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Dean Browns Alumni Address Annual Meeting of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine

July 06, 2023

Nancy J. Brown, Jean and David W. Wallace Dean of the Yale School of Medicine and C.N.H. Long Professor of Internal Medicine, shares the latest news from YSM and her vision for the future. Her address will be followed by a Q&A, and then the AYAM Annual Meeting. AYAM president, Dr. J. McLeod (Mac) Griffiss ’66, will present the 2023 Distinguished Alumni Service Award and the slate of nominees for open positions on the AYAM Executive Committee.

ID
10108

Transcript

  • 00:04Started. I want
  • 00:06to welcome all of you to the
  • 00:08annual meeting of the Association
  • 00:10of Yale Alumni and Medicine.
  • 00:12I'm Matt Griffiths.
  • 00:13I'm the president of the association.
  • 00:15We have a good crowd here today,
  • 00:18and I'm glad to see that and
  • 00:20particularly welcome those of
  • 00:21you in the 50th reunion class.
  • 00:25We're going to start today by having Dean.
  • 00:28Brown give us a an update on
  • 00:30the school have been a lot of
  • 00:33changes since she arrived,
  • 00:34all of them positive and I think
  • 00:36you'll enjoy hearing how the school
  • 00:38is doing now as maybe it wasn't
  • 00:41so many months ago or years ago.
  • 00:44So Dean Brown.
  • 00:53Thank you and good morning.
  • 00:54It's really great to see you.
  • 00:55I'm going to give you in some
  • 00:57sense a little bit of a preview
  • 00:58of my state of the school,
  • 00:59which comes in a week,
  • 01:00but with a few, a
  • 01:03few extras because I assume you may
  • 01:06not have been watching all of these.
  • 01:08Let's start with the mission statement.
  • 01:11We I arrived February 1st,
  • 01:132020 and the mission statement had not been
  • 01:17updated in many years and it focused on.
  • 01:23They used a lot of words like
  • 01:26premier and excellent and there
  • 01:28was no mention of diversity.
  • 01:30And it turned out that COVID was
  • 01:32actually a great time to do redo a
  • 01:35mission statement because we could we
  • 01:37surveyed everybody on the old statement
  • 01:39and then did a did a detailed survey.
  • 01:42But we could have focus groups by
  • 01:45zoom and reach various groups,
  • 01:46but some of you participated in those,
  • 01:48some of our community leaders.
  • 01:50And this is where we landed.
  • 01:51And I I'm not a mission statement
  • 01:53kind of person,
  • 01:54but I feel pretty proud of this
  • 01:56as representative of the school
  • 01:58and capturing the Yale system.
  • 02:00So the first sentence,
  • 02:01Yale School of Medicine educates and
  • 02:03nurture creative leaders in medicine,
  • 02:04promoting curiosity and critical inquiry.
  • 02:06And I think that's really the
  • 02:08essence of the Yale system.
  • 02:10In an inclusive environment
  • 02:11enriched by diversity,
  • 02:12we advanced discovery and innovation.
  • 02:15Importantly through our partnerships.
  • 02:17It's we're not just in a silo.
  • 02:20And we care for patients with compassion,
  • 02:21but also commit to improving
  • 02:23the health of all people.
  • 02:24I I show a picture here of
  • 02:26I asked a Fernando,
  • 02:27who was our director of admissions at the
  • 02:31time and emceed all of these focus groups,
  • 02:34was amazing human being.
  • 02:36And he tragically died about
  • 02:38six months later of cancer.
  • 02:39And so I always associate the mission
  • 02:42statement with him as I talked today,
  • 02:45they're really sort of forced.
  • 02:47Crosscutting themes to what we're I think,
  • 02:50trying to accomplish in the school,
  • 02:52one is creating this environment of
  • 02:55inclusive excellence where we not
  • 02:57only recruit outstanding people,
  • 02:58but we create an environment
  • 03:00in which they can thrive.
  • 03:01A second is breaking down silos.
  • 03:03You know,
  • 03:04we have many silos of excellence,
  • 03:06but if we can cross those silos,
  • 03:09we can really accomplish a lot,
  • 03:12continuing to build and steward the resources
  • 03:14that we need for discovery and then.
  • 03:17Something that will may resonate with you,
  • 03:20which is actually building our
  • 03:22partnership with the Yale New Haven
  • 03:23Health System and that's been an iffy
  • 03:25partnership over 200 years and I'll
  • 03:27talk a little bit more about that.
  • 03:30So leadership,
  • 03:31these are just leadership
  • 03:33appointments in the last year,
  • 03:36I'll highlight we've created a a new
  • 03:39now freestanding section of biomedical
  • 03:42informatics and data science.
  • 03:44And recruited Lucilla Ona Machado from UCSD,
  • 03:47member of the National Academy,
  • 03:49to lead that that will become
  • 03:51a new department.
  • 03:52She also has the role of Deputy Dean
  • 03:54over informatics as we realize the
  • 03:58impact of all of the informatics that we
  • 04:01have and partnerships with computer science.
  • 04:05Keith trained here and actually
  • 04:07all three of these recent chair
  • 04:09selections were from internal
  • 04:11candidates just reflecting the
  • 04:13quality of our own faculty.
  • 04:15Also highlight like Peg McGovern who
  • 04:18is now our Deputy Dean for Clinical
  • 04:20Affairs and CEO of Yale Medicine,
  • 04:23our faculty practice plan.
  • 04:24Really an extraordinary person for
  • 04:27this role because Peg is a pediatric
  • 04:29geneticist who was a chair of
  • 04:32Pediatrics for about 10 years before
  • 04:34she became someone involved in running
  • 04:37clinical operations at at SUNY.
  • 04:40And we've been very fortunate
  • 04:42to recruit somebody who both can
  • 04:44get things done and has also
  • 04:46garnered the trust of the chairs.
  • 04:48So and then Karina joining our Office
  • 04:51of Diversity Equity Inclusion.
  • 04:54There are leadership changes going
  • 04:55on across the university and I wanted
  • 04:57to highlight a couple of things.
  • 04:59One is that our school of Engineering and
  • 05:04Applied Sciences is becoming independent
  • 05:06under the leadership of Jeff Brock.
  • 05:09And Jeff has been a terrific partner
  • 05:12beginning in the early days of COVID
  • 05:14as we were bringing people together
  • 05:16from across the university to solve
  • 05:19many issues in the early days.
  • 05:22And we are building many collaborations
  • 05:25in biomedical engineering imaging
  • 05:27and he's really great to work with.
  • 05:29And I mentioned computer science
  • 05:31and data science.
  • 05:32You are also probably aware that
  • 05:34our school of public health,
  • 05:35which has always been in this
  • 05:37tweener state where it's both a fully
  • 05:39accredited school but also a department
  • 05:41within the School of Medicine,
  • 05:43will become completely independent in a year.
  • 05:46The new Dean,
  • 05:47Megan Rainey is coming from Brown July 1.
  • 05:50She and I are working very closely.
  • 05:52I was saying to Matt to make sure
  • 05:54that as we separate,
  • 05:55we developed a longterm relationship
  • 05:57between the School of Medicine and the
  • 05:59school of public health that is positive,
  • 06:02not like the relationship to in some
  • 06:05of the schools to the north of here.
  • 06:10And then Azita Mommy,
  • 06:13a world traveler, really trained.
  • 06:18At the Karolinska as our new Dean
  • 06:20of Nursing and so we're looking to
  • 06:23forward to collaborating there.
  • 06:24Our faculty do amazing things.
  • 06:27This is a list of some of this
  • 06:30year's elections to honor
  • 06:32societies and achievements.
  • 06:33You'll see 3.
  • 06:35Appointed to ASCII the the
  • 06:37so-called Young Turks couple to the
  • 06:40Association of American Physicians
  • 06:41to the National Academy members.
  • 06:44One Jorge Galan to the American
  • 06:47Academy of Arts and Sciences on
  • 06:50a pile is shares appointments
  • 06:53across the school and FAS and is
  • 06:56National Academy of Sciences.
  • 06:58Other outstanding awards.
  • 07:00If you ever opened a newspaper during COVID,
  • 07:03you've read of Akiko Iwasaki's
  • 07:06work on the Immune Response,
  • 07:08but I'll point out that Emily Wong.
  • 07:11Was recently named a MacArthur
  • 07:13Fellow for her work looking at
  • 07:15the impact of incarceration on not
  • 07:17only the health of the patient,
  • 07:19but on the health of families.
  • 07:22NIH Directors New Innovator Awards
  • 07:243 is outstanding and I'll highlight
  • 07:27at the bottom.
  • 07:28The HHMI has a new Freeman Scholar
  • 07:32Program for Junior Investigators,
  • 07:3431 selected in the country and
  • 07:36one of them was Trevor Sorrells.
