth discussion of plaud this conclusion, being grateful for
how amazon.com manages to digest a having come to that experience myself.
consumer’s book purchases for the pur- Yet, doesn’t this bring us back to the
pose of building a roving user-profile beginning? Think of the anxiety or re-
that is fed back to the consumer sug- pulsion a reader who insists on absolut-
gesting similar books. What becomes ism might experience in being pushed
clear is that every sensory experience toward uncertainty. After all, much of
is registered and evaluated in the “hid- what is going on in the “hidden layer”
den layer.” Depending on its strength (mostly the primitive areas of the brain)
and relationships, the input provokes an has to do, it seems to me, with survival,
appropriate response, either as thought triggering the fight-or-flight reaction to
leading to action, or as cataloging for surprise or stress. What are the chances, logical miracles. Yet despite our great
future reference. However, he doesn’t then, that this brilliantly argued trea- achievements, we often fail to connect
discuss yet another function that the tise will change the orientation of indi- with our patients. What is going on?
“hidden layer” must also have, i.e., pro- viduals deep in the certainty region of How did we reach this point?
tection from the disabling chaos that the certainty/ambiguity curve? Burton Stanley Joel Reiser clarifies it all. He
would otherwise result from a flood of writes, “The more committed we are to a begins with Laennec and his invention
useless or inert stimuli. belief, the harder it is to relinquish, even of a stethoscope, a wooden peg with a
What follows logically from Burton’s in the face of overwhelming contradic- longitudinal hole. Reiser notes that:
analysis of the “hidden layer” is a re-eval- tory evidence,” p12 and further, “once es-
uation of the question of free will versus tablished, emotional habits and patterns respect for female modesty and
determinism. While Samuel Johnson’s and expectations of behavioral rewards bodily privacy required male medi-
statement, as reported by James Boswell, are difficult to fully eradicate.” p97 cal attendants to refrain from modes
that “All theory is against the freedom Finally, as if recognizing the difficulty of examination that trespassed on
of the will; all experience is for it” () in effecting a full conversion, Burton these mores. Because of this prob-
continues to be the default opinion, I’ve merely hopes that people will come to lem, Laennec rejected the use of
never read anything that raises the stakes the point of saying, “I believe this or auscultation on the patient he was
in favor of determinism more than does that is right” rather than “I know it is examining.
On Being Certain. In the penultimate right.” A rather weak response for such [But] .  .  . he recalled .  .  . a well
chapter, Burton summarizes much of a strong book. But perhaps that’s all we known fact of acoustics, sounds
what he has presented earlier, conclud- can hope for. grow louder when they pass through
ing that, “the free will–determinist de- solid bodies. . .p5
bate is limited by its own biological Dr. Wright is clinical professor emeritus of
constraints.” p214 Medicine at the University of Washington. After rolling up some papers he later
Along the way, Burton reveals, where He is a published poet. His address is: recalled:
possible, the genetic components and P.O. Box 761
biochemical and neurological pathways Edmonds, Washington 98020 being “not a little surprised and
that underpin an array of clinical syn- E-mail: jlwrig@comcast.net pleased, to find that I could thereby
dromes as a way of validating his conten- perceive the actions of the heart
tion that feelings of conviction, knowing, in a manner much more clear and
and correctness have deep neurolog- distinct than .  .  . by the immediate
Technological Medicine: The
ical roots. Among the syndromes he application of the ear.” p5
Changing World of Doctors
discusses are blindsight, Cotard’s syn-
and Patients
drome, addiction, mystic states and reli- The wooden peg came shortly after.
gious experience, obsessive-compulsive Stanley Joel Reiser Being able to learn the condition
disorders, cognitive dissonance, placebo Cambridge University Press, New York, of the human interior without having
effect, and déjà vu. 2009. 203 pages plus references. to listen to the patient’s story, being
At the end of the preface, Burton able to ask the patient to remain silent
Reviewed by Frederic W. Platt, MD
gives another reason for writing this while the truth was divined, was a boon
book. He states, “The sense of inner to physicians. Not only could they lis-
quiet born of acknowledging my limita-
tions has been extraordinary; I would
like to share this with you.” pxiv I ap-
I n the United States, we have the most
advanced medicine in history. We are
technological wizards wielding techno-
ten to those clicks and murmurs, those
wheezes, crackles, and bronchial breath
sounds, but they could put the patient’s

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 41


Reviews and reflections

story on the back burner. Physicians The linkage of the external en- to relate to that person. And here’s the
could get closer to their key question vironment to health and illness is rub. If we don’t realize that we are doc-
and its key answer: where is the disease? innovatively, wisely, and elegantly tors for living persons, not injured joints
For the first time in history physicians portrayed in the Hippocratic work and ears, our patients may stop listen-
could learn something that the patient Airs, Waters, Places. It advised phy- ing to us, fail to follow our suggestions,
could not know. Not only would the sicians . . . to consider [the patient’s] and end up angry and dissatisfied. We
stethoscope distance patients from their situation, how it lies as to the winds forget George Engel’s remark that ours
physicians physically, but a metaphoric and the rising of the sun . . . whether is a unique profession in which the ob-
space would open, a space that physi- it be naked and deficient in water, or ject of our scrutiny is at the same time
cians today have difficulty bridging. wooded and well watered . . . and the scrutinizing us!
Laennec’s invention was not the first mode in which the inhabitants live, This is a fine piece of writing. Fun
technological step forward in medi- and what are their pursuits.p131 to read, with an aha! on every page.
cine, nor perhaps the most important, Would you have imagined that the fam-
but today we still carry, and sometimes Having edged into the twenty-first ily of obstetricians who invented the
use, variations on his little invention. century, it is difficult for us to realize obstetrical forceps managed to keep it
Nor is this the first time Reiser wrote that medicine had focused on the envi- a secret for almost a century? Might
about the stethoscope; he discussed ronment, the patient’s emotional style, you have expected that physicians ar-
it in a  book, Technology and the and the four humors for almost  gued mightily against Laennec’s simple
Reign of Medicine. Reiser even noted years. But it did. Then, around , wooden tube because it made them
that Laennec’s teacher, Corvisart, had largely through the work of Thomas more like mechanics and less like wise
translated a  monograph by Leopold Sydenham and his colleagues, every- men? That every technological step for-
Auenbrugger, and that this translation thing changed. Sydenham thought we ward had both proponents and detrac-
prompted Laennec to create the first should classify diseases as we do other tors? Reiser’s prose is precise, lyrical,
stethoscope. entities of the natural world—plants or and entertaining. If I were asked to
Reiser discusses some of his favorite animals. He wrote: name a book that clarifies the heart of
technologies: the x-ray, the artificial kid- medicine, what we are really about, I
ney, the pressure ventilator, ultrasound, Nature, in the production of disease, would suggest Eric Cassell’s The Nature
the obstetrical forceps, and the medical is uniform and consistent; so much of Suffering and the Goals of Medicine.
record. Would you have considered the so, that for the same disease in dif- But if it is the history of medicine you
medical record a technological break- ferent persons the symptoms are for are after, if you want to come to under-
through? A mere hundred years ago few the most part the same; and the self stand how we got to where we stand to-
doctors kept written records about their same phenomena that you would day and what that stance looks like, the
patients. Our medical records have gone observe in the sickness of a Socrates very best might be Stanley Joel Reiser’s
through many generations since and are you would observe in the sickness of Technological Medicine: The Changing
now becoming computerized, to our a simpleton.1 World of Doctors and Patients.
benefit and despair. As you consider
the history of medicine, what would get From this he deduced that specific Reference
your vote as the most important step remedies could be found to treat those . Sydenham T. Medical Observations
forward? Antibiotics? Vaccines? The specific diseases. Aha! And what has Concerning the History and Cure of Acute
CAT and the MRI? Flexible endoscopes? happened in the ensuing  years? Diseases. In: Latham RG, translator. The
Artificial knees and hips? My favorite is We have become experts at disease. Works of Thomas Sydenham. Volume I.
the disease theory itself. Prior to , We study the causation, diagnosis, pre- London: Sydenham Society; : .
vention, and treatment of disease. And
The idea of balance—among the medical education, all eight to twelve Dr. Platt is a general internist in private
basic constituents of the self, and of years of it, has become an education in practice and clinical professor of Medicine
the self with the essential elements disease. at the University of Colorado. His address
of the natural and social world—was But in the process we may fail to no- is:
the foundation of treating illness and tice that knees and elbows don’t come 396 Steele Street
preserving health.p132 into our clinic unless surrounded by a Denver, Colorado 80206
person. We may not care to learn how E-mail: plattf@hotmail.com

42 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Letter to the editor

other’s freedom. I ask Dr. Radu, exactly Heidegger said the human experience
how would such a worldview promote consisted of being thrust into the world
“mutual understanding through our arbitrarily and ultimately accepting
different personal approaches”? p27 oneself as nothingness, a being-toward-
The author goes on to argue the death.3 Sartre said that “man is . . .
inadequacy of the Stoic and Epicurean forlorn, for he cannot find anything to
worldviews. I join him in his critique of depend upon either within or outside
these philosophies, but I fail to see how himself,” 1p34 and resigned himself to
existentialism solves the problems at- the idea that freedom is our great-
tendant in Stoicism and Epicureanism. est doom. Albert Camus said the two
For instance, Radu says that “the Stoic choices available to human beings are
misses the valuable lessons and pro- an absurd, meaningless existence on
Neither/nor found knowledge that can be gained one hand, and suicide on the other.4p144
In the Spring  issue of The only through attachment and loss.” p29 These bleak remarks come from the
Pharos (pp. –), Andrew Radu The existentialist is concerned with existentialists themselves. Is that the
argues that existentialism has much how man should act in an absurd world kind of worldview that should direct
to offer the suffering patient and the in which he knows he will die, and he the physician-patient relationship?
treating physician, contending that this elevates the will over the intellect—do- Ultimately, existentialism is subjec-
philosophy liberates us to “create our- ing over knowing. As such, existential- tive, fatalistic anti-philosophy—what
selves as we go along, even when faced ism has no “profound knowledge” to C. Everett Koop and Francis Schaeffer
with suffering and death.” p33 offer either; it is concerned with the called “the modern irrationalism.” 4p145
However, despite its eloquent pre- will. Radu concedes as much when he If there is a worldview that exudes
sentation, the approach advanced in says that true knowledge is always ab- humanistic despair, it is existentialism.
Radu’s essay is unconvincing. He says stract in an existentialist worldview. We would do well to practice medicine
early on that “existentialism advises us Radu’s apology for existentialism independent of this philosophy that
to reach mutual understanding through refers to universal categories such as would leave us with our feet firmly
our different personal approaches “people,” “human beings,” and “whole planted in mid-air.
and to draw deeply from our subjec- persons.” But true existentialism de-
tive experiences.” p27 This statement nies the existence of these categories. References
is not only vague, it is antithetical to Sartre said, “[T]here is no human na- . Sartre JP. Existentialism and Human-
what existentialist philosophy actu- ture, because there is no God to have a ism. Mairet P, translator. London: Meuthen
ally argues. Jean-Paul Sartre asserted, conception of it.” 1p28 Sartre unwittingly & Co.; .
“Man is nothing else but that which invokes a universal called “man,” but . Sartre JP. No Exit and The Flies.
he makes of himself.” 1p28 This is the that contradiction aside, he definitely Gilbert S, translator. New York: Alfred A.
supreme existentialist presupposition. affirms that there is no such thing as Knopf; .
In the play No Exit, Sartre has his char- human essence for the existentialist. . Heidegger M. Being and Time. St-
acter Garcin declare, “Hell is—other Radu fails to grasp this. It is fortunate ambaugh J, translator. Albany (NY): State
people!” 2p61 Why is hell other people? nonetheless; a consistent existentialist University of New York Press; .
Because, in any universe containing would say that humanness itself carries . Schaeffer FA, Koop CE. Whatever
more than one person, individual no attendant dignity. Happened to the Human Race? Old Tappan
freedom is necessarily limited. Radu needs to be more critical of (NJ): Fleming H. Revell Co.; .
One person can do whatever existentialism. The most critical re-
Miles Otto Foltermann, MD
he will, but millions of mark he makes is, “Existentialism is
(ΑΩΑ, The University of Texas at
persons cannot do the often viewed as bleak,” p30 as though
Houston, )
same without in- such a critique is leveled from the
Houston, Texas
fringing on each outside looking in. Not so. Martin

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 43


2010 Edward D. Harris Professionalism Award

T he Board of Directors of Alpha Omega Alpha is pleased


to announce the winners of the  Edward D. Harris
Professionalism Award. The award emphasizes AΩA’s commit-
C. Scott Hultman, MD, MBA,
FACS
Chief and Program Director, UNC
ment to its belief that professionalism is a crucial facet of be- Plastic Surgery, Department of
ing a physician, a quality that can be both taught and learned. Surgery at the University of North
Originally named the AΩA Professionalism Fellowship, the Carolina at Chapel Hill School of
award has been renamed to honor Edward D. Harris, the Medicine
longtime executive director of the society, who died in May. Dr. Hultman received , fund-
Applications were open to medical schools with active AΩA ing for his project, “Understanding and
chapters. Faculty who have demonstrated personal dedication Achieving Professionalism in a Surgical
to teaching and research in specific aspects of professional- Practice.”
ism that could be transferred directly to medical students or Because few formal courses exist at the medical student
resident physicians were encouraged to apply for these funds. level to address professionalism in medicine, Dr. Hultman’s
The winners of the  Edward D. Harris Professionalism project proposes adding an elective to the curriculum at
Award are: the UNC School of Medicine that introduces this important
concept to the senior medical student. The suggested cur-
Louise Aronson, MD, MFA riculum will specifically address the conduct for surgeons in
Associate Clinical Professor of training and in practice. The project is designed to improve
Medicine, Division of Geriatrics, knowledge, skills, and attitudes regarding professionalism, to
University of California, San understand the role of professionalism in a surgical practice,
Francisco, School of Medicine and to achieve and maintain competency in professionalism as
Dr. Aronson received , a health care provider.
funding for her project, “Improving
the Learning Environment for Heather Johnston, MD
Professionalism by Implementing Assistant Professor of Pediatrics,
and Assessing a Faculty Development University of Chicago Pritzker
Program on Reflection.” School of Medicine
Critical reflection is considered both Shalini Reddy, MD
a core component of professionalism and a tool useful in the Associate Professor of Medicine,
promotion and assessment of professionalism. Moreover, University of Chicago Pritzker
reflection allows both educators and learners to consider School of Medicine
those aspects of professionalism cited in the literature as inad- Dr. Johnston and Dr. Shalini received
equately addressed by traditional approaches to professional- , for their project, “Enhancing
ism education: the informal curriculum, clinical uncertainty Professionalism in the Developing
and behavioral gray areas, medical system complexities, the Doctor: The GROW (Guided Reflective
context and conflicts leading to unprofessional behaviors, and Online Writing) Project.”
the reasons students make the choices they do. Dr. Aronson’s Educators have struggled with the
project is designed to improve the learning environment optimal format for teaching profes-
for professionalism by implementing a faculty development sionalism to students, and have found
program on reflection and assessing its impact on educators’ success in methods that are based on
knowledge and attitudes about reflection, the feedback educa- context and experience, such as the use
tors give students on reflections related to the professionalism of reflection to work through critical
competency, and participants’ dissemination to other core events. Purposeful and guided reflec-
faculty of strategies for teaching reflection. tion can help students constructively
analyze events that shed a spotlight on the principles of
professionalism that are taught versus those espoused by the
informal curriculum. The project is designed to teach and
facilitate medical students’ purposeful and guided reflections
on professionalism beginning in the first year, and to enhance
students’ self-efficacy in identifying and processing events that
impact their professional development.

44 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


2009/2010 Visiting Professorships
ILLINOIS

B eginning in , Alpha Omega Alpha’s board of directors


offered every chapter the opportunity to host a visiting
professor. Fifty-five chapters took advantage of the opportu-
Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine
John A. Robinson, MD, councilor
Gail Hecht, MD, University of Illinois at Chicago College of
nity during the / academic year to invite eminent Medicine
persons in American medicine to share their varied perspec- Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science/The Chicago
Medical School
tives on medicine and its practice. Cathy J. Lazarus, MD, FACP, councilor
Following are the participating chapters, their councilors, Eric Gall, MD, MACP, MACR, University of Arizona
and their visitors. Southern Illinois University School of Medicine
Andrew J. Varney, MD, councilor
ALABAMA Alan Birtch, MD, professor emeritus, Southern Illinois University
University of Alabama School of Medicine School of Medicine
Stephanie D. Reilly, MD, councilor University of Chicago Division of the Biological Sciences Pritzker
John Tooker, MD, MBA, American College of Physicians School of Medicine
University of South Alabama College of Medicine Holly J. Humphrey, MD, councilor
T. J. Hundley, MD, FACP, councilor Jordan J. Cohen, MD, George Washington University School of
Charles S. Bryan, MD, MACP, FRCP (Edin), University of South Medicine and Health Sciences
Carolina School of Medicine INDIANA
ARKANSAS Indiana University School of Medicine
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Medicine Richard B. Gunderman, MD, PhD, councilor
C. James Graham, MD, councilor Mark A. Malangoni, MD, Case Western Reserve University
Donald P. Levine, MD, Wayne State University School of School of Medicine
Medicine IOWA
CALIFORNIA University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine
Loma Linda University School of Medicine Chrisopher Cooper, MD, councilor
Sarah M. Roddy, MD, councilor Jay A. Rosenberger, DO, University of Iowa, Des Moines Internal
Joanne M. Conroy, MD, AAMC Medicine, Methodist Plaza Internal Medicine
UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine KANSAS
Neil H. Parker, MD, councilor University of Kansas School of Medicine
Robert Wachter, MD, University of California, San Francisco, Jeffrey M. Holzbeierlein, MD, councilor
School of Medicine Robert Rich, MD, University of Alabama School of Medicine
University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine KENTUCKY
Steven Z. Pantilat, MD, councilor University of Kentucky College of Medicine
Rita Charon, MD, Columbia University College of Physicians and Charles Griffith, MD, councilor
Surgeons Ralph Jozefowicz, MD, University of Rochester School of
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Medicine and Dentistry
The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health LOUISIANA
Sciences Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine
Alan G. Wasserman, MD, councilor in New Orleans
William Magee, DDS, MD, FACS, Magee-Rosenblum Plastic Peter M. C. DeBlieux, MD, councilor
Surgery, Inc. Leigh A. Neumayer, MD, University of Utah School of Medicine
FLORIDA Louisiana State University School of Medicine at Shreveport
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine Jeffrey German, MD, councilor
Alex J. Mechaber, MD, councilor Douglas Levine, BA, MD, Mount Sinai School of Medicine of
Stephen K. Klasko, MD, MBA, University of South Florida New York University
College of Medicine Tulane University School of Medicine
University of South Florida College of Medicine Russell W. Steele, MD, councilor
Patricia J. Emmanuel, MD, councilor Ruth-Marie Fincher, MD, MACP, Medical College of Georgia
Danielle Ofri, MD, PhD, DLitt (Hon), FACP, New York University School of Medicine
School of Medicine and the Bellevue Literary Press
MARYLAND
GEORGIA Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Medical College of Georgia School of Medicine Peter E. Dans, MD councilor
Clarence Joe, DMD, MD, councilor Fred Schiffman, MD, the Warren Alpert Medical School of
Douglas Paauw, MD, University of Washington School of Brown University
Medicine Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences F. Edward
Morehouse School of Medicine Hébert School of Medicine
Frances J. Dunston, MD, MPH, councilor Robert E. Goldstein, MD, councilor
Roger I. Glass, MD, PhD, National Institutes of Health Kenneth Prager, MD, FACP, Columbia University College of
Physicians and Surgeons

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 45


Visiting professorships

University of Maryland School of Medicine The University of Toledo, College of Medicine