  • 07:39Trevor is working on.
  • 07:43Mosquito borne and tick borne
  • 07:45diseases and he's applying
  • 07:49evolutionary genetics to understand
  • 07:51how the blood feeding behavior
  • 07:53of mosquitoes evolved to develop
  • 07:56genetic targets for new drugs.
  • 07:59We have lots of faculty who are involved
  • 08:01in national leadership, but this is
  • 08:03when I think that is extraordinary.
  • 08:05In in a period in 2023,
  • 08:07there will be a time when Eric Weiner,
  • 08:09our new director of the Yale Cancer Center,
  • 08:13will at once be president of ASCO,
  • 08:15American Society of Clinical Investigation,
  • 08:17and Pat Larusso will be president of the
  • 08:19American Association for Cancer Research,
  • 08:21so the two major cancer organizations
  • 08:24in the country.
  • 08:25Eric came to us from Dana Farber,
  • 08:27he is a Triple Y.
  • 08:29He was an undergraduate medical
  • 08:31student and resident.
  • 08:32Some of you may know him and
  • 08:34doing an outstanding job in the
  • 08:36Cancer Center and of course our
  • 08:38faculty that we just had graduation
  • 08:40garnering lots of teaching awards.
  • 08:42And one of the efforts that we're making
  • 08:44is to you know include all of our
  • 08:48staff as well as we acknowledge
  • 08:50awards and our staff are outstanding
  • 08:53and contribute to our work.
  • 08:55I want to talk a little bit
  • 08:57about culture and climate.
  • 08:58You know, these are interesting times.
  • 09:00And when I arrived in 2020,
  • 09:04there was a fair amount of concern related
  • 09:08to some well publicized cases of sexual
  • 09:11harassment and how they had been handled.
  • 09:13And one of the first things that we did
  • 09:17was revamp our office of Faculty Affairs.
  • 09:22One of the other things that we've done now
  • 09:25is develop a strategic plan around diversity,
  • 09:28equity and inclusion.
  • 09:29These are posted on the website.
  • 09:31Are there 3 pieces of it,
  • 09:33one around faculty, one around students,
  • 09:36and one around staff?
  • 09:38The the foundation of this
  • 09:40plan is not only recruitment,
  • 09:43but retention and really thinking
  • 09:46about how we mentor faculty.
  • 09:49And how we sponsor faculty and
  • 09:51I'll show you our outcomes,
  • 09:53which also involves measuring
  • 09:55and looking at how we're doing.
  • 09:58And so we've done probably too many
  • 10:02surveys between the university
  • 10:04and the school,
  • 10:05but I'll highlight some outcomes of that.
  • 10:09This is the AA MC Diversity
  • 10:11Engagement survey.
  • 10:12It allows us to compare our
  • 10:14climate to that of other schools
  • 10:16of medicine and and to other.
  • 10:18About 80,000 other people have filled it out,
  • 10:23and the striking thing to me
  • 10:26was that we scored lower than
  • 10:29our peers in the area of trust.
  • 10:32And since I've been here,
  • 10:34I've I've heard from faculty concerns about.
  • 10:38If I say something about
  • 10:40behavior that I observe,
  • 10:42I'm I I'm fearful that there will be
  • 10:44retaliation or that nothing will be done.
  • 10:46And so again,
  • 10:47this is something that we've
  • 10:50worked to change the culture.
  • 10:52I think we're making progress.
  • 10:53So one of the things we did was we
  • 10:55revised our Office of Faculty Affairs
  • 10:57to create an Office of Academic
  • 10:59and Professional Development.
  • 11:01And really made it easy for people to
  • 11:04express concern without making it a big deal.
  • 11:07You know, I would say most of
  • 11:10what we see is people struggling.
  • 11:13They may have something going on at home,
  • 11:15they may have mental illness, you know,
  • 11:19and if we've intervene early,
  • 11:21we can prevent a lot of things
  • 11:23from happening and.
  • 11:25And so the other thing we need to
  • 11:27do is we need to train leaders.
  • 11:29To hold people accountable.
  • 11:30And this doesn't necessarily
  • 11:32come naturally to everybody.
  • 11:34So we've developed some leadership
  • 11:36training led by the people you see
  • 11:38here and particularly Bob Rohrbaugh,
  • 11:39who's the deputy Dean for Professional
  • 11:43and Leadership Development.
  • 11:45And so we're tracking what this looks like.
  • 11:47And this is an example of 1 year's kind
  • 11:51of things that have risen to that office.
  • 11:54And you'll see that the vast
  • 11:57majority of them around what we
  • 11:59would call professionalism,
  • 12:00some around work unit culture,
  • 12:02where sometimes a new chair or
  • 12:04sometimes an old chair is struggling
  • 12:06with how to communicate effectively.
  • 12:08And there's and we can help that
  • 12:11group by doing group culture,
  • 12:14group coaching
  • 12:15and when you look at those
  • 12:18professionalism issues.
  • 12:19You know some of it happens in the hospital,
  • 12:21things aren't going well in the OR
  • 12:24and someone reacts badly and you
  • 12:27know that again noticing patterns,
  • 12:29you know most of it is a one off
  • 12:31but when you see somebody where
  • 12:33that's happening very frequently
  • 12:34you might be able to help them and
  • 12:36and avoid those kinds of behaviors.
  • 12:39The other survey that I would feature is a
  • 12:43universitywide survey of our faculty and.
  • 12:46And this was several years ago now.
  • 12:47But it was striking to me that
  • 12:50our faculty didn't feel like
  • 12:52they were adequately mentored.
  • 12:54And when I would have listening
  • 12:56meetings with the faculty,
  • 12:59our junior faculty all had
  • 13:02mentorship committees.
  • 13:03But our midlevel faculty would
  • 13:04say things like, I'm not sure my
  • 13:07chair knows what it is I'm doing.
  • 13:10And then I talked to the chairs
  • 13:11and the chairs would say, Oh yes,
  • 13:12I meet with my faculty every year.
  • 13:15It's, you know,
  • 13:16we and there was a disconnect.
  • 13:18And so we got a group together and we
  • 13:20developed something called a faculty
  • 13:22development annual questionnaire.
  • 13:23Very simple.
  • 13:25They can do it in a little red
  • 13:28cap survey And it it's designed
  • 13:30to be a little bit of a forcing
  • 13:32function for that conversation
  • 13:34where the faculty member reflects
  • 13:36on what their goals are and.
  • 13:39The
  • 13:42and we coach the chairs a
  • 13:44little bit about how you,
  • 13:45how you have a meaningful conversation
  • 13:47with someone about what those goals are.
  • 13:49We've we piloted it last year.
  • 13:51We've rolled it out this year.
  • 13:53And the response I'll read you a couple
  • 13:55of the comments which I I think are
  • 13:57amazing and and we're continuing to
  • 14:00iterate this so that it's not a burden
  • 14:03for people either the faculty or the chairs.
  • 14:06I appreciate the multiple layers
  • 14:07of mentorship and support.
  • 14:09Invaluable.
  • 14:09I really appreciate that this is formalized.
  • 14:12It helped me think concretely
  • 14:13about steps toward ensuring
  • 14:15that I'm on track for promotion,
  • 14:19move forward to foster faculty
  • 14:21engagement and and value.
  • 14:23My chair spent almost 1 1/2 hours
  • 14:24with me and gave me helpful advice
  • 14:26and support of a calibre I could
  • 14:29not possibly have found anywhere.
  • 14:31In my long association with YSM,
  • 14:32I've never had a proper appraisal.
  • 14:34FDAC is a wonderful way to
  • 14:36democratize faculty evaluation.
  • 14:37So you know it's a work in
  • 14:39progress and will iterate,
  • 14:40but I think I think it's moving along.
  • 14:43Another group of faculty in
  • 14:46particular that I think we neglect
  • 14:48is are our research track faculty.
  • 14:50These are the non ladder
  • 14:53faculty who are particularly.
  • 14:55Important to our research mission.
  • 14:56And so last year a task force suggested
  • 14:59some things that we needed to do and
  • 15:02and these I'm highlighting those
  • 15:03that have been done in the last year.
  • 15:06This seems pretty basic,
  • 15:07but standardizing the offer letter,
  • 15:09when somebody joins the research track,
  • 15:11they're sometimes joining it as a
  • 15:12bridge to a tenure track appointment.
  • 15:15They're sometimes joining it
  • 15:16because they have no desire to be
  • 15:18an independent investigator and
  • 15:19they want to be part of a team.
  • 15:22And we need to make sure that
  • 15:24there's clear understanding of
  • 15:25which that is when somebody joins.
  • 15:27There are multiple pathways.
  • 15:29We've developed those.
  • 15:30And then when we started the F DAC,
  • 15:33we didn't have one for the research
  • 15:34track faculty, which is, you know,
  • 15:36maybe a little bit insulting.
  • 15:37So we've added that.
  • 15:39So we are measuring what we're doing.
  • 15:42This is a slide that I show every year
  • 15:44at the state of the school just to show.
  • 15:47You know,
  • 15:48doing these very simple things are
  • 15:50what is what are we succeeding?
  • 15:53And you can see that we are growing
  • 15:55the proportion of our faculty who
  • 15:58are underrepresented in medicine more
  • 16:00at the assistant professor level.
  • 16:02But we're now starting to see the same
  • 16:03trend in the associate professor.
  • 16:05And with time,
  • 16:06I'm hoping in the professor level
  • 16:08this is what our proportion of
  • 16:11faculty who are women look like.
  • 16:13We've been at 50% now in our
  • 16:15assistant professors for some time.
  • 16:17And we even show things like, you know,
  • 16:20of our endowed professorships,
  • 16:22what's the proportion of people
  • 16:23who who hold them.
  • 16:25And and as part of our
  • 16:27efforts at transparency,
  • 16:28all of this is available to
  • 16:30our faculty at any time.
  • 16:31They can go on our website and look at it.
  • 16:36So let me turn to education and we,
  • 16:40first of all, I want to highlight a couple of
  • 16:44leadership changes in the last three years.
  • 16:47When I arrived, Richard Belitzky had been
  • 16:49in his role for 15 years and and I think
  • 16:52within about two months came and said,
  • 16:54you know, I've talked,
  • 16:55I'd talked to Bob and I'm,
  • 16:58I'm ready to step down from this role.
  • 17:00And Missy and Goff did as well.
  • 17:03So we had a national search and we
  • 17:06recruited Jessica Aluzzi from within to
  • 17:08become our new deputy Dean for education.
  • 17:10She took that role in January 2021.
  • 17:13She in turn recruited John Francis,
  • 17:15I think some of you met John
  • 17:18yesterday to succeed Nancy and Goff.
  • 17:21John had been here in infectious diseases,
  • 17:24had and had been one of
  • 17:26our academic advisors.
  • 17:27He had left to be a
  • 17:30associate Dean for student affairs elsewhere.
  • 17:32And so we were able to recruit
  • 17:33him back and some other leaders
  • 17:35in our student diversity office.
  • 17:37And I'll point out the recruitment
  • 17:40of a licensed social worker.
  • 17:44To support our students
  • 17:46in terms of mental health,
  • 17:4840% of our students have seek
  • 17:52some sort of mental health support
  • 17:55during the time that they're here.
  • 17:56And this is nationally true.
  • 17:59For our students who are located
  • 18:01here doing their clerkships.
  • 18:03The burden of getting over to Yale Health
  • 18:05in the middle of the day can be tough.
  • 18:08And so we've created a satellite here.
  • 18:10It also helps triage people
  • 18:11if they need help.
  • 18:13And this has been,
  • 18:14I think really important to our students.
  • 18:17So this is a profile of the class
  • 18:20that entered this past August.
  • 18:22We will completely codify our incoming
  • 18:26class in in the middle of June.
  • 18:30But this is pretty typical of what
  • 18:31where we've been in the last few
  • 18:33years with 24 to 28% of our students.
  • 18:37Coming from groups that are
  • 18:39traditionally underrepresented,
  • 18:40about 15% of our students being
  • 18:43first generation students coming
  • 18:45from really top notch places and
  • 18:48GPA's and MCAT scores that I don't
  • 18:51think I could have gotten into Yale
  • 18:54and and I'll tell you that next year's
  • 18:57class looks even more fantastic
  • 19:01and so. That's what comes in the door.
  • 19:04And you know when you want to
  • 19:06think about how you're doing,
  • 19:07you also want to look at where
  • 19:09they go when they leave here.
  • 19:10And I just wanted to share with you our
  • 19:13match this year because it was a really
  • 19:16good day on match day and phenomenal.
  • 19:18We we always send a lot of
  • 19:21people to the Harvard programs.
  • 19:24Last year was the first year in a long time.
  • 19:26We actually retained more at
  • 19:28Yale than we sent to Boston.
  • 19:30But you'll see we sent something like
  • 19:3430 some odd students to California.
  • 19:36Most had come from California,
  • 19:38but 15 to UCSFI mean it's So
  • 19:43what? What allows us to attract such
  • 19:46incredible students and why do they do well?
  • 19:48And I believe and I think everybody in
  • 19:51this room would would say the same,
  • 19:53that it's our Yale system,
  • 19:55we attract people who are curious.
  • 19:59Who are fundamentally motivated and we put
  • 20:03them in an environment where they can guide
  • 20:07their own learning and we are really I
  • 20:10think selling this to the incoming students.
  • 20:13These are some quotations
  • 20:14that appear on our web pages.
  • 20:16There are many, many more.
  • 20:18And so our current students value
  • 20:21this just as much as you did,
  • 20:24I would say as we look to.
  • 20:28Recruit the best and brightest.
  • 20:29One of the other important things is
  • 20:31that we make medical education debt free.
  • 20:35Several places have made medical
  • 20:36education tuition free.
  • 20:38But when you do that,
  • 20:39there's still a fair amount of debt
  • 20:41burden because of the cost of living.
  • 20:43You know,
  • 20:44room and board and all those sorts of things.
  • 20:46The way we do our financial packages,
  • 20:48we calculate the total cost.
  • 20:51We calculate the ability of
  • 20:53the family to contribute.
  • 20:55We expect students to work one summer.
  • 20:58Potentially very little money.
  • 21:00And then they have a unit loan.
  • 21:02And Bob Alpern had started to
  • 21:05cap that unit loan and had gotten
  • 21:08it down to $15,000 a year.
  • 21:10And I'm very excited that this year
  • 21:13through a $25 million gift from the
  • 21:16STAR Foundation and Hank Greenberg,
  • 21:18we've now reduced the unit loan to $10,000.
  • 21:21Which means a student with financial
  • 21:24aid who graduates would have a
  • 21:26maximum debt from medical school
  • 21:28of 40,000 after four years.
  • 21:30And you know, the question is,
  • 21:33do we take that all the way down to 0 next?
  • 21:36My inclination is that we need to
  • 21:38expand the the number of students who
  • 21:41are eligible for financial aid first,
  • 21:43because I think we have a bit of
  • 21:45a donut hole where we have some
  • 21:47students who are on the border
  • 21:49and graduate with some debt.
  • 21:52But you can see where we are compared
  • 21:54to our peers and this is last year.
  • 21:56We don't have this year's other
  • 21:58everybody else's data for this year,
  • 22:00but we're roughly half of
  • 22:03the national average.
  • 22:05I also want to highlight your
  • 22:08role in helping us and I want to
  • 22:10thank you for the work that you're
  • 22:13already doing creating mentorship
  • 22:15programs for our current students.
  • 22:17But one of the things that I
  • 22:21think we should be doing is really
  • 22:25leveraging you in your community
  • 22:27to reach out to our students.
  • 22:30And so we're starting to do
  • 22:32more dinners around the country
  • 22:34to reach alumni where you are.
  • 22:37And this is a sample of some of
  • 22:39them that we've done in the last
  • 22:41year and I'm really delighted.
  • 22:43To share,
  • 22:43I think some of you met Anne yesterday.
  • 22:45She was the person sitting with your
  • 22:48class wearing a class of 90 badge,
  • 22:50and you were trying to figure out why.
  • 22:52But Anne is a was a brown undergraduate,
  • 22:56Yale medical alum,
  • 22:58practicing ophthalmologist in New York.
  • 23:01And we've convinced her to spend
  • 23:03a little bit of her time as the
  • 23:07new Director of Alumni engagement.
  • 23:10And one of our visions is that we will.
  • 23:13That that Ann will create a program that,
  • 23:17as we admit students will be able
  • 23:19to create outreach so that you can
  • 23:22reach them if if they're from your
  • 23:25city and talk to them about the
  • 23:27Yale system and your experience.
  • 23:28And I think that this will even
  • 23:31further enhance the quality of
  • 23:33students were able to recruit.
  • 23:35I want to mention that we've been involved
  • 23:37in strategic planning around education,
  • 23:40and I think Jessica Lucy has
  • 23:42shared some of this with you.
  • 23:44A
  • 23:46lot of this is around improving and
  • 23:50innovating in medical education.
  • 23:53You know, we, like so many schools,
  • 23:54had these courses where our faculty would
  • 23:59lecture with a PowerPoint like this okay.
  • 24:03And it was pretty passive and with COVID,
  • 24:06you know we did zoom but we learned that we
  • 24:08need to do things a little bit differently.
  • 24:10You saw the SIM center very
  • 24:12handson way of learning that.