Donna L. Parker, MD; Gary D. Plotnick, MD; Yvette Rooks, MD; Patricia J. Metting, PhD, councilor
councilors John E. Billi, MD, University of Michigan Medical School
Joshua Sharfstein, MD, U.S. Food and Drug Administration Wright State University Boonschoft School of Medicine
MICHIGAN Linda Barney, MD, councilor
Michigan State University College of Human Medicine Paul Haidet, MD, MPH, Pennsylvania State University College of
E. James Potchen, MD, councilor Medicine
Alexa Canady, MD, Florida State University College of Medicine PENNSYLVANIA
University of Michigan Medical School Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University
Cyril M. Grum, MD, councilor Clara A. Callahan, MD, councilor
Mary E. Tinetti, MD, Yale University School of Medicine Thomas J. Nasca, MD, MACP, ACGME
MISSOURI Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine
University of Missouri—Columbia School of Medicine Robert G. Atnip, MD, councilor
Thomas Selva, MD, councilor Russell Rose
Thomas Inui, ScM, MD, Indiana University School of Medicine Temple University School of Medicine
University of Missouri—Kansas City School of Medicine Amy Goldberg, MD, councilor
John Foxworth, PharmD, councilor Sanjiv Chopra, MD, Harvard Medical School
Jeffrey G. Wiese, MD, Tulane University PUERTO RICO
NEBRASKA Ponce School of Medicine
Creighton University School of Medicine Rafael Iván Iriarte, MD, councilor
William J. Hunter, MD, councilor Amy Hutchinson, MD, Emory University School of Medicine
Steven Zweig, MD, University of Missouri—Columbia School of University of Puerto Rico School of Medicine
Medicine Humberto Guiot, MD, councilor
University of Nebraska College of Medicine Stephen Beeson, MD, Studer Group
James R. O’Dell, MD, councilor SOUTH CAROLINA
Gretchen Berggren, MD, Harvard School of Public Health Medical University of South Carolina College of Medicine
NEW JERSEY Christopher G. Pelic, MD, councilor
UMDNJ—New Jersey Medical School Michael S. Saag, MD, University of Alabama School of Medicine
Robert A. Schwartz, MD, MPH, councilor University of South Carolina School of Medicine
P. K. Carlton, MD, Lt. General, U.S. Air Force Joshua T. Thornhill IV, MD, councilor
William P. Magee, DDS, MD, FACS, Eastern Virginia Medical
NEW YORK
School
Albany Medical College
Neil Lempert, MD, councilor TENNESSEE
Gary Gottlieb, MD, Brigham and Women’s/Faulkner Hospitals University of Tennessee Health Science Center, College of Medicine
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons Owen Phillips, MD, councilor
John C. M. Brust, MD, councilor L. D. Britt, MD, MPH, Eastern Virginia Medical School
C. Ronald Kahn, MD, Harvard Medical School TEXAS
State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center College of Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine
Medicine Mark L. Montgomery, MD, councilor
Arthur H. Wolintz, MD, councilor John Pierce, MD, Veterans Adminstration, U.S. Department of
Samuel Packer, MD, New York University School of Medicine Veterans Affairs
State University of New York, Upstate Medical University, College of Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine
Medicine Robert C. Schutt, Jr., MD, councilor
Lynn M. Cleary, MD, councilor Thomas P. Lutterbie, SRA International, Inc., Fairfax, Virginia
L. D. Britt, MD, Eastern Virginia Medical School University of Texas Medical Branch, University of Texas Medical
Stony Brook University School of Medical School at Galveston
Jack Fuhrer, MD, councilor Lisa R. Farmer, MD, councilor
Steven Galson, MD, MPH, Acting Surgeon General of the United Raymond Mis, DO, New England College of Osteopathic
States Medicine
NORTH CAROLINA WASHINGTON
The Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University University of Washington School of Medicine
Thomas G. Irons, MD, councilor Douglas S. Paauw, MD, councilor
John Gianopoulos, MD, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School Serena Koenig, MD, Brigham and Women’s Hospital
of Medicine WEST VIRGINIA
Wake Forest University Health Sciences School of Medicine West Virginia University School of Medicine
K. Patrick Ober, MD, councilor Melanie Fisher, MD, MSc, councilor
Jack Coulehan, MD, Stony Brook University School of Medicine Nancy H. Nielsen, MD, American Medical Association
OHIO
Ohio State University College of Medicine
Sheryl Pfeil, MD, councilor
Jonathan Woodson, MD, Boston University School of Medicine

46 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


2009/2010 Medical Student Service Project Awards

B egun in  as the Chapter of the Year award, this pro- MASSACHUSETTS
gram was intended to recognize outstanding contribu- Boston University School of Medicine
th Annual Haitian Health Career Seminar: Emergency
tions made by an AΩA chapter. In , the program became Preparedness, Relief and Beyond
the AΩA Chapter Development Award, aimed at encouraging
MICHIGAN
ongoing original and creative programs being carried out by Wayne State University School of Medicine
AΩA chapters. In , the program again changed to the Robert R. Frank Student Run Free Clinic (RRFSRFC)
AΩA Medical Student Service Project Award, available to any MINNESOTA
student or group or students at a school with an active AΩA Mayo Medical School
chapter. Winter Warmth Festival
Funds of up to  per year, renewable for a second year MISSOURI
at  and a third year at , are available to students to University of Missouri—Kansas City School of Medicine
aid in the establishment or expansion of a medical student Second Servings
service project benefiting a school or its local community. Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine
One application per year per school is allowed, selected by Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program
the school’s AΩA councilor and dean from the proposals NEW YORK
submitted. Mount Sinai School of Medicine of New York University
The MedStart ProgramNew York Medical College
Medical Student Service Projects funded by AΩA during
NYMC Careers in Medicine WebsiteSophie Davis School of
the / school year were: Biomedical Education of the City College of New York
Health Fair in Harlem (renewed)
CALIFORNIA University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry
Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California Cooking with the Community Volunteer
Long Term Education of Beauticians on Tanning Beds and Its Weill Cornell Medical College
Association with Melanoma Weill Cornell Youth Scholars Program (renewed)
University of California, Irvine, School of Medicine
OHIO
Medical Initiative Against Homelessness (MIAH)
Ohio State University College of Medicine
FLORIDA Be the Change Health Fair
University of Florida College of Medicine Wright State University Boonschoft School of Medicine
Mobile Gator (startup costs) Community Collaborative Spring Food Drive
ILLINOIS PENNSYLVANIA
Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science/Chicago Medical Drexel University College of Medicine
School Accessibility Adventure Day
STEP UP
Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University
University of Chicago Division of the Biological Sciences Pritzker Refugee Health Partners
School of Medicine
Project Brotherhood-SNMA Partnership Proposal (renewed) RHODE ISLAND
The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University
University of Chicago Division of the Biological Sciences Pritzker
Two Channels to Cambodian Patient Advocacy: Medical Student and
School of Medicine
Patient Education
Pritzker Community Service Fellowship
SOUTH CAROLINA
INDIANA
Medical University of South Carolina College of Medicine
Indiana University School of Medicine
COM Career Night
Taking Root in the Community—MS Class Service Project
University of South Carolina School of Medicine
IOWA Fall Giving Tree
University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine
Health and Nutrition Curriculum in Local Elementary Schools TENNESSEE
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
LOUISIANA Shade Tree Family Clinic—Vaccine Outreach Program
Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine
in New Orleans TEXAS
Patient and Visitor Library Interim Hospital in New Orleans University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of
Medicine
Tulane University School of Medicine
BEST (Breastfeeding Education and Support for Teenage Mothers)
Covenant House: A community reproductive health center
University of Texas Medical Branch, University of Texas Medical
MARYLAND School at Galveston
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Stay Shady! (renewed)
The Student Preceptor Program

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 47


2009/2010 Administrative Recognition Awards

T his award recognizes the AΩA INDIANA NEW YORK


Indiana University School of Medicine University at Buffalo, School of Medicine and
chapter administrators who are so Ruth Patterson Biomedical Sciences, State University of
important to the functioning of the New York
IOWA
chapter. The nomination is made by the University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Susan M. Burger
councilor or other officer of the chapter. Carver College of Medicine OHIO
A gift check is awarded to the indi- Jeannie Panther The University of Toledo, College of Medicine
vidual, as well as a framed Certificate of Ardella Croci
KANSAS
Appreciation. University of Kansas School of Medicine OKLAHOMA
The following awards were made in Valerie Poulson University of Oklahoma College of Medicine
/: Leila M. McLean
LOUISIANA
Louisiana State University Health Sciences PUERTO RICO
ALABAMA Center School of Medicine in New Orleans Universidad Central del Caribe School of
University of Alabama School of Medicine Bobbie Millet Medicine
Stephen Smith, PhD Milagros Rodriguez
MARYLAND
GEORGIA Uniformed Services University of the Health SOUTH CAROLINA
Morehouse School of Medicine Sciences F. Edward Hébert School of Medical University of South Carolina College
Dorothy Clair Medicine of Medicine
Daphne Thomas Mary Ann Snell
ILLINOIS
MISSOURI University of South Carolina School of
University of Chicago Division of the
University of Missouri—Columbia School of Medicine
Biological Sciences Pritzker School of
Medicine Karen David
Medicine
Kate Blythe Suzanne Neff WISCONSIN
Southern Illinois University School of Medical College of Wisconsin
Medicine Lesley Mack
Kay DeFord

Commemorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of a Medical Landmark


On January , , U.S. Surgeon General Luther Terry approved in June by the American Medical Association
released what would become one of the most widely cited that calls upon physicians to urge the U.S. Citizens’ Stamp
documents in the annals of medicine: Smoking and Health— Advisory Committee to issue a stamp commemorating the
Report of the Advisory Committee of the Surgeon General of fiftieth anniversary of the Surgeon General’s Report in .
the Public Health Service. The findings were blunt, sobering, In support of this campaign, two companion exhibitions,
and unequivocal: “Cigarette smoking is causally related to lung curated by Alan Blum, MD (AΩA, Emory University, ),
cancer in men; the magnitude of the effect of cigarette smok- director of the University of Alabama Center for the Study
ing outweighs all other factors.” of Tobacco and Society, are available for display at museums,
The landmark report proved to be the catalyst for broad- medical libraries, and other venues. “Dr. Luther Terry and the
based antismoking efforts in the United States and around the Publication of the Surgeon General’s Report on Smoking and
globe. In the two decades following its publication, more than Health” and “Anti-Smoking Postage Stamps from Around the
 million Americans stopped smoking, resulting in a signifi- World” (featuring the collection of more than  anti-tobacco
cant decline in heart attacks and a slow but steady decrease in stamps and philatelic covers, amassed by retired Baton Rouge
the incidence of lung cancer in men. chest physician James Lutschg, MD) will be on view at Roswell
Yet cigarettes remain the most preventable cause of dis- Park Cancer Institute for the rest of . They will also be
ability and death in the United States, killing more Americans seen at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual
than AIDS, breast cancer, motor vehicle accidents, alcohol, conference in June .
illegal drugs, homicides, and suicides combined. To preview the exhibitions: http://www.youtube.com/
Since  sixty-five countries have issued stamps with an watch?v=fIRnOUuIn
anti-smoking message, but the United States is not among them. To inquire about hosting the exhibitions, contact Dr. Blum
Backed by twenty-two medical societies, a resolution was at ablum@cchs.ua.edu.
2009/2010 Volunteer Clinical Faculty Awards

T he Alpha Omega Alpha Volunteer Clinical Faculty Award University of Maryland School of Medicine
Leonard Sowah, MD
is presented annually by local chapters to recognize com-
munity physicians who have contributed with distinction to MICHIGAN
University of Michigan Medical School
the education and training of medical students. AΩA provides Beth C. Kimball, MD
a permanent plaque for each chapter’s dean’s office; a plate
MINNESOTA
with the name of each year’s honoree may be added each year University of Minnesota Medical School
that the award is given. Honorees receive framed certificates. Charles Horowitz, MD
The recipients of this award in the / academic year
NEBRASKA
are listed below. University of Nebraska College of Medicine
Brian K. Buhlke, DO
ALABAMA NEW JERSEY
University of South Alabama College of Medicine UMDNJ—New Jersey Medical School
Leonard S. Rich Richard Levandowski, MD
CALIFORNIA NEW YORK
University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine Mount Sinai School of Medicine of New York University
Albert Yu, MD, MPH, MBA Richard A. Skolnik, MD
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA New York University School of Medicine
Howard University College of Medicine Neal A. Lewin, MD
Reginald D. Wills, MD State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center College of
The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Medicine
Sciences George N. Braman, MD
Paul Schlein, MD State University of New York, Upstate Medical University, College of
GEORGIA Medicine
Morehouse School of Medicine Mitchell Brodey, MD
Lisa A. Counsell, MD Stony Brook University School of Medicine
ILLINOIS George L. Hines, MD
Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science/The Chicago University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry
Medical School Lawrence N. Chessin, MD
Melvin Wichter, MD Weill Cornell Medical College
University of Chicago Division of the Biological Sciences Pritzker Timothy C. Dutta, MD
School of Medicine NORTH DAKOTA
Richard Aronwald, MD University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences
INDIANA Napoleon Espejo, MD
Indiana University School of Medicine OHIO
Todd R. Bagwell, MD Ohio State University College of Medicine
IOWA Danilo Polonia, MD
University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine University of Cincinnati College of Medicine
Nathaniel Meyer, MD Bruce Allen, MD
KANSAS PENNSYLVANIA
University of Kansas School of Medicine Drexel University College of Medicine
Jennifer Brull, MD Kevin Kasper, MD
KENTUCKY Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University
University of Louisville School of Medicine Anthony J. Macchiavelli, MD
Michael Alt, DO University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
LOUISIANA Veena Dhar, MD
Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine SOUTH CAROLINA
in New Orleans Medical University of South Carolina College of Medicine
Michael Kemp Amacker, MD James G. Ward, MD
Louisiana State University School of Medicine at Shreveport University of South Carolina School of Medicine
William Norwood, MD, FACS William C. Giles, MD
Tulane University School of Medicine TEXAS
Vincent R. Adolph, MD University of Texas Medical School at Houston
MARYLAND Daniel G. Corredor, MD, FACE
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
David Schwartz, MBBCh
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences F. Edward
Hébert School of Medicine
Adam Saperstein, MD