  • 24:15We have a lot of people working on new
  • 24:20technology based ways to to learn anatomy,
  • 24:23to think in 3D.
  • 24:26We also hear from our students that
  • 24:29although they don't want you know.
  • 24:31Grades and tests,
  • 24:32they do want ways to assess themselves,
  • 24:34they want ways when they're
  • 24:35thinking about it.
  • 24:36So we have some of the country's
  • 24:38experts in that kind of self-directed
  • 24:40assessment and so we're working on
  • 24:43that and then expanding our advisor
  • 24:45program into a a coaching program.
  • 24:47So we had a gazillion applicants
  • 24:50for 16 coaching positions and we
  • 24:54will launch that program in June.
  • 24:56Work in supporting our own faculty.
  • 24:59We've revised our tracks in the faculty
  • 25:04handbook to really reward teaching.
  • 25:07We've developed educational leaders in each
  • 25:11department beyond what we had previously.
  • 25:13We've done work to improve our what used
  • 25:15to be the teaching and Learning Center
  • 25:18to to make that even more effective
  • 25:20as a Center for medical education,
  • 25:22offering people advanced degrees
  • 25:24in medical education.
  • 25:26And we've made sure that when
  • 25:27we when someone is committing
  • 25:29significant effort to education,
  • 25:31we're paying them for that time and
  • 25:34so they can protect their time.
  • 25:36And then lastly, you know,
  • 25:39I think some of this is an effect of COVID,
  • 25:41but our students are hungry for
  • 25:44more opportunities to meet people
  • 25:47outside their own class and so.
  • 25:49You'll you,
  • 25:50I think you got an e-mail,
  • 25:52we're standing up some advising
  • 25:53colleges that will allow sort
  • 25:55of for vertical integration.
  • 25:56So first year students will be
  • 25:59in dinners with 4th year students
  • 26:01and senior folks we are,
  • 26:04we are working with faculty to
  • 26:08make sure that they understand the
  • 26:11sensitivities of our students much more.
  • 26:15Communication about the learning
  • 26:16environment and again you know in in
  • 26:19the hospital as well as in the school
  • 26:21and then increase community engagement.
  • 26:23We have a wonderful relationship with the
  • 26:27pastors of our AM E Zion churches here.
  • 26:30They are very engaged in our
  • 26:32clinical research programs and more,
  • 26:34more and more
  • 26:37engaging them in things like in
  • 26:40fact our mission statement but
  • 26:42in sharing with our students.
  • 26:44What the community's interests are, and
  • 26:47the students are not always aware of that.
  • 26:50They think they have the best and
  • 26:52brightest idea in the community,
  • 26:54says, you know, no,
  • 26:54that's actually not what we're interested in.
  • 26:56What we really need is this.
  • 26:57So it's a very useful working relationship.
  • 27:00And this is just, you know,
  • 27:02we've got an LCMD site visit
  • 27:04for accreditation coming up.
  • 27:06I think it's something like preparing for
  • 27:08a colonoscopy and that's where we are, so.
  • 27:12So talk a little bit about research
  • 27:15and we are sitting right now at
  • 27:18#7 in the country and NIH funding,
  • 27:21you can see that there's a cluster,
  • 27:23they are all in the middle within you
  • 27:25know a couple of millions of of dollars.
  • 27:27And when you look at the departments,
  • 27:30you know obviously internal
  • 27:32medicine and and here psychiatry are
  • 27:36biggest departments with funding.
  • 27:38And psychiatry here is of course
  • 27:41extraordinary typically a #1.
  • 27:42Comparative medicine is a unique
  • 27:45department here and then public health
  • 27:47and public health is that's the
  • 27:49ranking among public health departments
  • 27:52and then it will move to becoming
  • 27:55ranked among public health schools.
  • 27:57The basic science here is extraordinary.
  • 27:59What I didn't appreciate when I came
  • 28:01is that the clinical and translational
  • 28:04science is also extraordinary And
  • 28:06to highlight a few things,
  • 28:08the new therapies to prevent type
  • 28:10one diabetes.
  • 28:11Were developed here,
  • 28:13starting with basic science and
  • 28:15understanding how the T cell
  • 28:16attacks the islet.
  • 28:17But now all the way through the
  • 28:20development of antibodies that can
  • 28:21be given to children who are at high
  • 28:24risk for type one diabetes trazepatide.
  • 28:25And I forget the brand name,
  • 28:28but it's the one that's now $1000 a month.
  • 28:31But for the treatment of obesity.
  • 28:33That trial was led here the,
  • 28:36you know,
  • 28:37some of the Sentinel trials in Alzheimer's.
  • 28:40Obviously the COVID work ketamine
  • 28:43for refractory antidepressants
  • 28:45and for refractory depression.
  • 28:48We, Yale University,
  • 28:51developed a universitywide scientific
  • 28:54strategic plan and I highlight here
  • 28:56that much of that strategic plan is
  • 28:59very well aligned with what we're
  • 29:01doing in the School of Medicine.
  • 29:03Tony Koleski and Brian Smith,
  • 29:05our Deputy Deans for Research,
  • 29:06led a school focused strategic
  • 29:09planning exercise in late 2020 to say
  • 29:12what do we need to develop that's
  • 29:15compatible with the university wide,
  • 29:17but focuses on our own gaps.
  • 29:20One of those things is physician
  • 29:22scientist development,
  • 29:23creating an infrastructure so that
  • 29:25we provide salary support for our
  • 29:28starting faculty before they have
  • 29:30that first career development award.
  • 29:32And infrastructure to support
  • 29:33people in making the transition
  • 29:35from the career development award
  • 29:37to the first independent funding,
  • 29:39the RO one that includes oversight
  • 29:42of mentorship,
  • 29:43includes access to a repository
  • 29:46of successful grants,
  • 29:48a internal mock study section where
  • 29:51people can see their grants reviewed and
  • 29:53realize that they need to make a change.
  • 29:55And then the creation of a Janeway society,
  • 29:57which includes all of our junior faculty,
  • 29:59whether they're in the basic science
  • 30:01departments or the clinical departments.
  • 30:03They just had their second
  • 30:04second annual retreat.
  • 30:05Jean Bennett,
  • 30:06one of our alumna came
  • 30:08and and spoke and Jean's,
  • 30:10you know,
  • 30:10only curing blindness and and so you know,
  • 30:13she's a pretty compelling speaker.
  • 30:16We've also developed this year
  • 30:20was our inaugural year something
  • 30:22called the Science Fellows Program.
  • 30:25Which is I would say analogous to
  • 30:28the Whitehead in that the intention
  • 30:30is that we will recruit postdocs
  • 30:32of such caliber that we anticipate
  • 30:34we will invite them to stay
  • 30:36on the faculty. And that's a very
  • 30:38different model for basic science.
  • 30:40And we're particularly interested
  • 30:42in using this as a mechanism to
  • 30:44increase the diversity both in terms
  • 30:46of the types of science and the.
  • 30:49And the applicants.
  • 30:50And so this year there were the first
  • 30:53year 134 applications, 11 finalists,
  • 30:564 offers and three have accepted.
  • 31:00And you can see that the applicants
  • 31:01were very diverse and all
  • 31:03three who accepted were women.
  • 31:06That's unusual in our
  • 31:08basic science departments,
  • 31:09not yet any underrepresented medicine,
  • 31:11but some significant improvements there.
  • 31:15To mention that we're, you know,
  • 31:17really focused on making sure
  • 31:19that the technology or faculty
  • 31:21have access to is cutting edge.
  • 31:23We recruited Shan Ju and Song
  • 31:26Penn a year ago to build Fib SEM,
  • 31:29which is a technology they
  • 31:30came from Januia Farm,
  • 31:31a technology that allows incredible
  • 31:34resolution to solve structures,
  • 31:36things like building a murphish core.
  • 31:39With some other crosscutting resources,
  • 31:43we've created a a centralized
  • 31:46biorepository for those of you who
  • 31:48were here for any period of time.
  • 31:49You know that many of our faculty
  • 31:52have small biorepositories related
  • 31:54to the disease of interest for them.
  • 31:57But if you can, if you can,
  • 32:00collect those samples in a way
  • 32:02that they can be used for other
  • 32:04things and you can collate them
  • 32:06so that others can use them.
  • 32:08This is a very powerful tool and
  • 32:10it allows you to to search for new
  • 32:13drug targets and and other things.
  • 32:16I mentioned data science and
  • 32:18the recruitment of Lucilla.
  • 32:20Lucilla has brought with her all of us.
  • 32:24So we are now at Yale engaged of
  • 32:26the All of Us program in the all
  • 32:29of Us program which is an NIH
  • 32:31funded program to collect DNA and
  • 32:34medical information from.
  • 32:36It's a million people and we are
  • 32:39focused here in Connecticut and in
  • 32:41Puerto Rico and then we've stood
  • 32:43up some centers in the last year.
  • 32:45Anya Josheroff was the author who
  • 32:47has led some of those incredin based
  • 32:51pharmacologic trials for obesity.
  • 32:55Mitochondrial biology is something
  • 32:57that we're growing in our psychiatry.
  • 33:01Department, a lot of interest in the
  • 33:04effects of cannabinoids. You know,
  • 33:06marijuana has been legalized in many,
  • 33:08many States and yet we really don't
  • 33:10understand the impact of that.
  • 33:12And we believe we're seeing a
  • 33:14significant impact in mental health.
  • 33:16And then John Sang who was recruited
  • 33:19recently doing Systems immunology
  • 33:21and you'll be hearing more about that
  • 33:24with an announcement in the fall.
  • 33:27We are very space constrained and
  • 33:29you may not appreciate this just
  • 33:31walking around and because you've seen
  • 33:33new buildings just to Orient you.
  • 33:35This is College Street here, here, Cedar St.
  • 33:38and of course Sterling Hall.
  • 33:40We are over here in tack and we
  • 33:44have two new buildings going up,
  • 33:47100 College St.
  • 33:48which has bridges to three 3300
  • 33:51George Street and then back to
  • 33:53the School of Public Health.
  • 33:54And across the street a new building
  • 33:57101 College we will that will
  • 33:59give us more space but the space
  • 34:02that we call West of Cedar,
  • 34:04the old hospital that has been
  • 34:06lab space is some of that will
  • 34:08need to be decommissioned is the
  • 34:10cost of renovating it now exceeds
  • 34:12the cost of new space.
  • 34:14You get into asbestos mitigation
  • 34:15even when you renovate it,
  • 34:17it's often still kind of rabbit
  • 34:19worn looking labs and so.
  • 34:22We,
  • 34:23we are have plans after these
  • 34:25two to build a new building.
  • 34:28All of this is much slower
  • 34:29than we would like it to be.
  • 34:31We probably should have built a
  • 34:33building about 10 years ago and it's
  • 34:35slow because of Labor shortages and
  • 34:40supply chain and all those kinds of things,
  • 34:42but we will get there.
  • 34:44We're trying to be very
  • 34:46creative in our use of space.
  • 34:47Last on research, we did convene our
  • 34:51first scientific Advisory Board.
  • 34:52You'll recognize many of these people.
  • 34:55This wasn't intentional, but all,
  • 34:57all but one have a Yale association
  • 35:01and and that's kind of fun.
  • 35:03So Nobel laureates,
  • 35:04Lasker Prize winners,
  • 35:06editor of science, you know,
  • 35:07really a very energetic and
  • 35:10enthusiastic group,
  • 35:11very helpful to us.
  • 35:13So the clinical mission
  • 35:16I don't think for you
  • 35:18know for many of you St.
  • 35:20Raves was part of Yale New Haven Hospital,
  • 35:23but it is now and that means
  • 35:25that we currently have one of the
  • 35:27largest academic health centers
  • 35:29here in town with 1541 beds and
  • 35:33this is just what's in New Haven.
  • 35:36We have of course now a network
  • 35:38that ranges from Greenwich to
  • 35:40the South all the way up to.
  • 35:43Westerly RI, most of the affiliated
  • 35:45work that we do is here, but we have
  • 35:49a fairly big footprint in Greenwich,
  • 35:51Bridgeport and in New London.
  • 35:56And again, you know,
  • 36:00we have a 200 year relationship
  • 36:02with first New New Haven Hospital,
  • 36:05Grace New Haven Hospital,
  • 36:07now you know,
  • 36:08New Haven health system and
  • 36:10it's been bumpy at times.
  • 36:12And I think we are at a bit of a
  • 36:16turning .1 because we have new leaders,
  • 36:19relatively new leadership both in
  • 36:21the school and as of March a year
  • 36:23ago in the in the health system.
  • 36:25But also because I think COVID
  • 36:27has been helpful.
  • 36:27We had to come together in
  • 36:29ways that we never had before.
  • 36:33And because of the way we came together,
  • 36:36we actually had one of the lowest
  • 36:38mortality rates in the country for COVID.
  • 36:40And that is very different from
  • 36:42how we do day-to-day because we're
  • 36:45tripping over ourselves often.
  • 36:48And so Chris and I have just said we're,
  • 36:52we're going to do this and we're
  • 36:54going to kind of, you know,
  • 36:55step out over the ravine and hope
  • 36:57we make it to the other side.
  • 36:59But we have to do this.
  • 37:01And So what is this?
  • 37:02Well,
  • 37:03we are working on a joint strategic plan.
  • 37:05It's the first time we've ever had
  • 37:07a joint strategic plan between
  • 37:09our two institutions.
  • 37:10I'm gratified that when we addressed
  • 37:13this to the leadership of the
  • 37:15hospital and our chairs 201,
  • 37:17they identified leading clinical
  • 37:19and translational research as what
  • 37:21differentiates us and one of the
  • 37:23things we needed to invest in.
  • 37:25But it's everything from our
  • 37:26learning environment to providing
  • 37:28better access to our patients,
  • 37:31better value for our patients and
  • 37:32you know just the business aspects of
  • 37:35what are our destination programs,
  • 37:38one of the things that I think we didn't.
  • 37:40Think we would get done as quickly
  • 37:42as we did was an alignment of
  • 37:44our physician practice.
  • 37:45So Yale Medicine is our faculty
  • 37:48practice plan.
  • 37:49There's also a unit Yale New Haven
  • 37:51Health System employed practice plan,
  • 37:53Northeast Medical Group and the
  • 37:56two sometimes competed, you know,
  • 37:58whether we were recruiting
  • 37:59physicians or competed for patients,
  • 38:01which is crazy.
  • 38:03And so we've now aligned them
  • 38:05under a single group.
  • 38:07We haven't changed employment status.
  • 38:09So our faculty are still employed
  • 38:11by the university and New NEMG is
  • 38:13still employed by the health system.
  • 38:15But it's led by a single chief
  • 38:17physician executive who is Peg McGovern,
  • 38:19who's also our deputy Dean for
  • 38:22clinical affairs and she is
  • 38:23somebody who's up to the task,
  • 38:25which is really exciting.
  • 38:27Reporting to Peg is
  • 38:29Richard Goldstein, who oversees NEMG.
  • 38:33This will allow us to get to a
  • 38:36single access center. We now have 3.
  • 38:39It will allow us to get rid of duplication
  • 38:42in billing and all sorts of things.
  • 38:45That will also reduce expense on both sides,
  • 38:48which is critical to the success
  • 38:51of hospitals post COVID.
  • 38:53So we're huge amount of work that needs to
  • 38:57be done And then the last thing because
  • 39:02you don't really get into fund change
  • 39:04management until you move people's money.
  • 39:08Is we've gotten into funds flow and so
  • 39:13we have our funds flow traditionally
  • 39:16is a series of oneoff negotiations
  • 39:19typically between chairs and a leader
  • 39:22in the hospital and in our agreements
  • 39:26look something like this no to alike.
  • 39:29They are written down and huge amounts
  • 39:33of wasted time and wasted personnel
  • 39:35tracking everything that's in these.
  • 39:38We needed to have something
  • 39:39that was rational, transparent,
  • 39:41aligned incentives so that we
  • 39:44got the behavior that we wanted.
  • 39:47And you know,
  • 39:48we did what everybody has done and
  • 39:50I and and many academic institutions
  • 39:53have done this most, you know,
  • 39:55as early as 10 or 10 to 8 years ago.
  • 40:00And we brought in a consultant who's
  • 40:02done this with most of our academic
  • 40:04partners and we've changed how
  • 40:05funds will flow in a ration.
  • 40:07So we pulled out academic program support.
  • 40:10We've created a criteria
  • 40:12for the clinical payments.
  • 40:13We continue to have things like GME payments,
  • 40:16all those sorts of things.
  • 40:17Not important to get into the details,
  • 40:19but we go live July 1 and this is a
  • 40:24huge exercise and change management is
  • 40:26and it's going to require that people.
  • 40:29Learn to lead differently.
  • 40:30We are running our new and our old
  • 40:33systems in parallel for a year
  • 40:35and holding people harmless,
  • 40:37but it's a big, big lift.
  • 40:42Lastly, we're in the midst of a
  • 40:44capital campaign. Universitywide.
  • 40:45These are the pillars of the capital
  • 40:48campaign and just tying to that
  • 40:51what we're doing in the school.
  • 40:53So obviously the the university
  • 40:56science strategic plan.
  • 40:58Our own interest in research and
  • 40:59innovation such as in dead data science,
  • 41:02our own interest in faculty development
  • 41:04and in cross campus collaborations and
  • 41:07then I think well aligned with leaders
  • 41:09for a better award world is our efforts,
  • 41:12our efforts in financial aid.