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 49


Alpha Omega Alpha members
elected in 2009/2010
Chapters are listed alphabetically by state, province, or country, then in order of charter
ALABAMA Khadavi, Mohammed Ali Khan, Jennifer Kung, Ryan Martin, Sarah E Medeiros,
University of Alabama School of Medicine, University of Alabama at Amy Marie Metzger, Matthew Mossanen, Jacqueline C Newton, Rafee Obaidi, Molly
Birmingham—Alpha Alabama Quinn, Sangeetha Meda Reddy, Adam Rees, Nicholas D Reese, Lobna Shahatto,
Students: Victoria Shamblin Anderson, William Charles Barrow, Lindsay Elizabeth David Shamouelian, Vatche Tchekmedyian, Dina Wallin, Chantel L Washington,
Brown, Nathan Michael Bullington, Jennifer Lauren Burgess, Adam L Edwards, Annie Rui Zhang, Zachary S Zumsteg
Joseph Tyler Fuqua, Eddie Lee Hyatt, Jacob Don Kelley, William Purvis Lancaster, Faculty: Michael Wynn Yeh
Samuel Keener McElwee, Virginia Logue Menendez, Troy Elijah Mott, Stephen Loma Linda University School of Medicine—Epsilon California
Pehler, Brandon Allen Perry, Zachary David Reardon, Stefanie Lycans Riddle, Cleon Students: Claire Andrews, Krysten Marie Bell, James Alan Chenoweth, Michael
Louis Rogers, Mark Edward Rogers, Christopher Paul Roth, Kyle J Rudemiller, Chiang, Jessica Claridge, Blake Christopher Fowler, Howard David Guan, Allison
Rebekah Joy Savage, Kyle William Schuller, Daniel Schuster, Shannon Elizabeth Linnea Hinz, Jason Hong, Shino Dorothy Magaki, William Wilbur Millard II, Janet
Simpson, Inge Juljana Tamm-Daniels, Stephanie LeeAnn Wilson, Jonathan William Modad, Jeremy Michael Moretz, William Soren Mortensen, Denise Palke, Robert
Wright Quigley, Stephen Joseph Rechenmacher, Jeniffer Sicalo, Michael Wisung Sim,
Faculty: Ona Marie Faye-Petersen, Brian P Gleason Matthew Joel Storment, Luke Christopher Strnad, Chad Van Ginkel, Daniel Eric
House staff: Jamie Lin Erwin, Peter J Frederick, William Fish Marstellar IV Westerdahl, John Rawles Wuchenich
University of South Alabama College of Medicine—Beta Alabama Faculty: Lynda Daniel-Underwood
Students: Tyler Paul Black, Russell Douglas Goode, Panayiotis Petros Grevenitis, House staff: Cherie Amour Colbert, Michael John Orlich, David Turay
Geoffrey Lewis Hancy, Brandon Winslett Kirkland, Ross Alexander Mullinax, Ashley University of California, Irvine, School of Medicine—Zeta California
D Myers, Michael Travis Pierce, Lauren Jennifer Platt, Ruchit R Shah, Rachel Kristina Students: Scott Aaron Atkins, Nicholas S Boehling, Noah Canvasser, Jonathan H
Traylor Chen, Alexander Chao-Yu Chiang, William G Chu, Jonathan Joseph Falakassa,
Alumni: Frank V deGruy III Pedram Ghasri, Emily Michelle Grant, Jacqueline Rowena Ho, Becky Annie Lim,
Faculty: Anthony L Gard Madhukar Shirish Patel, Jesus Gildardo Ulloa, Jason Warren, Edward C Wu
House staff: Manuel Damian Rodriquez University of California, Davis, School of Medicine—Eta California
Students: Helen Bai, Blair Rosella Louise Colwell, Kendell Riley German, Charity B
ARIZONA
Hope, Robin Anne Talcott Huffer, Margaret Lawless, Bill Ran Luo, Joshua Phillip
University of Arizona College of Medicine—Alpha Arizona
Melvin, Karen Jenning Mu, Rasanamar Sandhu, Sonia Sonik-Spielvogel, Elizabeth
Students: Sohail Abdi-Moradi, Nicola Jane Baker, Kathryn Elizabeth Bradley, John
Rose Stewart, David Trent, Tammy Shingpei Wan, Charles Qian Yu
Michael Carter, Efrain Israel Cubillo IV, Amelia Kathleen Decker, Kevin Patrick
House staff: Vishal Goyal
Engelhardt, Veena Vanessa Goel, Jessica Erin Haley, Stephanie Elise Hartz, Juliana
Michele Kling, Drew Joseph B Kurtzman, Vivian Lien, Connor Thomas Lundy, Loan COLORADO
Thanh Pham, Christine Nicole Poach, Emily Nicole Prendergast, Minah Shin, Lenka University of Colorado School of Medicine—Alpha California
Stankova Students: John Deitrich Anderson, Erik Angles, Mim Ari, Sean Baran, Jerry Bodily,
Alumni: Keely Marie Chevallier, Kelly Ann Fair, Geoffrey Fasen, Patricia Monica Federczyk,
Faculty: Ronald E Pust Kelsey Flint, Laura Sturgess Huff, Jason Navid Mansoori, Brook Kim McConnell,
House staff: Wynter Nigel Phoenix, Thye Matthew Schuyler Travis James Menge, Andrew Cook Nelson, Keri Jean Propst, Evan Michael Pushchak,
Tyler Richard Reese, James Cameron Rose, Gina Leigh Schiel, Tierney A Sparks,
ARKANSAS
Christopher Brett Warner, Julie Ann Weintraub, Kristina Linnea Welton, Bryan
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Medicine—Alpha
Phillip Wert
Arkansas
Students: Kaete Alexandra Archer, Daine Thompson Bennett, Timothy Jay Bilbruck, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Robert Wilder Bradsher III, Elizabeth Cottrill, Heather Christine Delahunt-Moore, The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health
Dragon Do, Jennifer Ileen Doyle, Megan Suzanne Evans, Adam Nicholas Franklin, Sciences—Alpha District of Columbia
Charles Marvin Gordon, David Sharpe Heister, Lauren Nash Hendrix, April Marie Students: Shivani Manhar Bhatt, Laura Crystal Cookman, Jaclyn L Davis, Natasha
Hill, Samuel Jordan House, James Wesley Stakesby Lewis, Colt Michael McClain, Nikhil Desai, Marc F Dobrow, Kayla Terese Enriquez, Laura Ridgely Hatch, Lisa
Michael Sean McLaughlin, Sean Necessary, Blake Andrew Phillips, Jennifer Raible, Roselin Jacob, Michelle Anne Kaplinski, Steven V Kardos, Brian Edward Kaufman,
William Reyenga, Daniel Levi Shepherd, Courtney L Sick, Chase Douglas Smith, Rachel E Kutteruf, Brian J Linder, Brian Scott Martell, Rachel Elana Mednick, Kirsten
Justin Walden Poehling Monaghan, Ryan James Mountjoy, Katherine Steinfeld Perry, Patricia
Alumni: Paula Wyatt Morris Reutemann, Kirsten M Rose-Felker, Anjuli Shah, Edward J Silverman, Frank Horace
Faculty: Mark J Heulitt, Laura P James Valone III, Christopher C Vanison, Maria Victoria Vargas, Lauren S Wade, Ajay D
House staff: James Stewart Blachly, Rachel Howell King Wadgaonkar, Robert Carlton Ward
Faculty: Karen Ann Blackstone, Thomas William Jarrett
CALIFORNIA
House staff: Ashté Collins, Nihar Kiritkumar Patel, Palak Shah
University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine—Alpha
Georgetown University School of Medicine—Beta District of Columbia
California
Students: Marika Alois, Aaron Conner Babb, Meghan Laura Bernier, Andrew James
Students: Naomi Aloysia Adler, Heather Dawn Bennett, Tene Aneka Cage, Danielle
Braziel, Daniel Robert Bunker, Rachel Caravella, John Thomas Cardella, Trent David
Marie Chammas, Craig Chen, Allen C Cheng, Hao Jun Jonathan Chong, Daniel
Emerick, Jill Elizabeth Euteneuer, Paul Nicolas Fiorilli, Michael Freeman Githens,
James Chrobak, Jordan M Cloyd, Taraneh Terry Farsani, Ari Benjamin Hoffman,
Christopher Michael Jones, Scott Michael Karpowicz, Danielle Olivia Kaw, Kent
Jennifer Lin Hsiao, Benjamin Huang, Nicholas James Johnson, Devin William Kehl,
Kwok Kin Lam, Robert William McDermott, Marie LaPenta McHenry, Kathryn
Mary Watson Montgomery, Sarah Uhler Morton, Venu M Nemani, Patrick Michael
Maureen McKenna, Kathleen Genevieve Mitchell, Jason Paul Moran, Teresa Jean
Newman, Praveen Panguluri, Anna Theresa Panighetti, Adam David Schickedanz,
Nasabzadeh, Caitlin O’Brien, Megan Carroll Paulus, Hubert Pham, Nicholas Henry
Lawrence Raymond Shiow, Jed Wolpaw, April Joy Zaat, Harras Bin Zaid, Mary Hui
Pope, Kirsten Regalia, Carleen Marie Risaliti, John Anthony Savino III, Andrea M
Zhang
Spiker, Paul Joseph Switaj, Zachary Scott Wallace
Alumni: Lee Rachel Atkinson-McEvoy, Alma M Martinez
Faculty: James Francis Duffy SJ
Faculty: Calvin Chou, Elisabeth Brayton Wilson
House staff: Elizabeth Ashleigh David, Michelle Denise Zook
House staff: Sami J Barmada, Jocelyn S Chapman, Damon E Francis
Howard University College of Medicine—Gamma District of Columbia
Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California—Gamma
Students: Elliot Amponsah Asare, Ugochukwu Onyibo Egolum, Aslam Ejaz, Zafir
California
Kalamadeen, Mariel Ames Kerr, Christina Nicole Lawson, Preeti Manavalan, Stephen
Students: Julianne Marie Awrey, Yekaterina Bakhta, Natalie Burns, Philippe
James Martin, Luke Archer Neilans, Chinyere Ndidi Nwaneri, Jessica A O’Babatunde,
Champagne, Summer Puanani Chong, Erik Irvin Curtis, Alexis Elise Dixon, Kelly
Olusola Obayomi-Davies, Olaleke Oke, Islamiat O Olaribigbe, Sabrine Semoin,
Therese Erickson, Margaret Fleming, Jamie Lauren Funamura, Carolyn Alexander
Kristen Marie Trulear, Jhade Woodall, Raymond Kenneth Young
Gates, Andrea Halim, Ivan Peter Harnden, Michael Jesse Hendricks, Isabel Rey Huey
Alumni: John Hubert Stewart, Anthony Evans Watkins
Hsu, Felicia Rachel Katz, Adrienne Marie Keener, Kathleen Lee Kiernan, Nicole Mie
Faculty: Andre J Duerinckx, Kanwal Kumar Gambhir
Mei-Oi Mau, Elana Halks Miller, Gina C Rossetti, Leah Ruslen, Stuart Tomlinson
House staff: Mohankumar Kurukumbi
Schroff, Kathryn Lee Serowka, Grant Shifflett, Sergei Terterov, Justin Philip Wagner
Faculty: Kenneth Allen Geller, Rayudu Gopalakrishna FLORIDA
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA—Delta California University of Miami Miller School of Medicine—Alpha Florida
Students: Mary Lou Bui, Amanda Chao-Yu Chi, Jennifer A Fulcher, Caitlin Laurel Students: Ian Blake Amber, Marissa Lea Anderson, Heidi Hansen Ashbaugh, Raheel
Gomez, Jonathan D Grant, Rebecca Jean Hammon, Osamu F Kaneko, Nicole M Bengali, Frank Bouchard Cortazar, Daniel M Cushman, Erin A Fender, Jessica Marie

50 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Figueroa, Holly Fish, Robert Cunningham Gerring, Stephen Eugene Guyette, Isaac HAWAII
Stirling Jones, Mohamed Kaif, Isabel Anais Lamour, Ella Hoshuen Leung, Jessica M University of Hawaii at Manoa John A Burns School of Medicine—Alpha
Linder, Alina Mercedes Lopez, Emilio Enrique Lopez, Sharon Lorraine McCartney, Hawaii
Paru D Mehta, Raja Mohan, Stephanie Olga Peacock, Timothy Jerad Rearick, Isaac Students: Scott Alexander Harvey, Eric Nicholas Lau, Andrew Lee Middleton,
Harry Ritter, Andrew Louis Ross, Jonathan Weiss, David Griffin Wholey Heather Rose Kaipolani Miner, Heather Mitsuru Motonaga, Lynn Ly Ngo, Knewton
Alumni: Gauri Agarwal, Jason L Radick Kazunori Sakata, Joshua Iokepa Santos, Ryan Makoto Sato, David Richard Veal
Faculty: Jeffrey P Brosco, Matthias A Salathe
ILLINOIS
House staff: Marcela A Ferrada, Marc Richard Gualtieri, Manuel L Ribeiro-Neto
University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine—Alpha Illinois
University of Florida College of Medicine—Beta Florida
Students: Jihan Akhtar, Catherine Anderton, Catherine Anderton, Alpheus Benjamin
Students: Sheyan Armaghani, Spencer H Bachow, Mara Alexa Clapp, Keirsun
Appenheimer, Kristen Michelle Aquino, Meredith Blythe Barnes, David Alan
Crockett, Aaron David Falchook, John Henry Faryna, Jason Aaron Freed, Justin
Barounis, Jason Gary Bill, Heather Rose Binder-Jereb, Christopher Bohac, Katherine
Michael Gomez, Jonathan Grant Harrell, Jonathan Kai Hu, John Paul Magulick,
Chen, Krista Jo Childress, Lucia Yun Chou, Bart Chwalisz, Vincent Michael Colin,
Timothy Nywening, Paul David O’Rourke, Drew Alexander Palmer, Glen Thomas
Taylor Dennison, Farhan Farooqui, Panagiotis Flevaris, Jonathan Andrew Gehlbach,
Robinson, Christina E Rodriguez, Andrew Michael Romano, Naziya Samreen,
Christopher Mark Graves, Matthew D Hall, Suzanne Hatsumi Hiramatsu, Samuel
Benjamin Charles Service, Jennifer Wilkinson, Brent Thomas Wise, Dong Dawn
L Hutson, Sachin Jain, Monique Kamaria, David Khatami, Esther Jean Kim, Tiffany
Yang, Gregory David Young
Kim, Joel David Kolmodin, Michael E Kralovec, Loryn K Kromrey, Pamela J Lang,
Faculty: Jamie Beth Conti, Maureen Anne Novak
Molly Kristine McMorrow, Eric R Mehlberg, Virginia Akua Mensah, Akhil Narang,
House staff: Christopher Lawrence Bray, Adam D Falchook, Ashish Kumar Gupta
Hammed Abidemi Ninalowo, Joshua Aaron Novak, Audrey Nuccio, Ephraim Edward
University of South Florida College of Medicine—Gamma Florida
Parent, Neel Bhaskar Patel, Ritbune Prakobkit, David Prigge, Sarah Ann Richman,
Students: Bryan Joseph Allen, Brandon Brown, Andrew Rising Carey, Karan Anil
Adam Joseph Sanchez, Rudi Scharnweber, Brian Edward Schwartz, Melina Shabani,
Desai, Casey Erin Gooden, Michelle Grace Hamel, Gregory Shannon Henderson,
Manthan R Shah, Kara Jane Simonson, Christopher T Sparrow, Joshua David Troyer,
James Trever Highsmith, Jarrod Adam Keeler, Menyoli Michael Malafa, Matthew W
Renee Westley, Loren Zech, Bree Zimmerman, Loren David Zuiderveld
Manry, Michaela Nguyen, Robert LeRoy Plews, Michael Allen Roberts, Melinda Leigh
Faculty: Ben Gerber, Martha Sweeney
Shiver, Ryan Telford, Laura Anne Thornsberry, Philip Vuong Tran, Seth James Trifiro,
House staff: Giai Thieu Lo
Kristy Lynn Wesighan
University of Chicago Division of the Biological Sciences Pritzker School of
Alumni: Richard Elmer Weibley
Medicine—Beta Illinois
Faculty: H Juergen Nord, Kevin O’Brien
Students: Mary Kathleen Bister, Markus Daniel Boos, Elizabeth Jane Brown, Ahmed
House staff: Robert Ledford, Brice Thomas Taylor
Aziz Chaudhary, Meghan Ann Connett, Lindsay Amanda Finger, Jonathan Grinstein,
Florida State University College of Medicine—Delta Florida
Sara Alison Kalantari, Josephine Kim, Ryan Kohlbrenner, Charles Glen Kulwin,
Students: Brandon Russell Allen, Elizabeth Brooks, Michael William Hall, William
Drew Anderson Lansdown, Gautam Malhotra, Shanshan Mou, Cameron Elizabeth
Adam Hammond, Jennifer Kinley, Melissa Lee Kozakiewicz, Christina Annette
Nienaber, Michael Thomas Osborne, John Anthony Paro, Charlotte-Paige Melanie
McCall, Nicole Courtois McCoy, Molly McIntyre, Jimmy Lewis Moss Jr, Emily
Rolle, Geoffrey Wool
Taylor Overholser, Kate Ross, Amanda Marie Sebring, Vanessa Vasquez, Eilene Kales
Northwestern University, The Feinberg School of Medicine—Gamma Illinois
Weibley, Katie Ann Wolter
Students: Praveen Anchala, Beau Brinckerhoff, Melissa Joy Chen, Benjamin David
GEORGIA Currie, David Michael DiBardino, Leo L Han, Nikolas H Kazmers, Melissa Keene,
Medical College of Georgia School of Medicine—Alpha Georgia Thomas Klumpner, Andrew Edward Kott, Christine Lin, Matthew David Lipton,
Students: John Bradley Allen, Beau Taylor Bryan, Charya Chhauv By, Justin Thomas Jeremy Scott Markowitz, Jessica Newman, Sarah Novis, Jason Oppenheimer, Senad
Cheeley, Amy Vinod Chudgar, Jarrod Craig, Brooks William Ficke, Melanie Lyn Osmanovic, Matthew Patton, Martin Pham, Rachel Phelan, Amanda J Redig, Tamika
Freeman, Scotty Gadlin, Amy Reed Goss, Bronwen Ann Halstead-Nussloch, David Smith, Paul J Speicher, David Alan Vermylen, Diego Cole Villacis, Whitney Elizabeth
Joseph Heinsch, Andrew Judson Hill IV, Matthew Preston Huges, Tracie Catherine Zirkle
Hughes, Sara Johnston, Daniel McCollum, John LeCraw Mikell, Lauren Courtney Alumni: Karen Sheehan
Mitchell, Shalin Jitendra Patel, Jeff Ryan Petrie, Roja Chandrashekhar Pondicherry- Faculty: Robert Listernick, Stanford T Shulman
Harish, David Elliot Roffwarg, Sirikishan Ramkishan Shetty, Adam Daniel Singer, House staff: William John Bulsiewicz, Katherine Anne Connor, Laleh Golkar
Matthew Chesley Steele, Frank Durham Stegall, Matthew Garrett Stewart, Hari Melstrom
Mrugesh Trivedi, Blake Michael Troiani, Viren Sahai Vasudeva, Jeremy Clady Wells, Chicago Medical School at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and
Karen Brown Wood Science—Delta Illinois
Alumni: W Thomas Jenkins, Julie LaCraw Mikell Students: Shant Ashdjian, Benjamin Joseph Aumiller, Sebastian Nathaniel Bienia,
Faculty: Walter ‘Ted’ Kuhn, Laura L Mulloy Oscar Pelayo Bravo, Stephanie Ann Carapetian, Shinn-Huey Shirley Chou, Isha
House staff: Jason Odell Burnette, Jason Paul Champagne Dhingra, Wand Yee Gan, Akash Garg, Paula S Ginter, Mariah Lynn Hindes,
Emory University School of Medicine—Beta Georgia Alexandar Jovanovich, Jordan Christopher Kawano, Natalia Kazakevich, Zaihleen
Students: Robert Beaulieu, Mary Jane Bryant, Robert William Contino, Aisha David, Shariff Keller, Isaac Kennedy, Nima Mehran, Craig Mescher, Megan Ann Mezera,
Theresa Mary Dulski, Samuel Aaron Funt, Kimberly Bogard Horner, Lauren Ann Joelle Dominique Millikin, Walter Osias, Anthony Chapman Palmer, Hemang
Hudak, Laura Johnson, Osama N Kashlan, Lynn Hua Lee, Jessica Manning, Carrie Kirkteekumar Pandya, Amit Patel, Chetak A Patel, Scott Aaron Ritterman, Sarfaraz
Ann Nalisnick, Daxa Mahendra Patel, Adam G Perry, Luke Tyler Peterson, Adam Sadruddin, Scott Jospeh Siglin, David Samuel Tager, Jillian Lee Theobald, Alex
Benjamin Prater, Jennifer Spicer, Amanda Wartner Stinger, Sean Robinson Stowell, Barathan Theventhiran, Karen Elizabeth Wright
Dane Todd, Berendena I Vander Tuig, Aaron David Weiss, Daron J Williams, Ariel Alumni: Erik Larsen, Mildred MG Olivier
Zodhiates Faculty: Stuart Lewis Goldman
Faculty: Raymond James Kotwicki, Barbara J Stoll House staff: Vamsi Kiran Kodumuri, Param Puneet Singh
House staff: Jeremiah Deneve, Andrew Nathan Kobylivker, Ian Neeland Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine—Epsilon Illinois
Morehouse School of Medicine—Gamma Georgia Students: Peter Harry Anastopoulos, Daniel Baluch, Tracy L Binius, Anthony
Students: Tiffany Marie Bell, Melinda Fernandez, Jennifer Lee Kim, Shreyas Girish Christopher Brown, Joseph Daniel Campbell, Margaret Susan Carter, Matthew
Makwana, Celeste Miller, Cam Tu Nguyen, Jamie Francesca Nguyen, Jessica Pierce Connor, Casey Andrew Dauw, Timothy F Feldmann, Lauren Hewell Fischer,
Gowramma T Shantha Justin William Griffin, Claire Gushurst, Marc Edward Heincelman, Rana Marie
Mercer University School of Medicine—Delta Georgia Higgins, Umair M Jabbar, Eric Kamenetsky, Brad C Knox, Mary Alison Mahieu,
Students: Daniel Aubrey Grace, Maribeth Banks Hamrick, Blake Steven Kimbrell, Joseph Marmora, Moira Courtney McNulty, Megan Elizabeth Mietelski, Risha Li
Jason Robert Laney, Tracy Lynn Nolan, Martin Daniel Rosenthal, Joshua Perkins Moskalewicz, Bretton P Mularski, Ryan Joseph Estoesta Salvador, Karan K Shah,
Simpson, Melissa McLane Taylor Ganesh Sivarajan
Alumni: Christopher Charles Moore, Oliver Christian Whipple Faculty: Gregory Gruener
Faculty: David C Parish, Leon Newton Sykes Jr House staff: Aaron Thomas Gerds
House staff: Jason Ryan Chapman, Eric Lee Long, B Darren Preuninger Rush Medical College of Rush University Medical Center—Zeta Illinois
Students: Theresa M Adams, Mary Mercedes Bailey, Kristin Beaver, Julia Michelle
Boll, Elizabeth Chruscinski, Kelly Colleen Cushing, Cullen Dutmer, Alison Freeman,
Nicole Anne Friel, Julia Rose Howell, Faiyaaz Ahmad Kalimullah, Jennifer Losavio,
Michele Lee Nassin, Aris Oates, Purvi Pravinchandra Patel, Matthew James Raday,
David Joseph Ruta, Mina Sedrak, Eric Arthur Swanson, Anthony J Weston

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 51


New members

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine—Eta Illinois LOUISIANA


Students: Sumer K Allensworth, Blake Cohen, Ashley Kohaus, Mark R Krohe, Minh- Tulane University School of Medicine—Alpha Louisiana
Bao Le, Adam Justin Rodos, Drew Allan Spencer, Mary Eileen Sterrett, Adam Donald Students: Robert Michael Bacigalupi, Shannon Kristina Barry, Laura Bateman, Todd
Wallace, James Roy Waymack, Kendra Suzanne Woods Borenstein, Jenny Buck, Siu Ping Chin Feman, Jennifer Coleen Creedon, Joshua Lee
Alumni: Roxanne J Guy Denson, Alex Fokin Jr, Sumitha Santhoshini Ganji, Brian Thomas Halbert, Alan
Faculty: Thomas Howard Tarter Joseph Hathcock, Megan Maureen Henderson, Lucius Alexander Howell, Katerina
House staff: Brooke M French, Masaya Higuchi, Abiy Kebede Kelil O Kimonis, Michael Marino, Garland Herring McQuinn, John Moscona, Glenn Alan
Moulder, Melody Becnel Oncale, Arvind Kant Pandey, Christopher D Press, Reinaldo
INDIANA
James Quevedo, Renee Shiao, Camille Linick Stewart, Joseph Tarsia
Indiana University School of Medicine—Alpha Indiana
Alumni: Paul Krogstad, James E Robinson
Students: Erin Olivia Aakhus, Megan Anne Alderman, Tyler Stephen Arnold, Andrew
Faculty: David Mushatt, Eboni Price-Haywood
Justin Bishop, Amber Brannan, Jared R Brosch, Abigail Faith Weliver Donnelly,
House staff: Son Van Nguyen, Nicholas Joseph Van Sickels, David Christopher Yu
Barrett B Fricke, Kyle Mark Harry, Laura Jean Hinkle, Michael L Hopen, Emily Marie
Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New Orleans—Beta
Horvath, Anthony Christopher Illing, Elisa Anne Illing, David Alan Isaacs, Sarah Beth
Louisiana
Jacob, Mark Matson Kaehr, Colleen Marie Kiernan, Hayley Knollman, Laura Kruter,
Students: Christopher A Belfour, Stephanie Lynn Bourque, Zackary Paul Bruce,
Jordan D LeGout, Cathryn J Luria, Joseph Daniel Lutgring, John Paul Magno Manalo,
Paul Buzhardt, Jeffrey Reid Claiborne, Ryan K Couvillion, Daniel Michael Englert,
John Ryan Martin, Kevin Charles McCammack, Emily Anne Merryman, Jacob
Matthew Thomas Finn, Jesse Gills, Carrie Margaret Goodson, Ashley Ayo Guy,
Ryan Miller, Andrew Arthur Millis, Christopher Carl Muth, Emma Joy Nordstrom,
Vandon Joseph Habetz, Jonathan Morgan Hand, Elliot T Hardy, David Patrick
Benjamin Gordon Northcutt, Michael Glenn O’Connor, John T O’Malley, Ruchin
Kennedy, Brandon M Lopez, Christel Cary Malinski, McCall Guyton McDaniel,
Patel, Diana Marie Patterson, Anne E Penner, Benjamin Francis Redmon, Troy
Bevan Ambus Myles, Rachel Ann Pastorek, Ana Paunovic, Wesley Ray Porta, Eric
Roberson, Ian Cooper Sando, Zafar Sayed, Meghann Lynn Schenk, Chad E Tewell,
John Schmidt, Jason R Schwartz, Andrew Bennett Sewell, Mark Winston Stalder,
Michael Cassimer Veronesi, Kimbre L Vogel, Katherine Anne Voges
William Steffes, Lauren Michelle Thomassie, Mark Patrick Trahan, Catharine Grace
Alumni: Richard Thomas Beeler, Michele Smallwood Saysana
Wolfe
Faculty: David Alastair Flockhart, Robert J Havlik
Alumni: Catherine Marie Hebert, Gerard Pena
House staff: Paul Richard Crisostomo, Anthony David Kaiser, Laura Jean Nelson
Faculty: Murtuza Juzar Ali, Lee S Engel
IOWA House staff: Patrick Greiffenstein, Emily B Kauffman, Davey L Prout Jr
University of Iowa Roy J and Lucille A Carver College of Medicine—Alpha Louisiana State University School of Medicine at Shreveport—Gamma
Iowa Louisiana
Students: Nusayba Ali Bagegni, Jennifer Lynn Baker, Anastasia V Bassis, Nathan Students: Drexell Hunter Boggs, Jason Patrick Calligas, Christopher A Cefalu, Brian
Thomas Beins, Jill Marie Bowman, Shannon Elizabeth Cassel, Dianna Lynn Edwards, Edward Etier Jr, Jill Fruge, Joshua Paul Holstead, Kristopher Katira, Austin Thomas
Andrew Elson, Elizabeth Hester Gauger, Jesus Eduardo Gomez, David Winthrop Lash, Mathew John Mazoch, Jared Lundy Moss, Andrew Merlan Nida, Patrick Ryan
Hennessy, Katie Hoyme, Sobia Fehmi Khaja, Andrew Norbert Laczniak, Shannon Lee Redmond, Jamie L Rister, Kristopher Case Sanders, Matthew James Sewell, Jesse
Schauer Leveridge, Nikolas S May, Jason Benjamin Mueller, Bryant G Oliverson, Erin Arthur Standifer II
Powell, Johanna Marie Savage, Bradley Steele Schoch, Harmony Schuttler, Elizabeth Faculty: Jan Hood
Ana Vanderah, Laura Joy Watkins, Jeffrey David Welder, Kija Marie Weldon, Scott
MARYLAND
Gregory Westphal, Jospeh Robert Nelson Zabell
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine—Alpha Maryland
Alumni: James Richard Hubbard
Students: Alexander Billiioux, Laura Cappelli, Steven Chen, Keith Curtis, Matthew
Faculty: Scott Wilson
John Czarny, Catherine Distler, Paul Doherty, Pavle Doroslovacki, Lauren Elizabeth
KANSAS Graham, Andrew Hughes, Kristen Johnson, Karim Ladha, Damaris Nou, Eric Nou,
University of Kansas School of Medicine—Alpha Kansas Meghan O’Neill, Justin Schaffer, Melanie Schorr, Shannon J C Shan, Shan Tang, Maya
Students: Smita Aggarwal, Willis Barrow, Nathan S Cuka, David Michael Dupy, Subbalakshmi Venkataramani, Khinh Ranh Voong
Sushant Govindan, Deborah A Holland, Megan Leigh Jones, Marcus Allen Kater, Alumni: Neil M Bressler, Lee Hunter Riley III
Sarah Latif, Cameron Ledford, Shelby Richard Lies, Jeffrey Desmond Markey, Mallory Faculty: Henry Brem, Francis Giardiello
Glynnis Martinez, Kerri Ailene McGreal, Anne Katherine Miller, Stephanie Yeager House staff: Charles Hugh Brown IV, Amy DeZern, Matthew Weiss
Murray, Brooke L W Nesmith, Thuan Ba Nguyen, Erin Marie O’Brien, Devon Paul, University of Maryland School of Medicine—Beta Maryland
Andrew Pirotte, Abhishek Ray, Katherine Seymour, Bruce Tjaden Jr, Zachary Jon Students: Edward Hyunsun Ahn, Mariam Hassan Ayub, Jason Bradley Brill, Laura
Viets, Blair Wendlandt, Nicole Wieghard, Matthew Steven Wilson, Trenton C Wray Marie Caputo, Stephanie Cha, Michael B Chang, Laura Figueroa-Phillips, Jamie L
Alumni: Lisa Starcke Gilmer, Jerry L Old Goldberg, Michael Conrad Grant, Christian Richard Halvorson, Andrea Harriott,
Faculty: Michael L Kennedy Kyle Hatten, Jenna Khan, Elizabeth Julianna Le, Nancy Ann Lentz, Stephen Andrew
House staff: Gerhard Aron Fast, Lucas Pitts, Mayra Esperanza Sanchez McNutt, John D Morris, Jonas Allan Nelson, Omobonike O Oloruntoba, Paul
William Perdue Jr, Jacklyn Lindsay Quade, Sowmya Ravi, Casey Marie Rice, Charles
KENTUCKY Rutter, Meghna S Trivedi, Mamata Venepally, Linda Xu
University of Louisville School of Medicine—Alpha Kentucky Alumni: Ronald Goldner
Students: Sabra M Abner, Folasade A Ademosu, Ashley Lynn Alumbaugh, Joseph Faculty: Joseph Patrick Martinez
David Bailey, Dustin Webb Dillon, Destinee Lucy Eakle, Rachel S Ford, Joel M Fritz, House staff: Temilolu Olayinka Aje, Adam D Friedlander, Leroy Brown Vaughan
Mark Tye Haeberle, Lakshmi Kartha, Matthew Kelleher, Benjamin Klausing, Sofya Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences F Edward Hébert
Kuznetsov, Mary Lacy, PariaEsmaily Majd, Elizabeth Lee Matera, Chester Joseph School of Medicine—Gamma Maryland
Mays, Justin Thomas Phillips, Luke Patrick Robinson, Sarina Sahetya, Zachary Students: Tatyana Babina, Jeremy Baran, Jason Bingham, Stuart Kent Brigham,
Richard Simpson, Clint Marshall Tucker, Gregory C Wilson Gregory Thomas Chesnut, Paul Andrew Cripe, Nathan S Cutler, Diane Ungos
Alumni: Paige Hertweck Elegino-Steffens, Jason Foerter, Ian Funnell, Antonino Germana, Jason David
Faculty: Anthony J Casale, Henry Jerrold Kaplan Hoskins, Dinchen Anna Jardine, Nathan Ross Kelsey, Gregory Ivan Kelts, Andrew
House staff: Christopher Robert Janowiecki, Brian M Plato, Mary Ann Sanders Ching-An Kung, David Alton Lindholm, Jonathan Michael Melzer, Eric Gerard
University of Kentucky College of Medicine—Beta Kentucky Meyer II, Matthew Michalowicz, Heather DeVane Mundy, Christopher Neil Premo,
Students: Cady Blackey, Joseph Allen Blackmon, Lindsay Block Blackmon, Joseph Katherine Helen Racicot, Kristen Elizabeth Saenger, Robert R Shawhan, Kimberly
Clay Brown, Adam Gerard Cole, Borys Gvozdyev, Alan Montgomery Hall, James Ann Vance, Robert Vietor, Bryant James Webber, Thomas Joseph Willson, John I
Donald Hawthorne III, Amanda Fleming Marsch, Marlena Nicole Mattingly, Lucas Young
Haynes Rifkin, Megan Song, Taylor Vaughan, Charlotte Marie Walter, Mark J Yuhas Faculty: Jerri Curtis, David Robert Welling
Faculty: Cletus Savio Carvalho, Joseph A Iocono
House staff: Michael Douglas Goble, Fadi R Makhoul, Kevin Harris Smith MASSACHUSETTS
Tufts University School of Medicine—Beta Massachusetts
LEBANON Students: Claudia Bartolini, Christopher Boisselle, Marjory Bravard, Emily Elizabeth
American University of Beirut School of Medicine—Alpha Lebanon Bunce, Priya Chandra, Karen Elizabeth Glatfelter, Sarah Lauren Harkness, Karen
Students: Salim Daouk, Lana Saleh Dbeibo, Ali El Mokdad, Abdallah El Sabbagh, Elizabeth James, Arjun Nimalan Jeganathan, Laura Moynihan Kerr, Kathleen Mary
Nathalie Malek El Ters, Rashed Ali Ghandour, Racha Zeid Halawi, Nemer Junior Killilea, Juhee Lee, Michael Zvi Lerner, Jeffrey Michael Martin, Matthew Mifsud,
Robert Muallem, Ibrahim Nassour, Wassim Abdul Razzak Shatila Matthew Aaron Nitzberg, Nainesh Sharad Parikh, David Picker, Betzalel Reich,
House staff: Maya Georges Barake, Khaled M Musallam, Carlos Noujeim Kenneth Lee Roach, Christopher Sanchez Sales, Sara Schoenfeld, Clota Heazel Snow,
Aferdita Spahillari, Sohil Raj Sud, Patrick Burke Sullivan, David Alexander Wang, Ana
Weil, Jeffrey Harrison Williams
Faculty: Robert A Kalish

52 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Boston University School of Medicine—Gamma Masschusetts MISSOURI
Students: Paul Bower, John Cuaron, Christopher D’Ardenne, Alexander DeHaan, Washington University in St Louis School of Medicine —Alpha Missouri
Steven Deso, Daniel Faden, Sarah Regina Freilich, Ravi Garg, Mathew Geltzeiler, Students: Alexander William Aleem, Lauren Kali Biesbroeck, Bradley John Carra,
Justin Daniel Golden, Ashleigh Anna Halderman, Elizabeth Judith Housman, Ryan Brian Francis Flaherty, John Michael Gansner, Michael John Geske, Kimberly Meng
Hunt, Nicole Jaffe, Amy Judy, James Nicholas Kimbaris, Nitin Krishnaji Kulkarni, Hsu, Carlie Rebecca Kennedy, Peng Lei, Vanessa Ann Lewis, Jessica McAlister,
Jamal Abdoalah Nabhani, Patrick Hoi Ginn Redmond, Ari C Sacks, David A Salz, Casey Kent McCullough, Bryce Abram Mendelsohn, Jason Alan Meyers, Eric Austin
Matthew Sullivan, Matthew Watto, Emily Anne Welsh Millican, Lina Nayak, Gerald Johnstone Palagallo, Ira Hyman Schachar, Manjool
Alumni: Marie Elizabeth McDonnell Manoj Shah, Kavitha Rajeswari Sivaraman
Faculty: Todd Michael Hoagland Alumni: Herluf Gyde Lund Jr, William T Shearer
House staff: Jon David Dorfman, Amanda Vest Faculty: Dana Abendschein, David Windus
University of Massachusetts Medical School—Delta Massachusetts House staff: Miranda Ming-Wai Lim, Robert Guy Neumann, Ben Julian Palanca
Students: Daniel Joseph Barker, Katharine Crawford Barnes, Lauren Busekroos, Saint Louis University School of Medicine—Beta Missouri
Katherine Cembrola Cembrola, Erik Domingues, Parag Goyal, Laura Hagopian, Lydia Students: Michael G Azzam, Yvonne Ellen Bailey, Nathan Allen Cannon, Katherine
Helliwell, Maurice Francis Joyce III, Teri Tung Kleinberg, Alexis Carey Lawrence, Ann Fernandez, Daniel Kevin Holt, Amanda Nicole Kimber, Meghana Ram Kunkala,
Andrew Leone, David M Miller, Julia Claire Randall, Meghan Shea, Kyle David Wood Nicholas J Kuntz, Kathryn B Leonard, Matthew Anthony Marino, Lindsey Lea
Alumni: Carolyn Clancy, Thomas Emery Scammell Michaels, Gretchen Mae Oakley, Patrick Joseph Rose, Clare Elizabeth Rudolph,
Faculty: Nancy Marshall Fontneau, Robert Zwerdling Joshua M Sappington, Andrew Gregory Silver, Courtney Anne Tobin, Laura Elizabeth
House staff: Anne Cameron Coates, Daisy Dylan Fischer, Nils Henninger Tranel, Yee Men Wong
University of Missouri—Columbia School of Medicine—Gamma Missouri
MICHIGAN
Students: Adam A Alter, Anjali Patel Anders, Brett Charles Bade, Jordan Michael
University of Michigan Medical School—Alpha Michigan
Brown, Katie Elizabeth Cameron, Shelby Marie Dickison, Deiter James Duff, Savita
Students: Ketti Sophia Augusztiny, Lauren Andrea Bohm, Emily Jane Deringer,
Leanne Fanta, Wesley Frevert, Matthew Edward Johnson, Mary Bridget Keegan,
Katherine Mary Gast, Nava Geula, Jennifer Hasvold, Susan Mary Hiniker, Maha
Linsey Jane Monaghan, Katherine (Kay) Anna Rodgers, Jason Andrew Showmaker,
Sada Jawad, Michael Sivash Khodadoust, Karen Anne Kinnaman, Alice D Lam,
Mark Sucher, Stacy Michelle Syrcle, Theodore Seth Thomas
Rosalyn Elizabeth Maben, Jennifer Marie McDonald, Lowell Evan Michael, Aaron
Alumni: Todd Darian Shaffer
Charles Miracle, Darren Morris, James Paul Reinhart, Lauren Anne Sanlorenzo, Julia
Faculty: Ghassan M Hammoud, Thomas P Mawhinney
Theopisti Saraidaridis, David Shalowitz, Benjamin Singer, Christina Garcia Ulen,
House staff: Clark Olavi Andelin, Jacob A Quick
David Werny, Angela Christine Weyand, Andrew Yenphu Yew, John Montgomery
University of Missouri—Kansas City School of Medicine—Delta Missouri
Yost, Justin William Zumsteg
Students: Hasan Chowdhury, Maria Luisa Ciani, James Lewis Gentry, Allison Sue
Faculty: Ameed Raoof, Cosmas J M Vandeven
Glass, Jared Scott Halpin, Will R Hotchkiss, Afrin Nahar Kamal, Justin William
Wayne State University School of Medicine—Beta Michigan
Langan, Sagar Tushar Mehta, Spencer Menees, Miral Patel, Radhika Kausalya
Students: Marijana Atanasovski, Julian Barbat, Jane Elizabeth Beimer, Jaida Celeste
Ravindran, Akta Sehgal, Lindsay Martin Smith, Zachary Lee Smith
Bourke, Katherine Lynn Caretti, Erica Lynn Chimienti, David Crawford, Kunal Sanjay
Alumni: Jeffrey David Kerby, Rahul Kumar Khare
Dalal, Samantha S Dewundara, Iuliana Dit, Justin Richard Dueweke, Tim Ta-Chih
Faculty: James J Mongan
Ferng, Elizabeth Frayer, Ryan Matthew George, Alissa Karyn Gottesman, Ciprian
House staff: Jennifer Lynn Flint, Andrew Jacob Moore, Stephanie Anne Reid
Stefan Gradinaru, Pooja U Gupta, David Hackenson, Aaron Heindl, Levi Jefferson
Hilton, Levi Hinkelman, Adrienne M W Hoban, Taemyn Hollis, Sarah Elaine NEBRASKA
Kenning, Brandon William King, Laura Ann Kitzmiller, Bonita D Kozma, Ashlee University of Nebraska College of Medicine—Alpha Nebraska
Ellen Krisko, Thomas Patrick LaRoche, Remy Rosario Lobo, Allison Long, Randee Students: Sara Elizabeth Brostrom, Steven Louis Gogela, Brian Craig Kitamura, Jared
Cherie Miller, Mazen Mislmani, Brett Mollard, Jesse Douglas Morrison, Laura Ashley Kvapil, Melissa Ann Langdon, Alex Charles Lesiak, Kendra Lesiak, Kristin Marie
Most, David McKeon Prior, Jason Joseph Rose, Courtney Elizabeth Rowling, Gurpriya McGregor, Gina Leigh Morgan, Melanie Ortleb, Jason Patera, Eric John Meyer Reed,
K Sethi, Edward Shields, Matthew Stemer, Justin Jay Stenz, Gilbert Siu Fai Tang, Jesse Lyndsay Dale Schwab, Mark Murdoch Smith, Mark Joseph Stavas, Benjamin A>
James Veenstra, Katherine Vitale, Leah Ashley Weitz, Benjamin Jay Workman, Joseph Teply, Joseph Jay Vavricek, Sarah Elizabeth Wunder
Yang, Daniel Aaron Zeldes Alumni: Gretchen Glode Berggren, Warren Berggren
Alumni: Monte Lance Harvill Faculty: Devin R Nickol, Weining Ken Zhen
House staff: Eleazar Eduardo Soto House staff: Aaron Todd Benner, Angela Jo Kratochvil-Stava
Michigan State University College of Human Medicine—Gamma Michigan Creighton University School of Medicine—Beta Nebraska
Students: Staci Miriam Batchelder, Catherine Elizabeth Burger, Nikunj Rashmikant Students: Jennifer Kelly Beckman, David G Crockett, Rose Christine Gomes, Erin
Chauhan, Katherine Elizabeth Clark, Kelly Ann Conley, Benjamin Thomas Ebner, Kathleen Ham, Jonathan Leo Hatch, Anne Brittany Haugen, Sarah Grace Herby,
Carrie Ann Fales, Michelle Gilmer, Meghan Regina Harper, Brian Christopher Hill, Thomas Joseph Jensen, Ashley Marie Lane, Michael Lanfranchi, Ryan Craig LeBaron,
Peter Klaas Hoekman, Meaghan Renee Misiasz, Michael Douglas Peacock, Andrew Christopher John Neeley, Brendan Joseph O’Connor, Amanda L Oertli, Allison Nicole
Leonard Ray, Shawna Marie Ruple, Jeffrey Russell Sachs, Kara Melissa Jacobs Slifka, Rasband-Lindquist, John Thomas Ratelle, Tara Lynn Sabby, Douglas Snodgrass, Erik
Stefanie Vincenzina Stachura, Joel Patrick Veldhouse, Shannon Joy Voogt Stites, Kaitlyn Marie Weidenbach
Alumni: Michael James Potchen Faculty: Chhanda Bewtra, Sumeet Kumar Mittal
Faculty: Jose Goldman, Isoken Nicholas Olomu House staff: Jamil Yousef Abuzetun, Shipra Arya, Senthil Thambidorai
House staff: Chelsea Alisa Coston, Ashima Makol, Peter Hoang Phan
NEVADA
MINNESOTA University of Nevada School of Medicine—Alpha Nevada
University of Minnesota Medical School—Twin Cities—Alpha Minnesota Students: Benjamin Jared Allen, Derek Brady Covington, Chantelle Marie DeCroff,
Students: Jacob Scott Ankeny, Usman Anwer, Nicholas Schumacher Briese, Kristina Doris Eaton, Lisa Ann Kafchinski, Jason Daniel Michaels, Erik Joseph Olson,
Matthew D Cascino, Kevin Cavanaugh, Brittani Conway, Carmen Rebecca Dargis, Erin Marie Royal, Timothy David Struve, Chad Watts
Shireen Elizabeth de Sam Lazaro, Rebecca Donahue, Meghann Duffy, Lydia Ioanna Faculty: Miriam Bar-on, Richard Caringal Baynosa
Eleftheriou, Heidi L Erickson, Melanie Fearing, Adam Phillip Foss, Sarah Anne
NEW HAMPSHIRE
Frommer, Nathaniel Thomas Gaeckle, Nicole Gergen, Melissa Rae Haehn, Luke
Dartmouth Medical School—Alpha New Hampshire
Thomas Hafdahl, Elizabeth Ann M Johnson, Jennifer Kleinman, Lisa Kristine Koch,
Students: Laura Gillian Amar-Dolan, Dana Carne, Kimberly Beth Cartmill, Alissa
Virat Ashwin Madia, Sean Brady McAdams, Benjamin Miller, Shauna S Morrow,
Jeanne Curda, Sarah Kathleen Dotters-Katz, Michael Guilliver Erkkinen, Noah J
Mikal Nelson, John David Nerva, Maiken Ann Overton, Elizabeth Mae Petersen,
Hoffman, Chetan Prakash Huded, Nicholas G Maldonado, Jessica Ann Morgan, Ziev
Vanessa Raabe, Kevin Michael Flannery Rank, Samuel Gibson Rayner, Jon Charles
Ben Moses, Aimee Rosann Peck, Christopher Ryan Russo, Sherzana Sunderji, Mark
Reich, Geoffrey Merritt Rutledge, Bridgette Marie Suri, J Allen Swanson Jr, Christine
Douglas Tyson
Thomas, Kelsey Ann Watt, Jeffrey Peter Willging
Alumni: Sarah Garlan Johansen, Edward Jonathan Merrens
MISSISSIPPI Faculty: Joseph Peter Cravero, Susan Marie Pepin
University of Mississippi School of Medicine—Alpha Mississippi House staff: Antonia Altomare, Christina Janelle Azevedo, Jonathan Trumbull
Students: Matt Burford, Jay Oliver Craddock, Stacey Elizabeth Douglas, Michael Huntington
Foster, Benjamin Lucas Hodnett, Mark Gill Kosko, Elizabeth Spence Piazza, Marcus
NEW JERSEY
Andrew Presley, Katherine Leigh Ragland, Mark Andrew Runnels, Benjamin Forrest
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Robert Wood Johnson
Tillman, Helga Bacareza Vamenta-Morris, Joseph Verzwyvelt, Sidney Larken Ware,
Medical School—Alpha New Jersey
Shelby Young White, Ryan Yates
Students: David Matthew Bennett, Bryan Thomas Burke, Alessia Carluccio, Michael
B DiGiacomo, Kelly Elizabeth Fabrega, Brian David Fernholz, Travis Cron Foster,