  • 41:14You have been big contributors
  • 41:17and I mentioned last yesterday
  • 41:20afternoon before our our panel.
  • 41:22That our alumni since July 2018
  • 41:27have given $4.6 million many
  • 41:31of you give to financial aid.
  • 41:32For those of you who we have,
  • 41:36a match is not the right term but
  • 41:39a commitment from the Provost that
  • 41:42for every gift of $1,000,000 or more
  • 41:45to financial aid he is matching or
  • 41:49unlocking funds that is matching this.
  • 41:52And so for example,
  • 41:53that gift from the Star Foundation,
  • 41:55we're able to,
  • 41:56we were able to unlock another 25 million.
  • 41:59So thank you for this.
  • 42:00Thank you for the outreach that
  • 42:02you're doing to our residents and
  • 42:05students and just ending again with a
  • 42:07reminder of those crosscutting themes.
  • 42:09And I hope you've seen what ties to that.
  • 42:12And I think we have a little
  • 42:14bit of time now for questions.
  • 42:15Yes.
  • 42:30Yes,
  • 42:33question for that.
  • 42:34I just I thought that there is a
  • 42:37study in cannabis and I was thinking
  • 42:39that very specific because there are
  • 42:41coding here they all expect for the
  • 42:43study how artificial involvement,
  • 42:47yes there's. There's a fair amount
  • 42:49of artificial intelligence work going
  • 42:51on in the School of Medicine already
  • 42:54particularly in imaging pathology the
  • 42:56obvious places where you might use it.
  • 42:58There is a a robust dialogue university
  • 43:02wide and and obviously in computer science
  • 43:05in those places a lot going on in a I.
  • 43:07But one of the biggest issues
  • 43:11particularly for the undergraduate
  • 43:14campus is how even to handle.
  • 43:16Tests and all of those kinds of things,
  • 43:19and whether something is generated by chat,
  • 43:21GB T and how you,
  • 43:23how you annotate that and all those
  • 43:25kinds of things. But yes,
  • 43:30follow up to the cannabis Center.
  • 43:32There's some interesting neuroscience
  • 43:35that is moving forward slowly
  • 43:37because of the bands going back to
  • 43:40the legalization of psychedelics.
  • 43:42Is that happening at Yale too?
  • 43:45Yes. So we're doing a lot of
  • 43:48work in and and I get I was
  • 43:50showing new centers this year,
  • 43:51but we're doing a lot of work
  • 43:53in the psychedelics in a number
  • 43:56of conditions, including PTSD.
  • 43:57We probably have the strongest PTSD
  • 44:00work going on in psychiatry here and in
  • 44:04affiliation with our VA and that's yeah.
  • 44:11Great things that this year for students,
  • 44:13was the relationship still very strong. the
  • 44:20VA, you know, is critical to I
  • 44:21think to a School of Medicine,
  • 44:23both for that educational piece
  • 44:25for students and residents,
  • 44:27but also for another opportunity
  • 44:30for junior faculty in terms of
  • 44:33grant funding and it it the VA has.
  • 44:37Even more difficult wet lab space
  • 44:40problems right now because it's
  • 44:42physical plant is so old that
  • 44:45we're actually in conversations
  • 44:48about whether they would take some
  • 44:50bioincubator space in New Haven for
  • 44:52a while that those kinds of things.
  • 44:56Yes,
  • 45:01question about in terms of the development
  • 45:05of physician scientists dental.
  • 45:07I'm wondering how you do with respect
  • 45:09to the kids that are transition. Yes.
  • 45:13How are you doing to respect recruiting
  • 45:17position scientists and keeping them? Yes.
  • 45:22So you may not know this.
  • 45:23This is one of my particular passions and.
  • 45:27And when I arrived,
  • 45:29we did appoint Keith Chote in this
  • 45:32role and and the our statistics for
  • 45:34the K to R conversion were not bad.
  • 45:36They were you know they're still above
  • 45:39the national average and of course,
  • 45:41but in my experience if you get
  • 45:43the right infrastructure in place,
  • 45:45you can get that that K to R
  • 45:47conversion up to the 70% range.
  • 45:49And so the just to review
  • 45:52some of the elements of this.
  • 45:54We have a competitive program.
  • 45:57So we we have lots of K12 awards.
  • 45:59These are institutional career
  • 46:02development awards along fields, right.
  • 46:06But we also now haven't truly institutional.
  • 46:09So it's from the Dean's office several
  • 46:13slots and it's competitive so that
  • 46:16people submit their science and
  • 46:19their mentorship plan internally.
  • 46:22Get funding.
  • 46:22Most of them flip off because they're
  • 46:25submitting their K award at the same time,
  • 46:27so we're actually recycling this.
  • 46:30We also created
  • 46:33a T32 equivalent for our foreign
  • 46:38trained fellows because that's a
  • 46:40group as many of you know is not
  • 46:43eligible for career development
  • 46:45funding and some of our best folks.
  • 46:47So we have 4 new people this year.
  • 46:51So we're investing a fair
  • 46:52amount of this. Yeah, yes.
  • 46:59So the West Campus is used as cross
  • 47:05university space for several institutes
  • 47:07and we have a number of faculty out there.
  • 47:13It my sense of it is that it is
  • 47:16underutilized and I would like
  • 47:18to put more things out there.
  • 47:20It's, it's interesting that even
  • 47:21post COVID when everybody was
  • 47:23meeting by Zoom and whatnot,
  • 47:25faculty are reluctant to move there.
  • 47:28But we are trying to leverage
  • 47:30that certainly for swing space
  • 47:32as we build other things.
  • 47:34Yeah, yes,
  • 47:38you're doing a great job
  • 47:39turning out leaders in medicine
  • 47:42globally in the United States.
  • 47:45Bravo on having a Surgeon General upcoming.
  • 47:50Head of the CDC you have a
  • 47:54lot of interdisciplinary How
  • 47:57are you pulling this off?
  • 47:58It's pretty amazing.
  • 48:02I can't take
  • 48:02credit for Rebecca or Mandy
  • 48:04because they were here before.
  • 48:06But I do think the Yale system
  • 48:08makes a huge difference, right?
  • 48:10You you develop people who go deeply and.
  • 48:19Develop a passion
  • 48:23and who maybe struggle a little bit.
  • 48:25They have that experience of,
  • 48:26you know, having to figure it out.
  • 48:30There's no point in having medical
  • 48:33students just memorizing a bunch of
  • 48:35stuff because the stuff you memorize now
  • 48:37is not the same stuff you need to know.
  • 48:39And I mean, you know,
  • 48:42so I think it's selection, no doubt,
  • 48:44but I think the culture as well.
  • 48:49Yes,
  • 48:57yeah.
  • 49:23Yes,
  • 49:25a couple of things although
  • 49:28it may not look different.
  • 49:30I would point out the residential,
  • 49:32the the numbers of towers of
  • 49:34apartment buildings within a block
  • 49:36or two of the School of Medicine.
  • 49:39Most of our students do not
  • 49:40live in Harkers Hall anymore.
  • 49:42So, so that that fact that
  • 49:45there's that residential is huge
  • 49:46if you go several blocks away.
  • 49:51Particularly on the other
  • 49:52side of the hospital, it,
  • 49:53it is a big concern.
  • 49:55There's a lot of renovation going
  • 49:58from here to Long Wharf and the mayor
  • 50:02has announced a plan around that and
  • 50:05we're very much partners in that.
  • 50:07These buildings that are going
  • 50:09up that are being built by
  • 50:11developers have city support,
  • 50:12but they are able to go up
  • 50:14because the university and the
  • 50:15School of Medicine in particular
  • 50:16is leasing floors in them.
  • 50:22Fundamentally, we have to we have
  • 50:24to change the economics of the
  • 50:26city and we have to address the
  • 50:28addiction issues in the city.
  • 50:29We have a lot of work going
  • 50:32on around addiction.
  • 50:33Our residents spend all of their
  • 50:35primary care time in an FQHC,
  • 50:39so we have a lot more work to do.
  • 50:42But I it's one of the things
  • 50:44that attracted me here was that
  • 50:46we are in a community where we
  • 50:48can make a difference.
  • 50:50Yes, you
  • 50:53must not sleep much at night. My
  • 50:57question is what do you see
  • 51:00the role of primary care.
  • 51:04So it's interesting we have,
  • 51:05you know, never produced a lot
  • 51:08of primary care physicians.
  • 51:09We do have of course our PA
  • 51:13program on the other hand are.
  • 51:14Our primary care residency program in
  • 51:17internal medicine produces more primary
  • 51:20care residents than anybody else.
  • 51:22They don't stay at Yale.