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 53


New members

Alison Grazioli, Gowtham Jonna, Noreen Patricia Kelly, Dallas Kingsbury, Laura House staff: Constantine Farmakidis, Miranda Harris-Glocker
Longo, Caitlin Martin, Nicole Irene Montgomery, Erin Patricia Murphy, Molly Rose State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center College of
Nadelson, Chiti Parikh, Dupal R Patel, Shanon Thomas Peter, Julianne Pupa, Matthew Medicine—Eta New York
Douglas Saybolt, Danielle Marie Sciorra, Christopher Philip Sereni, Margarita Marie Students: Alexandre Paul Ancheta, Robert Brownell, Jeffrey Thomas Bruckel, Yair
Sergonis, Anjali B Sheth, Alan Sing, Neil Kanth Taunk, Julia Ham Terhune, Matthew Chaya, Ivanka Choumanova, Ilana Juliett DeLuca, Gregory S Dibelius, Fara Friedman,
David Treiser, Wan-Ju Wu Elizabeth A Gancher, Kelly James Givens, Jeffrey Gusenburg, Chenchan Huang, Sara
Alumni: Jeffrey Neil Bruce Elizabeth Kopple, Eugenia C Kuo, Timothy Connor Leupp, Elie Boaz Lowenstein,
Faculty: Anthony Tobia, Stephen Trzeciak Oleg Mironov, Franklin Nwoke, Susan E Pesci, Emily Lauren Robbins, Giorgio
House staff: Terrence Curran, Fedele DePalma Antonio Roccaro, Annaheta Salajegheh, Nicholas Spartan Santavicca, Dominick
UMDNJ—New Jersey Medical School—Beta New Jersey Santoriello, Guy Savir, Avraham Sofer, Sherwin Leu Su, Jennifer Sweet, Louise Marie
Students: Mafudia Abibatu Bangura, John Henry Bast, Chinmoy Bhate, Adam Chen, Truong, Alexander Volodarskiy
Isaac Chu, Brian Do, Summer Elshenawy, Eugene Daniel Festa, Michaela Grace Ibach, Alumni: Samuel Packer, Andrew Charles Yacht
Michael B Jacoby, Neil Kapadia, Mary Elizabeth Kelleher, Michael Klodnicki, Monica Faculty: Salvatore J A Sclafani, George A Vas
Koncicki, Timothy Meehan, Haresh Vijay Naringrekar, Kevin Paul O’Donnell, Joseph House staff: Graciela Beatriz De Jesus, Marina Kogut, Brandon George Smaglo
Benton Oliver, Laju M Patel, Shriji Patel, Chuanxing Qu, Nakul P Raykar, William Albany Medical College—Theta New York
Henry Rossy, Shannon Frances Scrudato, Amit Sharma, Douglas Michael Smith, Students: Alin Lina Akopians, David E Auringer, Jesse Tao Buedefeldt-Pollard,
Kathleen Sullivan, Nikhil Thaker, Ashley Gayle Winter, Ronald Zviti Erin Marie Cooney-Qualter, Justin Corey DeWillers, Erika Beth Ebert, Jeremy M
Faculty: Rajendra Kapila Esposito, Greg Everett Gin, Rashmi Jayadevan, Melissa Dawn Kivitz, Karilyn Theresa
House staff: Vadim Pisarenko Melanie Larkin, Tsang Lau, Frank S Lin, Lindsey Adair MacFarlane, Julia A Mathew,
Lindsey Ann Tillack, Amanda Marie Tower, Timothy Y Tran, Jenanan Prakasha
NEW MEXICO
Vairavamurthy, Mae Whelan, Jennifer Wootten, Edmund S Wu, Devin Stephen
University of New Mexico School of Medicine—Alpha New Mexico
Zarkowsky
Students: Sean Biggs, Jeremiah Manuel Bustos, Kenneth Michael Downes, Kathlyn
Faculty: John Hinty Burton, John W Simon
Joan Drexler, Coughi Camille Edens, Joshua Frederiksen, Heidi Hillesland, Michelle
New York Medical College—Iota New York
Rae Longmire, Jill Katherine Oldewage, Brandon Robert Peterson, Dustin Richter
Students: Kerry Apostolo, Timothy Paul Capecchi, Jessica Clima, Jacqueline Marie
Faculty: Martha Cole McGrew, Alan Garlett Waxman
Cook, Rachel Dahlborg, Matthew Dattwyler, Adam Ryan Demner, Ezra Detroy,
House staff: Pablo Garcia, Tony B Salazar, Selina Silva
Amanda Jane Fantry, James Felker, Patricia Fermin, Heidrun Elizabeth Gollogly, John
NEW YORK Patrick Curtis Gonzales, Jennifer Tome Higa, Shipra Hingorany, Miriam Kishinevsky,
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons—Alpha New York Andrew Steffes Korson, Megan Rae Linnebur, Jessica May, Hristina N Natcheva, Nita
Students: Mohsin S Ahmed, Priya Batra, Mauer Biscotti, Alexandra Jane Borst, Laura Nayak, Jennifer Anne Nowak, Julie Rice, Daniel Ricotta, Jordan Isaac Roth, Jayne B
N Brenner, Adam M Buck, Alison B Callahan, Louisa Canham, Peter N Chalmers, Rozelle, Lauren Spring, Jamie Stratton, David Tian, Edward Yap
Elizabeth J Diver, Erica DaVonne Farrand, Magni Hamso, Kathie Kai Huang, Ryan Alumni: John Joseph Degliuomini, Joanna Pessolano
Michael Joshi Ivie, Michael Ma, Robert Allen McGovern III, Martha R Neagu, Kristen Faculty: Jay D Draoua, Ray Whitt
A Pastor, Ravi Pathak, Sara Plett, Alvin Rishi Rajkomar, Katelyn Smithling, Moeun Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University—Kappa New York
Son, Robert A Sorabella, Mary L Stevenson, Danielle Trief, Emily A Vail, Matthew J Students: Alaleh Akhavan, Lukas Robert Austin-Page, Revekka Babayev, Adam Finn
Weinstock Binder, Laura Eve Brown, Kathleen Mary Buchheit, Yu Chen, Larissa Ann Chismar,
Weill Cornell Medical College—Beta New York Matthew Czaja, Izak Faiena, Jonathan Ross Groden, Evan Kandler Grove, Nancy
Students: Konstantinos John Arnaoutakis, Wesley Hurst Clark, Audrey Diane Habib, Margo Shawn Harrison, Svetlana Sarah Kachan-Liu, David Khalil, Sameer
Crummey, Sandra Marie Demars, Narat Eungdamrong, Daniel Joseph Friedman, Kumar Kulkarni, Nicholas Kwaan, Brenda F Levy, Caitlin Patricia McMullen, Yolanda
Katharine Corbett Goheen, Jonathan Stanley Gordin, Erica Lisa Greenberg, Chloe Michetti, Troy Anthony Miles, Jonathan U Peled, Jennifer Ann Schaub, Jessica
Electra Hill, Michael Adrian Klufas, Sarah Lewis, Alison Brooke Santopolo May, Schreiber-Zinaman, Natasha Shapiro, Alan T Sheyman, David Greenfield Snetman,
Anthony Ehren Rosen, Sarah Hall Schaefer, Allison Raye Schulman Ari Spiro, Angela Mable Trinh, Danielle Justine Usatin, Roger E Wiltfong, Sarah
State University of New York, Upstate Medical University, College of Marie Yannascoli
Medicine—Gamma New York Faculty: Amy Emanuela Kesselman
Students: Sarah L Averill, Niladri Basu, Jeffrey A Belair, Caitlin Bernard, Douglas Mount Sinai School of Medicine of New York University—Lambda New York
Michael Hildrew, Quynh N Hoang, Katharine Driscoll Maglione, Sean Robert Students: Tara E Albano, Luke John Benvenuto, Mai-Khanh Bui-Duy, Justin Chan,
McMahon, Jonathan Naysan, Julie M Rombaut, Michael Francis Sorrentino, Charles Lora Rabin Dagi, Ralph Michael DeBiasi, German Echeverry, Naamit Kurshan
Nicholas Weber Gerber, Lisa Michelle Hammond, Jonathan Lee, Rebecca Lucy Luckett, Emily Claire
Alumni: Blanche Antionette Borzell, Joseph William Hinterberger McClung, Alexander James Millman, Courtney Nagel, Meghan Pearl, Andrea
Faculty: Kwame Sarpong Amankwah Schwartz, Sheryl Serbowicz, Maria Widmar, Lauren Zajac
House staff: Matthew Bryant Crowell, Pankaj Mehta, Sekou Robertson Rawlins Alumni: Daniel Caplivski, June Kim
New York University School of Medicine—Delta New York Faculty: Katherine T Chen, Edward John Ronan
Students: Marra Gillian Ackerman, Joshua Will Allen-Dicker, Alana Rose Amarosa, House staff: Edward Chan, Brian Marc Elliott, Ilene B Goldstein
Bradley Stephen Bloom, Arlene Sujin Chung, Thomas Michael Facelle, Ely Richard Stony Brook University Medical Center School of Medicine—Mu New York
Felker, Emily Ford, Benjamin Hairan Ge, Luba Gulyaeva, Elizabeth Price Gurney, Students: Kristen Ann Aliano, Yelena Bogdan, Kenneth Friedman, Sara Kalkhoran,
Robert Raymond Kule, Jesse Miller Lewin, Evan Seth Marlin, Michelle Mergenthal, Mahsa Hoshmand Kochi, Kevin Lai, Daniel J Lee, Lorena LoVerde, Amar Buddhadev
Ryan William Morgan, Rose O’Rourke, Carly Browning Oboudiyat, Rushi Parikh, Manvar, James E Miranda, Eugene Jon Pietzak III, Michaela Danielle Restivo, Mark
Derek Daniel Reformat, Kathryn Ross, Lourdes Maria Sanso, Jeffrey Shyu, Nathaniel Snyder, Brandon Scott Sprung, Ashley Ward, Benjamin Yam
Smilowitz, Emily Frank Stamell, Bobby A Tajudeen, Jolyn Sharpe Taylor, Vitaly Alumni: Scott Johnson
Terushkin, Patrick Robert Varley, Amelia Mackenzie Wnorowski, Edward William Faculty: William L Jungers, Daniel Yellon
Zagha
NORTH CAROLINA
Alumni: Fritz Francois, Burton D Rose
Duke University School of Medicine—Alpha North Carolina
Faculty: Iman Osman, Harvey I Pass
Students: Matthew Murray Crowe, Susan Emmett, McKinley Glover, Stephen
University at Buffalo, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, State
Cannada Harward, Robert Andrew Henderson, Michael Hodavance, Elmer Philip
University of New York—Epsilon New York
Lehman IV, Wenjing Liu, Paula Pecen, Matan Isaac Setton, Lauren Rebecca Simel,
Students: Jessica B Badlam, Brian P Batt, Jamie Benway, Joyce Meng-Tin Chang,
Weiyi Tan, Richard Christopher Waters, David Alan Watkins, Tyler Steven Watters,
Samantha Chase, Angela Rose Girvin, Elizabeth Anne Gruber-Brem, Darren Michael
Caroline Eva Yeager
Huffman, Sara Hylwa, Jennifer Lee Jung, Anjum Faruk Koreishi, Allana Krolikowski,
Alumni: Edward Hecht Bossen
Evan Leibu, Allie Marie Massaro, Gina Matteson, Justin Mazzillo, Scott R Nodzo, Jeet
Faculty: Sharon Fridovich Freedman, Cynthia Shortell
Patel, Melissa Lynn Rayhill, Arsalan Q Shabbir, Lisa Marie Stabel, Jonathan J Stone,
House staff: Brent Allen Hanks
Ashley Wentworth
Wake Forest University Health Sciences (School of Medicine)—Beta North
Faculty: David M. Holmes
Carolina
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry—Zeta New York
Students: Timothy Bruce Alton, Hoyt Randall Beard, Joseph Charles Benjamin,
Students: Jennifer Rhoda Abrams, Joshua Burton Brown, Laurence Donahue, Tracy
Bradley Edward Bowen, Ashley Renee Brown, Michelle Lynn Bryan, Snow Daws,
Lynn Fuhrmann, Romeo Regi Galang III, Samuel Horr, Brian Paul Jenssen], Ajay
Michael Wayne Evans, Stuart David Ginn, Ilya Gorbachinsky, Matthew Ryan Grace,
Eapen Kuriyan, Andrew Hall Marky, Marlene Theresa Mathews, David Jonathan
Kathleen Harknett, Jessica Lynn Hata, Elizabeth B Hunt, Christopher Hunter, William
Mener, Christine Marie Osborne, David Henry Perlmutter, William Joseph Sauer,
P Huntington, Ida Sheevaun Khaki, Dylan Corey Lippert, Emily Myers Mann, Carrie
Jeremy Sinkin, Leslie Kathryn Vilkhu
Elizabeth Quinn McCloskey, Todd Peacock, Jeremy Webb
Alumni: Dennis Harry Kraus
Alumni: Gary Lon Morgan
Faculty: Rabih M Salloum

54 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Faculty: Tamison Jewett, Vinay Thohan House staff: Ryan Patrick Finnan, Christopher Thomas Manetta, Muddassir
House staff: Montgomery Lee Roberts, Oliver Adrian Varban Mehmood
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine—Gamma Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine—Zeta Ohio
North Carolina Students: Rachel Elizabeth Barron, Patrick Louis Brine, Michael Chichak, Kelly A
Students: Michael Joseph Adelman, Shereen Azam Alavian, Craig Joseph Baden, Covey, Chad Patrick Henson, Donald Nicholas Hope, Brian Katz, Elena Kazimirko,
Kaitlyn Marie Bailey, Joshua Berkowitz, Jason E Blatt, Ross Mathew Boyce, Ashmita Katherine A Kutney, David Lerner, Maria Emmeline Lim, Reema Mallick, Kevin Pan,
Chatterjee, Steven H Cook, Casey Jae Davis, Joshua Seth Davis, Matthew Morris Deepa D Patadia, Jennifer Michelle Rybka, Erin Smith, Sunpreet S Tandon, Brittain
Dedmon, Bradley C Fetzer, Maria Katherine Henry, Christopher Horvat, Matthew Hammill Tulbert, Johanna Sharisse Wilson, Jeffrey Yang Jr
Ramseur McDaniel, Charles Brandon Mitchell, Nathan Montgomery, Haley Alumni: Iain H Kalfas, Melissa Shannon Kirven
Burchfield Ringwood, Alyssa Darcelle Searles, Lauren Claire Smith, Abhineet Uppal, Faculty: Thomas McDonald File Jr, James Scott Young
Daniel Paul Verges, Sally D Wood House staff: Lauren N Burns, George L Trimble IV
Alumni: Leonard Alden Parker
OKLAHOMA
Faculty: Luis A Diaz, Hong Jin Kim
University of Oklahoma College of Medicine—Alpha Oklahoma
House staff: James Darrell Laudate, Allen Fletcher Marshall, Lucas Wymore
Students: Jeffrey Belisle, Stephanie Lynn Boes, Cassandra Rae Duncan-Azadi, Joel
The Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University—Delta North
David Dunn, Brandt Esplin, Jessica Rochelle Fesler, Tyson Dale Fisher, Blake Daniel
Carolina
Forcina, Paul Foreman, Sara Fransen Grace, Larissa Hines, Carla Holcomb, Lisa
Students: Phillip Andrew Austin, Linda Bridges Bialobrzeski, Michael Brian Burris,
Holeman, Michael Philip Hood, John Charles Kaufman, Thomas Lance Lane, Kaylan
Natalie Lucas Davies, Stephen Wayne Davies, Natalie Desouza, Hayley Michelle
Leigh Lawson, Yaohan Li, Julie Anne Linden, Brooke N McQueen, Gwendolyn Kay
Fischer-Hayes, Samuel Allen Hayes, Steven Todd Hobgood, Kathryn Leigh Idol-Xixis,
Neel, Mary Samantha Paden, Christopher Rose, Crista Jean Thomas, Eric David
Susan Ashley Morgan, Alexandra Te Stang, Neel George Thomas, Ying Zhang
Thomas, Brandon Trojan, Ryan Joseph Trojan, Mary Elizabeth Turner, Rebecca
NORTH DAKOTA Jeanne Vana, Joshua Stephen Weingartner, Eric Sa Wisenbaugh
University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences—Alpha
OREGON
North Dakota
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine—Alpha
Students: Cameron Mark Charchenko, Amanda Jean Johnson, Emily Koeck, Justin
Students: Shivali Agnani, Alalia Berry, Erin Jean Braithwaite, Matthew Dale Brock,
LeBlanc, Jared Michael Mahylis, Erica Leigh Martin-Macintosh, Jeffrey Brian Nelson,
Jill Kathleen R Christensen, Jessica Lee Davis, Ryne Alexandra Didier, Jenna Marie
Luke William Van Alstine, Tiffany Kristen Weber
Donaldson, John Phillip Dupaix, Laura Eastburn Keck, Zachariah Kramer, Evan Los,
Alumni: Andrea Rochelle Howick
Megan Rose Lundeberg, Geoff Maly, Jonathan Robert Meserve, Kyle Edward Mouery,
Faculty: Joan Marie Connell, Erdal Diri
Kara Siegrist-Taylor, Anna Michelle Stagner, Tara Cathryn Stahla, Sean Summers,
House staff: Georges El Hoyek, Jay Martin MacGregor, Avish Nagpal
Rachel Marie Thomas, Jessica Lynn Voge, Wendy Leigh Walker, Brian Raymond
OHIO Winters
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine—Alpha Ohio Faculty: Daniel Handel, Rebecca Harrison
Students: Shannon Nicole Acker, Ashley D Alexander, Pamela MaryJane Aubert, House staff: Katherine Iossi, Andre Martin Mansoor, Taketo Watase
Emi Elizabeth Bays, Stephanie Frances Chandler, Patrick Fitzgerald Elliott, Natalia
PENNSYLVANIA
Grindler, Ihab Halaweish, Michael Lee Hudson, Matthew Douglas Kalp, Allen Lam,
Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University—Alpha
Aaron Joseph Lindsay, Syed Saad Mahmood, Jovana Yanique Martin, Shibani Mukerji,
Pennsylvania
Pankit Parikh, Morgan Kate Richards, Jonathon O Russell, Daniel Sand, Sarah Beth
Students: Victoria Marie Addis, Michael Christopher Aynardi, Shannon Nicole Bailey,
Smith, Gregory Ward, Amber Nicole Watters, Nicholas James Wilson, Nina R
Cameron M Bass, Irina Belinsky, John Smith Berry IV, Timothy Baldwin Brown,
Woldenberg
Sudeshna Chatterjee, Ryan Christopher Cleary, Karen Lynn Connolly, Jennifer Lea
Faculty: Elizabeth Dorr McKinley
Davis, Ismar Dizdarevic, Danielle N Elliott, Matthew C Ferroni, Alithea Gabrellas,
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine—Beta Ohio
Geoffrey Steven Gaunay, Mudit Gilotra, Ian Patrick Hayden, Janae Kathleen Heath,
Students: Jared C Bentley, Catherine Callie Coombs, Elizabeth Courtney Crane-
Virginia Jackson, Robert Luke Kinner, Franklin Chong-Ho Lee, Patricia Anne Loftus,
Sherman, Meghan M Crute, Lauren Elizabeth Dubas, Anne Marie Guappone, Patrick
Aldo V Londino, Elizabeth Kyle Meehan, Sarah J Nagle, Timothy Eric Newhook,
James Haas, Aliecia Margeurite Hochhausler, Robert William Isfort, Heather Kaiser,
Arpan A Patel, Michael William Quartuccio, Nathan Russell Roberts, Elise Saddleton,
Robert James Larke, William J Moravec, Rachael Nemcic, Robert Orlowski, Neha
Anish N Sen, Colin Lloyd Smith, Joshua Sommovilla, Erica B Stein, Renee Szumski,
Patel, Allison Rose, John David Sargent, Kristin Anne Schmidlin, Jeffrey Michael
Kimberly Ann Tefft, Raya Terry, Kathryn McKinna Van Abel, Ryan van Hoff, Elliot
Sutton, Paul Toste, Kara E von Zychlin, Michael James Wert, Willis Taylor Williams,
Wakeam
Trisha Wise-Draper, Ke Xie
Faculty: Demetrius H Bagley, Robert H Rosenwasser
Alumni:
House staff: Adam Luginbuhl, Ankitkumar Kirankumar Patel
Faculty: Karl Golnik, Joel Tsevat
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine—Beta Pennsylvania
House staff: Jocelyn Marie Logan-Collins, Udayakumar Navaneethan, Colby A Wyatt
Students: Jane Ilana Bernstein, Lawrence Thomas Bish, Rachael Elizabeth Bonawitz,
Ohio State University College of Medicine—Gamma Ohio
Beth Dolinsky, Kian Eftekhari, Lea Alexa Filippone, Brandon C Gabel, Ryan Grant,
Students: Alicia Marie Alcamo, Clayton Bettin, Elaine Michele Binkley, Tirza Mary
Marie Angelique Guerraty, Alexia Virginia Harrist, Rebecca Sylvie Isserman, Neha
Costello, Peter Croft, Coral Xantia Day, Angela Fan Zhou Douglas, Taylor Andrew
Jeurkar, Amit Vikram Khera, Benjamin Monteverde Kleaveland, Susan Catherine
Finseth, Andrew David Foster, Haven Rebecca Garber, Aaron M Gerstenmaier,
Lipsett, Sarah Longworth, Aura Maria Obando, Christina Shearer Palmer, Aaron
Patricia Anne Gilligan, James Wes Halderman, Elizabeth Halley, Jeffrey William
Paul, Megan Bye Richie, Anna Louise Ross, Jamie Catherine Timmons, Michael
Hawk, Vincent Ho, Brittany Belcastro Hubbell, Elizabeth Anne Huffman, Jennifer
Antonio Vella, Jessica Ann Volk, Jennifer L Weinberg, Anna Katharine Weiss,
Louise Hunnicutt, Rowan Karaman, Katelyn Elizabeth Krivchenia, Jeffrey I
Anthony Joseph Wilson, Alexandra Nicole Yurkovic
Kutsikovich, Rein Lambrecht, Jessica Lynn Leadford, Bryan Jennings Liming, Mary
Faculty: James S White
Elizabeth Mccrate, Michael Wesley Milks, Mary Sandquist, Mary Scaduto, Scott
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine—Gamma Pennsylvania
Thomas Shemory, Janice R Shook, Rebecca Anne Sieber, Jennifer Sopkovich, Clayton
Students: Neilly Ann Buckalew, Nadine Champsi, Bhumy Dave, Thomas W DeCato,
Robert Taylor, Kenneth D Varian, Kiersten Walther
Ian Gorovoy, Robert Frederick Groff, Kristen Nicole Gross, Jessica Sanna Kim, Brian
Alumni: Clotilde Bowen, Francis Michael Minch
Chei-Fai Lau, Andrew Hans Leuenberger, Sunil Misra, Rachel Lynn Orler, Meera
Faculty: Michael Rhodes Grever, Richard Davis Shell
Sheffrin, Melissa Kay Stewart, Matthew James Stull, Sarah Brennan Sullivan, Laura
House staff: Nicholas John Behrendt, Hallie Prescott, Erin Nicole Ricciardi
Jean Viccaro, Rachel Ren Wang, Karl Nicholas Yaeger, Zachary Andrew Zator
The University of Toledo, College of Medicine—Delta Ohio
Faculty: Franklin Bontempo, Stephanie Buck Dewar
Students: Patrick C Beeman, Jaime Michelle Bucher, Elvis Cami, George Andrew
House staff: Michelle Moniz, Javier Salgado Pogacnik
Carberry, Eric Dockter, Dustin Fleck, Amanda Irene Jan, Christina Sue Jenkins,
Drexel University College of Medicine—Delta-Zeta
Stephen C Johnson, Bruce Franz Kaufman, Derek Klaus, Adam Mahoney, Emily
Students: Maire Abraham, Stephanie Ann Austin, Therese Bittermann, Rahul Kumar
McDonnell, Bryan Moloney, Thomas Richard O’Toole, Anand Pattani, Clayton
Biyani, Jeffrey Brennan, Jillian Cronin Buhler, Nicholas Celano, Preston Wyatt
Richard Perry, Brittany Raburn, Grant William Reed, Jessica Lynn Reynolds, William
Chadwick, Sharon Deol, Timothy Liam Donegan, Lindsay Kathleen Finkas, Tamir
Patrick Schmitt, Erica Sprague, Robert Brent Steiner, Jill Tseng, Jason Russell Young
Friedman, David Galos, Robert Adam Goldfarb, Sujeet Govindan, Jared Chase
Alumni: Donna A Woodson
Grochowsky, Brianne Elizabeth Hackman, Scott S Harris, Meredith Anne Harrison,
Faculty: Maurice Manning, Gretchen Tietjen
Megan Elizabeth Healy, Joann Beth Hunsberger, Jared Alan Johnstun, Krister J Jones,
Wright State University Boonschoft School of Medicine—Epsilon Ohio
Rachel Bulbul Kadakia, Adam Trowbridge Lipman, Kristin Jeanne Livingston, Peter
Students: Erin Leigh Brattoli, Megan Marie Chambers, Jason R Ferrel, Melanie
Stewart Maropis, Amelia McLennan, Michael Joseph Messina, Brian Mosier, Joshua
Elizabeth Golembiewski, Jessica Erin Guyer, Jennifer King, Katrina Lambert, Crystal
Charles Obuch, Nathan Olson, Elizabeth Lynn Pinney, Sarah Sangnim Rhee, Shawn
Rose Lantz, Yuchun Grace Liao, Aminata N Mansaray, Laura Dawn Phillips-Chou,
Paul Robinson, Amanda Celest Roof, Avnee Shah, Christa Marie Siebenburgen,
Shanthi S Ramesh, Jeffrey Scott Robinson, Lindsay Michael Stollings
Faculty: Terry Lee Correll

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 55


New members

Gregory Scott Smith, Vikas Thondapu, Shannon Lisa Tocchio, Pollianne Ward, Jason Faculty: Wendy Renee Cornett, L Britt Wilson
Ben Winkler, Rosemary Yi, Shuhao Zhang House staff: John Andrew Goldsmith
Alumni: Carol L Carraccio, Donald M Yealy
SOUTH DAKOTA
Faculty: Bernard Abraham Eskin, Page Morahan
Sanford School of Medicine of the University of South Dakota—Alpha South
House staff: Katherine Anne Gargiulo, Chileshe Nkonde, Lauren Jodie Van Scoy
Dakota
Temple University School of Medicine—Epsilon Pennsylvania
Students: Kimberly Nicole Harer, Seth William Harrer, Ross A Miller, Carrissa Mae
Students: Daniel Joseph Ackerman, Sang Wook An, Bryn Anne Boslett, Robert
Pietz, Travis Scharnweber, Halie Marie Vosler, Emily June Winterton, Jesse Thomas
John Brenchak, Brian Campfield, Marybeth Rose Concannon, Samantha English
Young
Day, Leigh Anne DiCicco, Jonathan Finkel, Gurpreet Kaur Gill, Silke Heinisch, Amy
Alumni: Charles Joseph Kopriva
Elizabeth Hosmer, Lauren Elizabeth Krug, Andreas Michael Lamelas, Mollie Abigail
Faculty: Paul C Bunger
Land, Barrett Little, Kelly Loftus, Tiffany Kay Lonchena, Robert Andrew Miller,
House staff: Elizabeth Joanne Wheatley
Daniel Jon Mueller, Ann Marie Murray, Carolynn Joy Ainsworth Nassar, Adaobi I
Nwaneshiuu, Michael O’Malley, Kim An Quach, Hannah Ravreby, Nathan Chris TENNESSEE
Tiedeken, Marc Tolley, Porshia Marie Tomlin, Anne Hemphill Warner Vanderbilt University School of Medicine—Alpha Tennessee
Alumni: Joseph J Thoder, Jacob W Ufberg Students: Amir Michael Abtahi, Tiffany Nicole Suzanne Ballard, James Russell
Faculty: Gilbert D’Alonzo, Robert Stephen Fisher Bekeny, Jashodeep Datta, Elizabeth Anne Gordon, Courtney Hayes Harrison, Eve
Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine—Eta Pennsylvania Henry, Natalie Louise Jacobowski, Emily Ann Kendall, Brandon Richard Litzner,
Students: Steven A Azaravich, David Scott Baird, Annalee Morgan Baker, Jonathan Daniel Adam Mordes, Jared Martin O’Leary, Alanna Marie Patsiokas, John Gary
Scott Bassett, Lindsey Alison Beers, Levi Potter Benson, Garret Wayne Choby, Phillips, Miranda Danelle Raines, Johanna Nathania Riesel, Joshua Elliott Rubin,
Andrea Beth Conway, Christopher Edwards, Galen Toye Foulke, Elizabeth Ann Daniel Eidelberg Spratt, Sara Katharine Tedeschi, Eli Zimmerman
Westen Fountaine, Elisabeth R Garwood, Amanda Bird Gilmartin, Yan Ho, Christine Alumni: Sara J Patterson
Marie Homcha, Jessica Lauren Hootnick, Nathan C Hull, Seth E Ilgenfritz, Matthew Faculty: Mohana Bhalchandra Karlekar, Amanda Grace Wilson
Eugene Jansen, Afif Naji Kulaylat, Kelly Ann Laraway, Mark Joseph Masciocchi, Ryan House staff: Francine V Arneson, Ryan Donald Hollenbeck, Daniel Garvin Stover
Michael Mitchell, Erin Lindsay Murata, Charles Michael Pagana, Brandon Shane University of Tennessee Health Science Center, College of Medicine—Beta
Smetana, Bozho Todorich, Christina Jayne Tofani, Jordan Anthony Torok Tennessee
Faculty: Michael Jay Green, Thomas J McGarrity Students: Alkesh Ashwinkumar Amin, Leslie Paige Austin, Danielle Lynne Barnard,
House staff: Lillian Marie Erdahl, Jessica Lynn Henderson, Paul Howard Smith III Jonathan Raines Berger, Emily Marie Bratton, Maryanne Matinee Chumpia, Daniel
Haden Doty, Bryan Scott England, Curtis Shannon Gaylord, Mary Katherine Johnson,
PUERTO RICO
Emily Defur Joyce, Erik Michael Maryniw, Adam R Militana, Lawrence Kevin
University of Puerto Rico School of Medicine—Alpha Puerto Rico
O’Malley, Joshua P Parlaman, Jay Girish Patel, Brian Christopher Payne, Barry Joel
Students: Milliette Alvarado, Jose A Alvarez-Cardona, Idanis M Berrios-Morales,
Pelz, Ron Benton Pitkanen, Ian Craig Reinemeyer, Jerry Mark Smith, Byron Fitzgerald
Eduardo J Colom-Beauchamp, Nydia Ymar Colon-Irizarry, Hector Javier Diaz, Maria
Stephens
Eugenia Florian-Rodriguez, Stephanie Font-Diaz, Reinaldo Jose Fornaris, Jessica
Faculty: Rose Mary Sutton Stocks, Stephanie Ann Storgion
Gonzalez-Hernandez, Luis Saul Lizardo-Sanchez, Ronald J Lopez-Cepero Mulero,
House staff: Brian Emanuel Brocato
Akram Mesleh-Shayeb, Ana Maria Pabon-Martinez, Leilanie Perez-Ramirez, Sulimar
Meharry Medical College School of Medicine—Gamma Tennessee
Rodriguez-Santiago, Jose E Velazquez-Vega
Students: Ryan Bliss, Cassandra Bradby, Brittany Joy Brown, May Cho, Tiffany Latrice
Alumni: William Micheo, Carmen D Zorrilla
Clay, Jared Michael Davis, Maria Theresa dela Cruz Ramones, Tonya L Dixon,
Faculty: Yazmin Pedrogo, Sharee Ann Umpierre
Jeanene H Gabriel, Ikponmwosa Iyamu, Rosanne Leger, Brooke Louisa Morrell,
House staff: Keimari Mendez-Martinez
HaiThuy N Nguyen, Luis Horacio Ocampo Jr, Alexis L Rodriguez
Ponce School of Medicine—Beta Puerto Rico
Alumni: Barbara Alfreda Duncan-Cody, Howard Clarence Willis
Students: Joanne E Castillo, Daryana Cruz, Nathania M Figueroa Guilliani, Simone
Faculty: Millard D Collins, Ayodeji Ayoola Oso
Amanda Neuwelt, Leah Ailed Orta Nieves, Yahaira Ortiz-Munoz, Ana-Marie Rojas
East Tennessee State University James H Quillen College of Medicine—Delta
Sol, Wilson Rovira-Pena, Frances G Tardy-Rivera
Tennessee
Faculty: Idhaliz Flores-Caldera
Students: Maikel Ella Botros, David Dahl, Daniel Weston Hobgood, Laura Kristin
Universidad Central del Caribe School of Medicine—Gamma Puerto Rico
Howell, Ginger Lovingood, Charles Orton, Georganna Michelle Rosel, Eric Davis
Students: William Arroyo, Dorgam Badran, Luz Juliana Barahona, Daniela Carlos,
Smith, Jeanne Marie Young
Lisa Michelle Cruz-Aviles, Kelly Ughini De Souza, Jonathan Guerra, Sullafa Muftah
Faculty: Jason B Moore
Kadura, Alejandro Lopez Araujo, Nilsa De Jesus Rosario
House staff: Dinesh Sharma
Alumni: Wanda Ivelisse Torres
Faculty: Frances Lynn Garcia, Luis A Irizarry-Reyes TEXAS
University of Texas Medical Branch, University of Texas Medical School at
RHODE ISLAND
Galveston—Alpha Texas
The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University—Alpha Rhode
Students: Caitlin Gayle Andrews, Conor John Best, Bo Beus, Jonathan David Braun,
Island
Andrew William Chambers, Kelly Elizabeth Cline, Andrew Michael Courson, Adam
Students: Andrew Allegretti, Andrew M Brunner, Margret W Chang, Jonah M Cohen,
Djurdjulov, Paul Michael Evans, Jeremy Andrew Halbe, Michael Andrew Hames,
Vincent D Criscione, Michael Steven Gart, Isaac William Howley, Austin Larson,
Jacey Refaat Hanna, Adriane Floyd Haragan, John Clare Heymann, Paul Houghtaling,
Joanna V MacLean, Charles Mitchell, Natalie J Nokoff, Eric J Palecek, Terence Tai
Auris Onn-Lay Huen, Sharon Elizabeth Hughes, Titilope Adenike Ishola, Charles
Weng Sio, Mary B Sutter, William G Tsiaras, Juan Camilo Vasquez, Beverly Ray
William Kimbrough, Katie Lael Kucera, Jillian Whitney Lazor, Anthony James Lewis,
Young
Michaela Renee Marek, Robert Nathanson, Julie Nguyen, Matthew Brian Pavelka,
Alumni: Galen Vincent Henderson
Emiko Petrosky, Michael Leroy Rains, Sanjita Ravishankar, Eric Scott Rosenberger,
Faculty: Penelope H Dennehy, Kelly McGarry, John Teichgraeber
Jennifer Lynn Russell, Christopher Michael Sakowski, Ronald Jeffrey Schmitt, Adam
House staff: Alexander Phillip Edward Diaz de Villalvilla, Evangelos Messaris, Thomas
Joseph Schneider, Richa Shukla, Jacob Guia Thomas, Michael Wang
Murphy
Baylor College of Medicine—Beta Texas
SOUTH CAROLINA Students: Amir Aboutalebi, Sunaina Subodhkumar Bhuchar, Sydney Lane Boule,
Medical University of South Carolina College of Medicine—Alpha South Steven Siangkiat Chua, Mary Caitlin Dooley, Pamela Griffin Ferry, Gary Bryan
Carolina Fillette, Jennifer Rose Gatchel, Waqar Mohammad Haque, Michael James Holland,
Students: Christopher McAlister Ayers, Annie Wei-Ting Chen, Megan Shive Adam Brent Hollander, Gary Lloyd Horn Jr, Kelli Danielle Jones, Reva Kakkar, Ramiro
Cifuni, Daniel Bryon Cobb, John Clayton Crantford, Stephen Aloysius Cross, Jose Madden-Fuentes, Christopher Patrick Neumann, Roma Rajesh Patel, Lauren
Stephen Hughes Finley, Jacob Ross Gillen, Robert A Glass III, Robert John Hosker, Elizabeth Patterson, Christian David Albert Peccora, Christine Elizabeth Petrich,
Derrick Adam Huey, John Phillips Hungerford, Jason P Lockrow, Matthew Brian Craig Rodgers, Robert Donald Russell, Robert Lee Salazar, Amishi Yogesh Shah,
Christopher McDermott, John William Nance Jr, Allen Ernest Pendarvis Jr, Ashok K Fareesa Shuja, Emma Phyllis Whitcomb
Ramachandra, Eugene Ritter Sansoni, Roger Sullivan, Karin Whitlock Taylor, Daniel Faculty: John H Coverdale
Ryan Toms, Jenna Leigh Walters, Zachary Inskeep Willis House staff: Benjamin Davis Fox, Chad Michael Ruoff
Faculty: William John Hueston, Patricia Geraty McBurney University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Southwestern
House staff: James Michael Allen, Paul Thomas Eberts Medical School—Gamma Texas
University of South Carolina School of Medicine—Beta South Carolina Students: Krista Ruth Alexander, Eric Arnold, Bryant Carroll Boren, Isaac
Students: Rose E Coady, Jonathan Ashby Davis, Trevor Michael Downing, April Alexander Bowman, Lyle Burdine, Shurong Chang, Joy Chen, Lee Warren Chen,
A Grant, Brittany Nicole Knick, Justin Marsh, Jeffrey Paul Radabaugh, Hector Sadia Choudhery, Mark Dalesandro, Jameson Cuyler Dear, Jamie Nella Frediani,
Rodriguez, Clara Eileen Sanders, Marion Morgan Swall Emily Gaddis, Kristina Liselotte Goff, Michael Graves, Elizabeth Ashley Hardin,
Alumni: Robert Carter Holleman Jr, Leroy F Robinson James Curtis Harms, Ana Kashfia Islam, Rachel Jamison, Megan Marie Johnson,