  • 51:25And with Peg's arrival,
  • 51:28one of the conversations we're
  • 51:30having is how do we keep them,
  • 51:33if not on faculty in the Yale
  • 51:35community through this aligned
  • 51:36physician enterprise And we will
  • 51:38within the next year stand up a.
  • 51:41Clinically integrated network that
  • 51:42allows us to then and you know
  • 51:45spread the tent even further so
  • 51:47are we have to build primary care.
  • 51:51I'm an internist you know we
  • 51:54will do that and again maybe not
  • 51:56through having a gazillion faculty
  • 51:58members but affiliated yes,
  • 52:04so piggyback off that question both of
  • 52:07us were went into family medicine and.
  • 52:10When we graduated almost 20 years,
  • 52:11it was such a challenge trying to
  • 52:13navigate our way into family medicine.
  • 52:15It was uncharted waters and and in
  • 52:17respect to now with primary care
  • 52:20still having that emphasis in regards
  • 52:22to internal medicine and met peace.
  • 52:23I was just wondering whether the
  • 52:25conversation in terms of family
  • 52:27medicine supporting students who
  • 52:28are interested in it having some
  • 52:30kind of track or encouragement.
  • 52:34We have had the conversation
  • 52:36and we particularly had a
  • 52:38conversation about putting a family
  • 52:41medicine residency in in L&M,
  • 52:44our hospital in New London.
  • 52:47There were some funny GME things
  • 52:50that they had had one fellow there,
  • 52:53so they were capped at the as being
  • 52:56able to have one GME person there.
  • 52:58That's going to change with a new law.
  • 53:01And so when that happens,
  • 53:03we will revisit that as a possibility.
  • 53:07Yes. In the 1960s,
  • 53:10the highways that came in off
  • 53:12of 95 were known as the Oak St.
  • 53:15connectors and we were in the
  • 53:17middle of the Oak St. slums.
  • 53:18I I fighting the environment
  • 53:21of New Haven is as old as
  • 53:24the school way it is. Yeah,
  • 53:26No, I have a. Son who was an urban
  • 53:30planning undergrad and I was an
  • 53:32architect and you know this is
  • 53:34New Haven is the case study for
  • 53:36effects of bad urban planning.
  • 53:42I will say he loves, he loves the
  • 53:45School of Public Health building as
  • 53:47a as a perfect example of brutalism.
  • 53:55Steve Brown, we have a question
  • 53:57actually from a class member 72.
  • 53:59In the past you've talked about the
  • 54:01need to improve access to care.
  • 54:02How is that going? I live in the community.
  • 54:05So this work that PEG is doing to,
  • 54:11you know again get us from three
  • 54:14access centers to a single access
  • 54:16center will make a huge difference.
  • 54:18We we also need to change how
  • 54:20we work as faculty, physicians,
  • 54:23there's a tendency to.
  • 54:25You know, you have a four hour.
  • 54:27I mean you've all been through this, right.
  • 54:28You have a four hour clinic and
  • 54:30and that goes from 8:00 till noon,
  • 54:32but you're you show up at 9:00 and you,
  • 54:35you know, so we have to change
  • 54:37our culture a little bit about
  • 54:38our commitment to our patients.
  • 54:40It doesn't mean that we are asking
  • 54:42faculty to have more than 1/2 day
  • 54:44clinic if they're a physician scientist,
  • 54:46but to commit to that time
  • 54:47when they're there.
  • 54:48So yeah.
  • 54:52Any other questions? There's one more more
  • 54:57than married. So as clinicians,
  • 55:00we deal with people, which
  • 55:01is a humanistic effort.
  • 55:04And I'm wondering what opportunities
  • 55:06there are for the medical students
  • 55:10to engage in the arts and humanities to
  • 55:12help improve their humanistic endeavor.
  • 55:14Yes, we have a wonderful.
  • 55:19Program in humanism in medicine
  • 55:22that offers regular events.
  • 55:26We have, as you probably recall,
  • 55:29the Yale Symphony,
  • 55:30the Yale School of Medicine Symphony,
  • 55:33and many of our students participate in that.
  • 55:37The there's engagement with
  • 55:39the art museums as well.
  • 55:42So I think all of that's
  • 55:43quite alive and well here.
  • 55:53Can you tell us a little bit
  • 55:55about the educational curriculum
  • 55:56for the medical students and how that's
  • 55:58changed over the last couple of years?
  • 56:01So over the last couple of years,
  • 56:02not a lot basically since I've
  • 56:06been here it is as you know as
  • 56:08but as many places now they do 18
  • 56:11months before they go into their
  • 56:15into their clinical clerkships,
  • 56:17their preclinical time is.
  • 56:22By you know, things are grouped together
  • 56:26logically by not by basic science,
  • 56:30but by related basic science material.
  • 56:35And those blocks run from four weeks
  • 56:38to 8 weeks, typically around 4 weeks.
  • 56:42So they start with something called
  • 56:44Introduction to the profession,
  • 56:46which is a very brief block.
  • 56:47It's about a two week block. They have.
  • 56:50The next one is on you know hematology
  • 56:52and genomics and those kinds of things.
  • 56:55They have a large Physiology block which is
  • 56:59one of our highest rate is rated blocks.
  • 57:02There's that.
  • 57:03There are many threads that
  • 57:04run across that period of time,
  • 57:06pharmacology being an example
  • 57:07where it's better if it's
  • 57:11integrated as you're learning
  • 57:14the basic science as well.
  • 57:17During their clinical clerkships they have
  • 57:254-12 week blocks, but then they have
  • 57:27an extended period of what we call
  • 57:30advanced training period and there
  • 57:33they have very few requirements
  • 57:35and you know, so they do some.
  • 57:38Occasional subinternships and electives,
  • 57:40but they can also take that time to work on
  • 57:44their thesis for extended periods of time.
  • 57:47And still a majority of our
  • 57:50students take a fifth year as well.
  • 57:54So that's just a brief overview
  • 57:56of the curriculum, yes.
  • 58:07Medical school here years ago,
  • 58:09one of the best lectures I
  • 58:11ever attended was been Scully
  • 58:16giving a lecture on the architecture
  • 58:18of The Cave, and particularly
  • 58:20he did the nice of longest.
  • 58:23Whatever. Yeah, yeah, so do I.
  • 58:29This is just amazing.
  • 58:31So I'm wondering in light
  • 58:33of the question of humanism,
  • 58:34are there opportunities,
  • 58:36structured opportunities without
  • 58:37having too much effort to where
  • 58:40medical students can take advantage
  • 58:42of this amazing university? Yes,
  • 58:46again, particularly elective time.
  • 58:48You know, they have so much elective
  • 58:50time they can they can take courses.
  • 58:52One of the reasons we want this
  • 58:54coaching program is to make sure
  • 58:56they have awareness of, you know,
  • 58:57to facilitate those kinds of things.
  • 59:04Several of our MDPHD students are
  • 59:06doing PHD's in the humanities.
  • 59:10We have, as you were aware,
  • 59:12a very strong history of Medicine
  • 59:14Department and the History of
  • 59:16Medicine folks spend a lot of
  • 59:18time teaching undergraduates,
  • 59:19but also in degraded into
  • 59:21our curriculum as well,
  • 59:25yes. I'm just not familiar
  • 59:27with the way the fact they
  • 59:29set up in terms of teaching.
  • 59:31But when we were here we had
  • 59:32exposure to private practitioners.
  • 59:34Is everybody now Yale affiliated or
  • 59:38under the faculty or do they have,
  • 59:41you know we had the moral unit within the VA
  • 59:45Is there that kind of exposure
  • 59:48or is everybody Yale back to
  • 59:50be one way or the other? No
  • 59:53Yale New Haven health system
  • 59:55is one of the. Rare academic
  • 59:58health systems that is not closed
  • 01:00:05and you know I would say so there are
  • 01:00:09three types of physicians in our own
  • 01:00:11just across the street, it's faculty,
  • 01:00:13it's Northeast Medical Group that
  • 01:00:15will that are more affiliated now and
  • 01:00:19then it's community missions, yes.
  • 01:00:26Changed over
  • 01:00:31the years. Nora Wong has written a very nice
  • 01:00:35article on this. Since I wasn't
  • 01:00:39around in 1932, I can't.
  • 01:00:44What I can say is that
  • 01:00:48the fundamentals have not changed at all.
  • 01:00:50You know, I think there are interesting
  • 01:00:54writings about. What winter?
  • 01:00:56And it's really what he really did, you know.
  • 01:00:59So including getting rid of,
  • 01:01:00you know classes in the sense of first,
  • 01:01:02second, third, year, 4th, right.
  • 01:01:04He really had a vision ahead of his time for
  • 01:01:07competency based progression in medicine.
  • 01:01:11I think if you came back and sat in
  • 01:01:16on courses or didn't sit on a courses
  • 01:01:19you would have a very you would you
  • 01:01:21would recognize the place very much.