56 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Anthony Nguyen Khuu, Andrew Brian Kleinberg, George Franklin LeBus V, Meghan Eddie Keith Hasty, Kami Michelle Hu, Allison Lange, Lauren Terry Lastinger, Robert
McDonald, Markey Carden McNutt, Karim Anthony Meijer, Benjamin D Mouser, Brinton Layser, Amanda Lenderink-Carpenter, Pramote Malasitt, Kevin Darrow
Hillary E Myears, Liliana Nanez, Patricia Lorrayne Purcell, James Wirth Sargent IV, Marcus, Nathan George Miller, Joshua Aaron Morales, Thomas Matthew Mullin,
Joseph W Spellman, Shena Thomas, Christine Lee Vigeland, Maggie Waung, Sarah A Collier Stephens Pace, James Michael Pellerin, Duy Lam Phan, Brian Robertson,
Wingfield, Weilan Zuo Joseph Daniel Romano, Erin Janette Saks, Nicholas Rosario Scarcella, Nisha Pulpet
Alumni: R Ellwood Jones Warrier, Roderick Jack Willmore, Caroline Winslow
Faculty: Joel Mitchell Goodman Alumni: Sheldon Retchin
House staff: Dawn S Hui, Grace L Lee, Wayne Kent Nelson Faculty: Jeffrey T Kushinka, Evan Reiter
University of Texas Medical School at Houston—Delta Texas House staff: Andrew Binder, Adebowale Odulana, Aamer Syed
Students: Booth Wiley Aldred, Glynda Caga-anan, Jordan Austin Cain, Kevin Chap, Eastern Virginia Medical School —Gamma Virginia
Ross Joseph Chapel, Jaclyn Jin-Ling Chen, Joseph Childs, Melissa Louise Diamantis, Students: David Andrew Ahlers, Jessica Renee Barber, Kimberly Erin Barker, Samuel
John Frederick Dunn, Ashleigh Michelle Francis, Elizabeth Rebecca Caroline Llewellyn Casella, Wendy Alford Haft, Julia Johnson, Andrew Evans Leake, Katherine
Geddes, Megan McRee Geloneck, Joshua Scott Griffin, Patrick Thomas Griffin, Marie Lunney, Bethany Michele Mulla, Dan-Vinh Pham Nguyen, W Michael Pullen,
Quinton Morrow Hatch, Amanda K Hernandez, Diana Margaret Hook, Daniel Baddr Ahed Shakhsheer, Waleed Christos Sneij, Stephen Charles Stacey Jr, Jonathan
Rhodes Kievlan, Adam Kingeter, Margaret Markham, William Robert Miller, Gregory David van de Leuv, Lyndy Jane Wilcox, Nathaniel Charles Hamm Wingert
Lane Naugher, Sarah H O’Connell, Kathryn Palumbo, Mary Kendall Parker, Phillip Alumni: Joel Clingenpeel, Daniel Adam Neumann
Noah Parmet, Matthew James Pommerening, Scott M Reis, Catherine Elizabeth Faculty: Amy Patricia Fantaskey, Jean Panneton
Riddel, Matthew Rogers, Katherine Schroeder, Sara Swineford, Joseph Emile Tayar, House staff: Thomas Edward Butler, Nathaniel Robert Poulin, Leah Marie Sieren
Christopher Ross Thompson, Vicente Valero, Haider Virani, Dia Rose Waguespack,
WASHINGTON
Taylor Brooke Wootton, Bryan Charles Yelverton
University of Washington School of Medicine—Alpha Washington
Alumni: Timothy Boone
Students: Evan James Allan, Juli Anne Armstrong, Nayan Arora, Ryan Thomas
Faculty: Pedro Mancias, John F Teichgraeber
Barrett, Daniel J Benedetti, David Paul Dorsey, Karen Christine Halsted, Peter
House staff: Ioannis Alagkiozidis, Katie Leighanne Hendley
Nicholas Hunt, Elsbeth Chiyo Jensen-Otsu, Paul Samuel Martin, Timothy William
University of Texas Medical School at San Antonio—Epsilon Texas
Menza, Dayne Mickelson, Sylvia Kana Mollerstrom, Katherine Grace Oldenburg,
Students: Kaessee Lee Brown, Stefanie Bryant, Tina Chou, Edwin Chu, Amit P Desai,
Elizabeth Peacock-Chambers, Donald Joe Perry, Louis Ludwig Stuart Horst Poppler,
Brendan Patrick Dewan, Brian Alan Fishero, Megan Alicia Freeman, Stephanie
Micahlyn Marie Powers, Scarlet Reichenbach, Leah Scanlin Ronald, Erika Cowman
Marie Gardner, Taggart Taylor Gauvain, Steven David Gibbons, William Garrett
Schetter, Hollie Sexton, Mackenzie Slater, Hana Smith, Rachel Sparks, Karna K
Greendyke, Scott Michael Greene, Michelle Moriah Hagopian, Kayla Evonne Ireland,
Sundsted, Laura Cauthorn Swanson, David Tarby, Ana Jorgenson Torvie, Jessica
Kiley Johnson, Jaime Jones, Joseph Jongbum Kim, Megan Presley Kostibas, Catherine
Valentine, David Andrew Williams, Elizabeth Anne Zeeck
Megan Lacey, Jeremy D Leland, Victor Lopez, Melissa Ann Muszynski, Anh D
Faculty: Steven Gerstner, John Geyman
Nguyen, Catherine Pham, Jason Bryant Pond, Jorge Alfredo Ramirez, Nainesh Shah,
House staff: Kanishka Garvin, Christine Chen Jensen, David Byung Min
Rachel Rebecca Shepherd, C Grant Staples, Julie Beth Stavinoha, Christopher Roy
Stelton, Melissa Ashley Talbert, Nicole Victoria Walker, Kelli Renee Yee WEST VIRGINIA
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine—Zeta West Virginia University School of Medicine—Alpha West Virginia
Texas Students: Simon Levi Amsdell, Ryan Michael Carr, Megan Michele Cecchini, Derek
Students: Hosam Nabil Attaya, Shila Azodi, Kevin Joseph Barnes, Cody Ryan Beaver, Clark, Christopher Eric Estel, Gregory Hale, Jennifer Lynn Koay, Brittani Kellin
Richard Bliss, Justin Benson Clayton, Ashley Brandon DeLaCerda, Chase Dalton Ninness, Ahsley Rawson, Matthew Joseph Schessler, Carl Seynnaeve, Brian Michael
Derrick, Mitchell George Eichhorn, Daniel Evans, Stephen John Griffin, Charlie Snelling, Dana Michele Tiberio, Ryan Matthew Wilson, Lana Winkler, Bethany Ann
Andrew Hogan, Shan Renee Huang, Winslo Idicula, Katherine Ikard, Natalie Brittan Woomer
Lane, Christopher Thomas Lee, James Rex Lemert, Danny Luong, Eric Brandon Faculty: Robert James Tallaksen
Martin, Amber Michelle Moreland, Usha Rao, Katie Beth Reding, Jordan Brent House staff: Kimberly J Fairley
Simpson, Ashley Lillian Estes Sturgeon, Raymond Barrier Theodosis, Vincenzo Joan C Edwards School of Medicine at Marshall University—Beta West
Wong, Brandon Wesley Wright Virginia
Alumni: B Wayne McNeil, Jennifer Johnson Mitchell Students: Jessica Rae Brown, James Bryan Doub, Daniel Roque Felbaum, Andrew
House staff: Sameer Rafiul Islam, Chad Barrett Johnson Richard Hutchens, Kristin Mary Klosterman, John Gabriel Maijub, Mary Temple Sale,
The Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine—Eta Texas Randall Joseph Schultz, Jarrod Smith, Coben David Thorn
Students: Rohan Ahluwalia, Ananth Kumar Arjunan, Timothy Naff Ball, Blake Bond, Alumni: Paul Ray Durst, Ross M Patton
Kristin Lee Bond, Nickolas Ray Byrge, Kevin Ching, Elise Eckhardt, Ramesh Kumar, Faculty: Charles Eugene Giangarra, Carl Frederick McComas
Benjamin Martino, Michael McNeal, Janelle Myers Perrone, Luke Benjamin Potts, House staff: Christopher David Adams, Susan Lee Flesher, Saif Arsan Mashaqi
Erica Rensvold, Jonathan Walgama, Oliver Wu
Alumni: Alec Dean Steele WISCONSIN
Faculty: Alejandro Arroliga, James Howard Brien University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health—Alpha
House staff: Mitchell Edward Deshazer, Anita Dilip Karnik, Alan Ray Trumbly Wisconsin
Students: Joel Thomas Adler, Stephen John Almasi, Jennifer Jo Barr, Erik Scott
UTAH Fossum, Meghan Jo’An Furlong, Joseph David Hansen, Brian Carl Hilgeman, Michael
University of Utah School of Medicine—Alpha Utah Patrick Kehoe, Sean Barrett Kuehn, Micaela Erin O’Neil, Bryan Dustin Pooler,
Students: James Ted Allred, Melody R Anderson, Ryan James Bair, Laurel Kristen Andrew James Pugely, Lyndsey Nell Runaas, Cassie Marie Schmitt, Meghan Leigh
Bradford, Matthew F Covington, Tricia Hauschild, Rohn McCune, Cynthia Newberry, Schott, Joseph John Schreiber, Lisa Yao Shen, Jennifer Ann Stephani, Sarah Emily
Leah Anne Owen, Asha Sarma, Joshua Alan Schliesser, Joseph S Schmutz, Rita Amend Tevis, Bimal Vyas, Evan Jared Warner, Shaun Yang, Eric Yanke, Jacqueline
Sharshiner, Jason William Young, Brian Earl Zaugg Ziehr
Medical College of Wisconsin—Beta Wisconsin
VERMONT
Students: Laith Mutasem Al-Shihabi, Azam Basheer, Becky Jo Brey, Katherine
University of Vermont College of Medicine—Alpha Vermont
Elder Brick, Erica Ayami-Sato Byrd, Craig Elliott Cummings, Linda Kaye Czypinski,
None reported
Alexandra Fairchild, Holly Marie Frost, Jarom Nathan Gilstrap, Erica Corrine
VIRGINIA Hofland, Alecia Nicole Huettl, Rebecca Marie Jansen, Benjamin Alan Keller, Rachel
University of Virginia School of Medicine—Alpha Virginia Ann Kuznar, Benjamin Joseph Lasee, Matthew Christopher Mauck, Eric James May,
Students: Ryan Peter Bartkus, Steven Edward Bishop, An Hong Bui, Lisa Renee Elizabeth Ann McCarrel, Matthew John McFarlane, Melissa D Miller, Brad Steven
Chastant, William Tessin Derry, Laura Thorne Ekka, Eric J Feuchtbaum, Joseph Nance, Jacob Robert Peschman, William Joseph Reynders, Robert Rogers, Stefanie
Derek Forrester, Carrie Katherine Grouse, Paul David Hiles, Clark David Kensinger, Suzanne Ruffolo, Steven Michael Schuckit, Jordan M Shapiro, David Ross Smart,
Megan Elizabeth Lohr, Vivek Narayan, Elizabeth Anne Nicolli, Andrew Park, Melissa Corbin Draper Sullivan, Stephen James Summers, Jonathan Kendall Vincent
Lanier Collins Park, Arich Ryan Reynolds, Kristen Ritenour, Jeremy Ross, Michael Faculty: Bruce Hegstad Campbell, Jean-Franáois Liard
Semanik, Kathryn Stansfield Sutton, James Alexander Thomas, Cynthia Elizabeth House staff: Jessica Anne Crawford, Michael Edward Curley, Kory Donald Koerner
Wagner, Matthew Wilson
Alumni: Delos M Cosgrove III Students 
Faculty: Barrett Henley Barnes Alumni 
House staff: Karim Sadik Faculty 
Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine—Beta Virginia House staff 
Students: Srinath Adusumalli, Matthew Curtis Avery, Sudheer Balakrishnan, Sara
Tavernier Burgardt, Dana Casey Chan, Sarah Katherine Connell, Sarah Beth Corley, Total number of new members 
Vladimir Paul Daoud, Maya D Fetter, Daniel Fistere Jr, Breanna Leah Harpstead,

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 57


The Pharos
Volume 73

Harris ED Jr.
Index by author  Alpha Omega Alpha/Association of American Medical Colleges Robert
Abbott C. Wear Something Red. Poem. Winter, . J. Glaser Distinguished Teacher Awards. Winter, –.
Abdulla S. See Floyd CT et al. Alpha Omega Alpha elects honorary members. Spring, –.
Abelson HT. The Candidate. Poem. Summer, . Consultations . . . going, going, gone? Editorial. Winter, .
Abrams HL. Commentary: Reynolds HY. A medical ear in the early morning Existentialism, the physician’s philosophy. Editorial. Spring, .
tennis group—when to advise and what to say. Autumn, . Minutes of the o meeting of the board of directors of Alpha Omega
Ambrose CT. Carolus Linnaeus (Carl von Linné), –: The Swede who Alpha. National and chapter news. Spring, –.
named almost everything. Spring, –. Haywood LJ. Selling Teaching Hospitals. Letter. Winter, .
Anderson KT. Tinsley Randolph Harrison, MD: A legacy of medical education. Hsu BS-H. Cost of a life. Health policy. Autumn, –.
Autumn, –. Huber W III. See Floyd CT et al.
Bales DW. Accelerating human evolution?? Letter. Winter, . Hudak CD. Undaunted. Poem. Winter, .
Basile MA. Christians in the Movies: A Century of Saints and Sinners, by Peter E. Ilgenfritz S. The Procedure. Poem. Spring, .
Dans. Reviews and reflections. Winter, –. Isenberg SF. A Simple Walk. Poem. Spring, inside back cover.
Berry J. Accelerating human evolution?? Letter. Winter, . Jacobs J. Re “Getting Drug Money Out of Doctors’ Offices.” Letter. Summer, .
Blaha J. Re “Consultations . . . going, going, gone?” Letter. Summer, . Jinwala F. See Floyd CT et al.
Blum A. Commemorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of a Medical Landmark. Kahn EN. The Gift. Poem. Winter, .
Autumn, . Kastor JA. An invitation. Health policy. Spring, .
Blum A. When I gets big. Poem. Summer, . Kastor JA. Will health reform reduce costs? Health policy. Winter, –.
Bowe C. Josiah. Winter, –. Kopen DF. The inadquacy of legislative procedures and the infirmity of physician
Brenner I. Re: “A Fatal Zest for Living.” Letter. Summer, –. organizations. Health policy. Summer, –.
Brillman JC. Worried Sick: A Prescription for Health in an Overtreated America, Langhorne H. Post Chemo Treat. Poem. Autumn, .
by Nortin M. Hadler. Reviews and reflections. Spring, –. Le J. Meditation on Surgical Masks. Poem. Winter, .
Buskirk M. Informal Education. Poem. Winter, . Lee TH. Health reform requires confronting myths. Health policy. Winter, –.
Cantrell L. Poems by Linda Cantrell. Poems. Autumn, –. Lockshin MD. Medical publishing: Will paper live on? Summer, –.
Cesari A, Mackowiak PA. A fatal zest for living: The all too brief life of Mario Lopez FA. Almost five years later: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans health care,
Lanza. Winter, –. and the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center. Summer, –.
Chase RA. One Breath Apart: Facing Dissection, by Sandra L. Berman. Reviews Maas S. Wind. Poem. Autumn, .
and reflections. Summer, –. Majmudar B. A One Bag, One Leg Lady. Poem. Winter, .
Chase RA. A Second Opinion: Rescuring America’s Health Care: A Plan for Mann A. Smoke. Poem. Winter, .
Universal Coverage Serving Patients Over Profit, by Arnold S. Relman. Reviews Marr JJ. Graft Rejection. Poem. Winter, .
and reflections. Summer, . Menkes JS. The right to sue. Letter. Winter, –.
Chesanow RL. A Voyage. Letter. Winter, . Michael H. See Floyd CT et al.
Claman HN. On Wrinkles (Hiding the Evidence). Poem. Spring, . Milano M. Hearing. Poem. Autumn, .
Coe FL. Amanda’s Garden. Poem. Autumn, . Miller EC. Attuning to equlibrium: Physician as artist, artist as physician.
Cooper RA. Expanding physician supply—An imperative for health care reform. Autumn, –
Health policy. Spring, –. Morrison W. Carotid. Poem. Winter, .
Coulehan J. Doctors in Fiction: Lessons from Literature, by Borys Surawicz and Morrison W. Snapshot. Poem. Spring, .
Beverly Jacobson. Reviews and reflections. Summer, –. Mukherjee S. Stroke in black and white. Autumn, –.
Coulehan J. Dying for Beginners, by Patrick Clary. Reviews and reflections. Muller D. Needlestick. Summer, –.
Autumn, –. Nagarkar PA. Getting drug money out of doctors’ offices. Winter, –.
Coulehan J. On Apology, by Aaron Lazare. Reviews and reflections. Spring, Nagarkar PA. Re “Getting Drug Money Out of Doctors’ Offices”: Mr. Nagarkar
–. responds to Dr. Jacobs. Letter. Summer, –.
Crawford GB. Quiet Snow among the Dark. Poem. Autumn, . Nissenblatt M. Summer, –.
Dale DC. Memorial: Edward D. Harris, Jr., MD: July , –May , . Palmore J. See Floyd CT et al.
Summer, . Parke S. Poppies. Poem. Autumn, inside back cover.
Dans PE. The physician at the movies Patterson RB. Commentary: Cantrell L. Poems by Linda Cantrell. Autumn,
Amelia. Summer, –. –.
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. Winter, –. Pederson T. The Language of Life: DNA and the Revolution in Personalized
Extraordinary Measures. Autumn, –. Medicine, by Francis S. Collins. Reviews and reflections. Summer, –.
Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story. Spring, –. Pfeiffer E. Endings Are Beginnings. Poem. Summer, .
The Hurt Locker. Autumn, –. Platt FW. Technological Medicine: The Changing World of Doctors and Patients,
Julie and Julia. Summer, –. by Stanley Joel Reiser. Reviews and reflections. Autumn, –.
Night at the Museum: The Battle of the Smithsonian. Summer, . Plotz CM. Commentary: Reynolds HY. A medical ear in the early morning tennis
Taking Chance. Winter, –. group—when to advise and what to say. Autumn, .
Valkyrie. Spring, . Plotz CM. Medical hand-me-downs. Letter. Winter, –.
The Young Victoria. Summer, –. Quinn S. The effect of Gchat deprivation on medical student productivity.
Darby R. Ethical issues in the use of cognitive enhancement. Spring, –. Winter, –.
DeWitt D. The Challenge. Poem. Winter, . Radu A. Eudaimonia, existentialism, and the practice of medicine. Spring, –.
Elahi E. See Floyd CT et al. Raphael A. The ethics of cosmetic enhancement. Winter, –.
Floyd CT, Michael H, VanHoose JD, Elahi E, Abdulla S, Jinwala F, Reddy K, Solar Reddy K. See Floyd CT et al.
B, Freeman A, Huber W III, Palmore J, Sambasivan A. The winning photos Reid EE. Studying in the Afternoon. Poem. Spring, .
from the Web Site Photography Contest. Summer, –. Reynolds HY. A medical ear in the early morning tennis group—when to advise
Foltermann MO. Neither/nor. Letter. Autumn, . and what to say. Autumn, –.
Freeman A. See Floyd CT et al. Richards DD III. Semmelweis: Magyar warrior. Summer, –.
Garcia EE. What Would Heifetz Do? Poem. Summer, . Rousseau PC. Echocardiogram. Poem. Autumn, .
Geynisman J. Adwoa. Poem. Autumn, . Roy RC. Spring of My Dying. Poem. Summer, back cover.
Grubb BP. The Gaze. Poem. Summer, inside back cover. Sambasivan A. See Floyd CT et al.
Haddy FJ. Direct-to-consumer advertising. Health policy. Summer, –. Scherl ND. Reflections on a Photograph. Poem. Winter, .

58 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


Shankar PR. Doctors and pharmaceutical promotion. Letter. Spring, . Announcement: Executive Director of Alpha Omega Alpha. Staff. Spring, back
Smith RJ. Re “The Ethics of Cosmetic Enhancement.” Letter. Summer, . cover.
Solar B. See Floyd CT et al. The Atheist Faces Death. Poem. Weiner MF. Summer, .
Spaeth. One simple question can change the world. Autumn, –. Attuning to equilibrium: Physician as artist, artist as physician. Miller EC.
Staff Autumn, –.
/ Administrative Recognition Awards. Autumn, . The Candidate. Poem. Abelson HT. Summer, .
/ Medical Student Service Project awards. Autumn, . Carolus Linnaeus (Carl von Linné), –: The Swede who named almost
/ Visiting Professorships. Autumn, –. everything. Ambrose CT. Spring, –.
/ Volunteer Clinical Faculty Awards. Autumn, . Carotid. Poem. Morrison W. Winter, .
 Carolyn L. Kuckein Student Research Fellowships. Summer, –. The Challenge. Poem. DeWitt D. Spring, .
 Edward D. Harris Professionalism Award. Autumn, . Commemorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of a Medical Landmark. Blum A.
 Helen H. Glaser Student Essay Awards. Summer, . Autumn, .
 Pharos Poetry Competition winners. Summer, . Consultations . . . going, going, gone? Editorial. Harris ED Jr. Winter, .
 Write a Poem for This Photo Contest. Spring, . Correction. Staff. Spring, .
Alpha Omega Alpha members elected in /. Autumn, –. Death on call. Wiesenthal A. Spring, –.
Announcement: Executive Director of Alpha Omega Alpha. Spring, back Drowning in science . . . saved by Shakespeare. Zaroff LZ. Spring, –.
cover Echocardiogram. Poem. Rousseau PC. Autumn, .
Announcing the  Pharos Editor’s Prize. National and chapter news. The effect of Gchat deprivation on medical student productivity. Winter, –.
Winter,  Endings Are Beginnings. Poem. Pfeiffer E. Summer, .
Correction. Spring, . Ethical issues in the use of cognitive enhancement. Darby R. Spring, –.
Correction. National and chapter news. Winter,  The ethics of cosmetic enhancement. Raphael A. Winter, –.
Dr. Francis Neelon joins the Pharos editorial board. National and chapter Eudaimonia, existentialism, and the practice of medicine. Radu A. Spring, –.
news. Winter,  Existentialism, the physician’s philosophy. Editorial. Spring, .
Interim editor. National and chapter news. Summer, . A fatal zest for living: The all too brief life of Mario Lanza. Cesari A, Mackowiak
Instructions for Pharos authors. National and chapter news. Winter, – PA. Winter, –.
Leaders in American Medicine. National and chapter news. Winter,  The Gaze. Poem. Grubb BP. Summer, inside back cover.
Memorial donations. National and chapter news. Summer, . Getting drug money out of doctors’ offices. Nagarkar PA. Winter, –.
The new Alpha Omega Alpha web site. National and chapter news. Winter, The Gift. Poem. Kahn EN. Winter, .
. One simple question can change the world. Spaeth G. Autumn, –.
The Pharos, Volume . Autumn, –. Graft Rejection. Poem. Marr JJ. Winter, .
Web Site Photography Contest. Winter, inside back cover. Health policy
Winner of the  Pharos Editor’s Prize. National and chapter news. The consumer movement in health care. Topol EJ. Spring, –.
Winter,  Cost of a life. Hsu BS-H. Autumn, –.
Winner of the Submit a Photo contest. Spring, . Direct-to-consumer advertising. Haddy FJ. Summer, –.
Winning poems of the  Write a Poem for This Photo Contest. Winter, Expanding physician supply—An imperative for health care reform. Cooper
–. RA. Spring, –.
Topol EJ. The consumer movement in health care. Health policy. Spring, –. Health reform requires confronting myths. Winter, –.
Trotter JA. The Picture of Health: A View from the Prairie, by Richard P. Holm The inadequacy of legislative procedures and the infirmity of physician
and Judith R. Peterson. Reviews and reflections. Winter, –. organizations. Kopen DF. Summer, –.
Valdrighi A. The Woman with Everything. Poem. Winter, . An invitation. Kastor JA. Spring, .
VanHoose JD. See Floyd CT et al. Will health reform reduce costs? Kastor JA. Winter, –.
Warren M. Rhabdomyosarcoma. Poem. Spring, . Hearing. Poem. Milano M. Autumn, .
Weiner MF. The Atheist Faces Death. Poem. Summer, . Informal Education. Poem. Buskirk M. Winter, .
Wiesenthal A. Death on call. Spring, –. Josiah. Bowe C. Winter, –.
Williams RC Jr. Dancing at the River’s Edge: A Patient and Her Doctor Negotiate Letters
Life with Chronic Illness, by Alida Brill and Michael D. Lockshin. Reviews and Accelerating human evolution? Bales DW. Winter, .
reflections. Spring, . Accelerating human evolution? Berry J. Winter, .
Wilson DE. Richard L. Byyny, MD, appointed Executive Director of Alpha Doctors and pharmaceutical promotion. Shankar PR. Spring, .
Omega Alpha. Autumn, back cover. Medical hand-me-downs. Plotz CM. Winter, –.
Wolf PL. Ode to a Jaundiced Eye. Poem. Summer, . Re “Consultations . . . going, going, gone?” Blaha J. Summer, .
Wood JC. The Alabaster Kiss. Poem. Spring, . Re “The Ethics of Cosmetic Enhancement.” Smith RJ. Summer, .
Wright JL. On Being Certain: Believing You Are Right Even When You’re Not, by Re “A Fatal Zest for Living.” Brenner I. Summer, –.
Robert A. Burton. Reviews and reflections. Autumn, –. Re “Getting Drug Money Out of Doctors’ Offices.” Jacobs J. Summer, .
Zaroff LZ. Drowning in science . . . saved by Shakespeare. Spring, –. Re “Getting Drug Money Out of Doctors’ Offices”: Mr. Nagarkar responds to
Dr. Jacobs. Nagarkar PA. Summer, –.
Neither/nor. Foltermann MO. Autumn, .
The right to sue. Menkes JS. Winter, –.
Index by title Selling Teaching Hospitals. Haywood LJ. Winter, .
 Alpha Omega Alpha/Association of American Medical Colleges Robert J. Love song. Nissenblatt M. Summer, –.
Glaser Distinguished Teacher Awards. Harris ED Jr. Winter, –. A medical ear in the early morning tennis group—when to advise and what to
/ Administrative Recognition Awards. Staff. Autumn, . say. Reynolds HY. Autumn, –.
/ Medical Student Service Project Awards. Staff. Autumn, . Commentary. Abrams HL. Autumn, .
/ Visiting Professorships. Staff. Autumn, –. Commentary. Plotz CM. Autumn, .
/ Volunteer Clinical Faculty Awards. Autumn, . Medical publishing: Will paper live on? Lockshin MD. Summer, –.
 Carolyn L. Kuckein Student Research Fellowships. Staff. Summer, –. Meditation on Surgical Masks. Poem. Le J. Winter, .
 Edward D. Harris Professionalism Award. Staff. Autumn, . Memorial: Edward D. Harris, Jr., MD: July , –May , . Dale DC.
 Helen H. Glaser Student Essay Awards. Staff. Summer, . Summer, .
 Pharos Poetry Competition winners. Staff. Summer, . National and chapter news
 Write a Poem for This Photo Contest. Staff. Spring, . Announcing the  Pharos Editor’s Prize. Staff. Winter, .
Adwoa. Poem. Geynisman J. Autumn, . Correction. Staff. Winter, .
The Alabaster Kiss. Poem. Wood JC. Spring, . Dr. Francis Neelon joins the Pharos editorial board. Staff. Winter, .
Almost five years later: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans health care, and the Interim editor. Staff. Summer, .
Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center. Lopez FA. Summer, –. Instructions for Pharos authors. Staff. Winter, –.
Alpha Omega Alpha elects honorary members. Harris ED Jr. Spring, –. Leaders in American Medicine. Staff. Winter, .
Alpha Omega Alpha members elected in /. Staff. Autumn, – Memorial donations. Staff. Summer, .
Amanda’s Garden. Poem. Coe FL. Autumn, . Minutes of the  meeting of the board of directors of Alpha Omega

The Pharos/Autumn 2010 59


Index

Alpha. Harris ED Jr. Spring, –.


The new Alpha Omega Alpha web site. Staff. Winter, .
Winner of the  Pharos Editor’s Prize. Staff. Winter, .
Needlestick. Muller D. Summer, –.
Ode to a Jaundiced Eye. Poem. Wolf PL. Summer, .
On Wrinkles (Hiding the Evidence). Poem. Claman HN. Spring, .
A One Bag, One Leg Lady. Poem. Majmudar B. Winter, .
The Pharos, Volume . Staff. Autumn, –.
The physician at the movies
Amelia. Summer, –.
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. Winter, –.
Extraordinary Measures. Autumn, –.
Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story. Spring, –.
The Hurt Locker. Autumn, –.
Julie and Julia. Summer, –.
Night at the Museum: The Battle of the Smithsonian. Summer, .
Taking Chance. Winter, –.
Valkyrie. Spring, .
The Young Victoria. Summer, –.
Poems by Linda Cantrell. Poems. Cantrell L. Autumn, –.
Commentary. Patterson RB. Autumn, .
Poppies. Poem. Parke S. Autumn, inside back cover.
Post Chemo Treat. Poem. Langhorne H. Autumn, .
The Procedure. Poem. Ilgenfritz S. Spring, .
Quiet Snow among the Dark. Poem. Crawford GB. Autumn, .
Reflections on a Photograph. Poem. Scherl ND. Winter, .
Reviews and reflections

en
Christians in the Movies: A Century of Saints and Sinners, by Peter E. Dans.

tk
Ai
Basile MA. Winter, –.

ica
Dancing at the River’s Edge: A Patient and Her Doctor Negotiate Life with

Er
Chronic Illness, by Alida Brill and Michael D. Lockshin. Williams RC Jr.
Spring, .
Doctors in Fiction: Lessons from Literature, by Borys Surawicz and Beverly
Jacobson. Coulehan J. Summer, –.
Dying for Beginners, by Patrick Clary. Coulehan J. Autumn, –.
Amanda’s Garden
The Language of Life: DNA and the Revolution in Personalized Medicine, by Late October and all is falling,
Francis S. Collins. Pederson T. Summer, –. to watch it fall is to watch an old
On Apology, by Aaron Lazare. Coulehan J. Spring, –.
On Being Certain: Believing You Are Right Even When You’re Not, by Robert man die by stages; are we not caught up
A. Burton. Wright JL. Autumn, –. in such a progress? Mark him, I told
One Breath Apart: Facing Dissection, by Sandra L. Berman. Chase RA.
Summer, –. my friend: last year, last month, even,
The Picture of Health: A View from the Prairie, by Richard P. Holm and Judith
R. Peterson. Trotter JA. Winter, –. he was able to that, or this, now lost;
A Second Opinion: Rescuring America’s Health Care: A Plan for Universal is this not movement in a sound direction,
Coverage Serving Patients Over Profit, by Arnold S. Relman. Chase RA.
Summer, . a deeper sinking into the white frost?
Technological Medicine: The Changing World of Doctors and Patients, by
Stanley Joel Reiser. Platt FW. Autumn, –. Are we happy in our hearts and cannot say
Worried Sick: A Prescription for Health in an Overtreated America, by Nortin that something about the progress of flesh
M. Hadler. Brillman JC. Spring, –.
Rhabdomyosarcoma. Poem. Spring, . is moral, and to watch it a secret thrill?
Richard L. Byyny, MD, appointed Executive Director of Alpha Omega Alpha. And, is it not a judgment of decency
Wilson DE. Autumn, back cover.
Semmelweis: Magyar warrior. Richard DD III. Summer, –. how he—the old man—squares his acts
A Simple Walk. Poem. Isenberg SF. Spring, inside back cover.
Smoke. Poem. Mann A. Winter, . with flesh’s motion toward surrender?
Snapshot. Poem. Morrison W. Spring, . The garden is without desire, without
Spring of My Dying. Poem. Roy RC. Summer, back cover.
Stroke in black and white. Mukherjee S. Autumn, –. sorrow, we believe, and scarcely care
Studying in the Afternoon. Poem. Reid EE. Spring, .
Tinsley Randolph Harrison, MD: A legacy of medical education. Autumn, –. for it anymore, however we waited on its growing,
Undaunted. Poem. Hudak CD. Winter, . but the old man holds our eye: is it fear?
Wear Something Red. Poem. Abbott C. Winter, .
Web Site Photography Contest. Staff. Winter, inside back cover. Is it our judgment of him? A cruel
What Would Heifetz Do? Poem. Garcia EE. Summer, . love of change? A love of the close of the year?
When I gets big. Poem. Blum A. Summer, .
Wind. Poem. Maas S. Autumn, . Fredric L. Coe, MD
Winner of the Submit a Photo Contest. Staff. Spring, .
The winning photos from the Web Site Photography Contest. Floyd CT, Michael
H, VanHoose JD, Elahi E, Abdulla S, Jinwala F, Reddy K, Solar B, Freeman A, Dr. Coe (AΩA, University of Chicago, 1961) is professor of Medicine and
Huber W III, Palmore J, Sambasivan A. Summer, –. Physiology at the University of Chicago. He is a member of the editorial board of
Winning poem of the  Write a Poem for This Photo Contest. Staff. Winter, The Pharos and a previous contributor to the journal. His address is: Nephrology
–. Section, MC 5100, University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, 5841 S.
The Woman with Everything. Poem. Valdrighi A. Winter, . Maryland Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637- 4930. E-mail: fcoe@medicine.bsd.uchi-
cago.edu.

60 The Pharos/Autumn 2010


I.
In the field behind the salt-stained shack,
Her fingers curled around the stem.
Poppies
Sinewy flesh, splintered
(with only some regret)
One pink poppy—
Voluminous and shy,
A perfect impermanence
She was only beginning
To understand.
The doctor had given him “weeks”—
Weeks before,
But that afternoon, like always,
He spooned sherbet into one
No, two, stone saucers.
“Come on, old boy,” he called,
“Finish it quick now, before she sees!”
A tail wag,
Worth every objection from his wife.
Small rituals filled their days,
Time in the context of every other time—
A poppy resting in an awkward clay vase,
A Mother’s Day present, wasn’t it?
Or an apology
For minor crimes of youth?
Three children and thirty-five years
Had not lessened the longing he felt
As she grasped his hand in the night.
II.
On the day before his last
She sat alone by the warbling creek
And watched cascades of ancient light
Catch on shimmering salmon scales.
Beneath the surface, other lives
Moved rapidly through her reflection—
Smooth, diaphanous darts of loss
Dancing her heart home.
When she called, her voice was calm,
Ready. But me? I was a medical student
I thought I knew death—
Turns out, observing isn’t knowing.
III.
In the night
The poppies—white and red,
Ebony eye to the moon,
Break through damp soil:
The sound of entering.
The earth does not stir her
As she is, dreamer,
A part of the entering.
Sara Parke

Ms. Parke is a Fulbright Scholar studying medical ethics


at the National Core for Neuroethics, University of British
Columbia. Her address is: 7418 S. Ingalls Court, Littleton,
The Colorado 80128. E-mail: sparke87@gmail.com.
Pharos/Date 61
Announcement
Richard L. Byyny, MD,
appointed Executive Director
of Alpha Omega Alpha

T
he Board of and also ser ve as
Directors of vice-chairman of
Alpha Omega the Department of
Alpha is very pleased Medicine. After hold-
to announce that ing administrative
Richard L. Byyny, MD, will become Executive positions as Executive Vice-Chancellor at
Director of Alpha Omega Alpha and Editor of the University of Colorado Health Sciences
The Pharos effective November , . After Center and as Vice President for Academic
an extensive search to recruit a successor to Affairs and Research/Dean of the System
Dr. Edward D. Harris, Dr. Byyny was selected Graduate School at Colorado, Dr. Byyny
from an extraordinary group of talented became Chancellor of the University of
candidates. Dr. Byyny is quite familiar with Colorado at Boulder, serving from 
AΩA, having served on the AΩA board of di- through . Now a Professor of Medicine
rectors from  through . He received at Colorado, Dr. Byyny has “crowned” his
his undergraduate and medical degrees from distinguished career by devoting his efforts
the University of Southern California, where to health policy and to the development of a
he was elected to AΩA. mentored research tract in medical student
Dr. Byyny received his internal medi- education.
cine training at Columbia University and Dr. Byyny will be devoting most of his
completed an endocrinology fellowship at time and effort to AΩA and The Pharos.
Vanderbilt University. He served as Head He is looking forward to interacting with
of the Division of Internal Medicine and the boards, the chapters, and with students.
Director of the Internal Medicine training We are all very pleased to have him as our
program at the University of Chicago from Executive Director. Please join us in welcom-
 through . He then moved to Colorado ing Richard L. Byyny, MD.
to again head up general Internal Medicine

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