  • 01:01:26Yes, So has
  • 01:01:30created, yeah, that's important
  • 01:01:35to have people who can remember
  • 01:01:38a lot of stuff and it it's
  • 01:01:41effectively measurable too.
  • 01:01:42So that allows us to do some selection.
  • 01:01:45So the alternative would would be to
  • 01:01:46find people who are more compassionate
  • 01:01:48and who can translate that more.
  • 01:01:49And I'm wondering A,
  • 01:01:50if you think that that's really the case.
  • 01:01:53And secondly, are you aware of any
  • 01:01:55data that we can measure compassion,
  • 01:02:00I know it when I see it
  • 01:02:08we do our admissions process includes
  • 01:02:14some standardized interviewing,
  • 01:02:16some cases and things that.
  • 01:02:19I'm not a psychologist,
  • 01:02:21but I understand help reveal
  • 01:02:23those characteristics of people.
  • 01:02:27But it's very judged.
  • 01:02:29I I think it's very subjective and I
  • 01:02:32I would say we do a pretty good job in
  • 01:02:34our students of landing those people.
  • 01:02:37We do something in residency,
  • 01:02:39not we yell, but as a country we do
  • 01:02:42something in residency that blunts that
  • 01:02:46and I think that's where
  • 01:02:48we ought to be focusing.
  • 01:02:49And and some of that is us, right?
  • 01:02:51I mean, I think some of it is what
  • 01:02:53they see and this is what people
  • 01:02:56refer to as the hidden curriculum.
  • 01:03:02Yes, thank you. Has Yale done anything
  • 01:03:07recently to address the workforce
  • 01:03:09needs with respect to behavioral health
  • 01:03:12issues that are so prominent now we.
  • 01:03:17We have a huge department of psychiatry.
  • 01:03:18Our students, you know,
  • 01:03:21we're very engaged in.
  • 01:03:23We have, we produce a significant proportion
  • 01:03:26of people engaged in mental health.
  • 01:03:29What we're doing clinically is much
  • 01:03:31more embedding people in primary
  • 01:03:35care because there's so much mental
  • 01:03:39health issues across medicine now.
  • 01:03:41I mean I will say for example we're seeing.
  • 01:03:46Post COVID, we're seeing a surge in
  • 01:03:49anger among patients and there's real
  • 01:03:51concern about safety and you know,
  • 01:03:52you've seen the stories nationally
  • 01:03:54and and that's something we're
  • 01:03:56thinking a lot about.
  • 01:03:57Yes, a number
  • 01:04:00of universities that are programmed
  • 01:04:03on doctors, right, Learning how
  • 01:04:06to find the general population.
  • 01:04:10Does Yale have a kind of a
  • 01:04:12program like that? We do.
  • 01:04:13It's not just physicians.
  • 01:04:15It's a universityled program,
  • 01:04:16but we put about five or six
  • 01:04:19people through it each year,
  • 01:04:21typically rising early faculty, early mid.
  • 01:04:26Faculty who have developed a career,
  • 01:04:30have expertise,
  • 01:04:31are passionate about something,
  • 01:04:33and they learn how to write
  • 01:04:34oped pieces and how to how
  • 01:04:36to communicate effectively.
  • 01:04:40You briefly mentioned the challenge
  • 01:04:42of having to memorize things.
  • 01:04:44I've been in practice surgery in the
  • 01:04:46Boston area for 35 years and have taught
  • 01:04:48it all through the medical school.
  • 01:04:50And I've learned with my colleagues that
  • 01:04:52as we're teaching nurturing students,
  • 01:04:54we teach them that they need to learn how
  • 01:04:56to recognize disease patterns and solve
  • 01:04:58problems and not minimalize anything.
  • 01:05:00They can't remember the name of the syndrome.
  • 01:05:03Who cares as long as they understand
  • 01:05:04what it is. Yeah. That's great.
  • 01:05:07I I volunteer at the Haven
  • 01:05:09clinic and I'm so glad that like,
  • 01:05:11I don't need to remember
  • 01:05:13the names of current drugs.
  • 01:05:15You know, I what I and.
  • 01:05:16And you're exactly right.
  • 01:05:18What I add is that when I walk
  • 01:05:20into a room I can recognize when
  • 01:05:22someone's sick and I can examine
  • 01:05:24them and and I can make a judgment,
  • 01:05:26a triage that the students know all their
  • 01:05:28antibiotics and all that, you know.
  • 01:05:33I'm getting we're getting the signal here.
  • 01:05:36Thanks very much.
  • 01:05:43I think it's all of you
  • 01:05:44can appreciate it spend a
  • 01:05:46breath of fresh air to have Dean Brown here.
  • 01:05:48And I have enjoyed very much
  • 01:05:50my interactions with her,
  • 01:05:51with my the last year plus as the president
  • 01:05:55of the organization when she first came.
  • 01:05:58On to the in February,
  • 01:06:00I guess of 2020 was it? Yeah.
  • 01:06:02Dora Wong, one of our active members
  • 01:06:06in the Association had written up a
  • 01:06:09a chapter on Dean Vindernet's and
  • 01:06:13the 100 year anniversary of the Yale
  • 01:06:16system and I gave a a copy of it.
  • 01:06:18It was still nearly finished
  • 01:06:21draft to Dean Brown.
  • 01:06:23And she read it
  • 01:06:27and and that began conversations about
  • 01:06:30the Yale system and the resurrection
  • 01:06:33of the system which had fallen
  • 01:06:35in disrepair before she arrived.
  • 01:06:38So thank you personally and
  • 01:06:41for all of us alarms Okay.
  • 01:06:43It's time to start the business meeting.
  • 01:06:46I'm told here was a my overly
  • 01:06:49scripted list of things to do. So
  • 01:06:54we have a good group this
  • 01:06:56coming to the reunion.
  • 01:06:57Not all here in the room with us,
  • 01:06:59but there are more than 300 guests
  • 01:07:03who have registered for the reunion.
  • 01:07:07The class of 1973 which is celebrating
  • 01:07:11his 50th reunion has 62 alums
  • 01:07:13and and guests in the class of
  • 01:07:161988 celebrating 25th has 55 so.
  • 01:07:20A large turnout and we appreciate
  • 01:07:23that very much.
  • 01:07:28I wanted to give you a brief update on
  • 01:07:31the association and what it's up to.
  • 01:07:35Our primary goal is to assist
  • 01:07:40the school and and Dean Brown in
  • 01:07:43the development of the school.
  • 01:07:46In in in ways that we can not always in
  • 01:07:51agreement but always in collaboration.
  • 01:07:57We during this last year have
  • 01:07:59instituted a couple of new things
  • 01:08:01one is we are have a an amendment
  • 01:08:04to our constitution which you're
  • 01:08:06been asked to vote on which creates
  • 01:08:09an America emeritus America status.
  • 01:08:11For the leadership of the AY AM who
  • 01:08:16rotate off and and you know what do they
  • 01:08:19do then I mean you know in a in a in
  • 01:08:21a year I'll no longer be the president.
  • 01:08:23And we we we needed to have a way to have
  • 01:08:28the insights and experience of our past
  • 01:08:32leaders available to us as we move forward.
  • 01:08:35And so we created that's the automatic
  • 01:08:38status of America's America.
  • 01:08:40Which will allow them to participate
  • 01:08:42in the work of the association,
  • 01:08:45everything except membership of
  • 01:08:48the executive committee.
  • 01:08:50But they come to the meetings and
  • 01:08:52I tasked them with jobs to do and
  • 01:08:56it's really been very helpful.
  • 01:08:58So you you've been asked to vote for that,
  • 01:09:01but I don't imagine anybody would have
  • 01:09:03a great deal of opposition to it,
  • 01:09:06our vice President.
  • 01:09:07Paul Leong has started a program of
  • 01:09:12engagement of alumni in various specialties,
  • 01:09:17the first one being Neurosurgery,
  • 01:09:20who will come together for a zoom meeting,
  • 01:09:25six of them a panel,
  • 01:09:27and the students who are interested
  • 01:09:30in that particular specialty.
  • 01:09:32Will have a chance to hear from them
  • 01:09:35and to ask questions and get advice
  • 01:09:39on how to become a neurosurgeon if
  • 01:09:42that's just something that they
  • 01:09:43think they might be interested in.
  • 01:09:45So we're in that first meeting which
  • 01:09:48I think is going to be next month,
  • 01:09:50although I could be off by a bit.
  • 01:09:53The we will have the chairs of certain
  • 01:09:57departments and from from different
  • 01:09:59medical schools all of them Yale graduates.
  • 01:10:03He plans then the next one would be on
  • 01:10:06Pediatrics and he plans to go through
  • 01:10:09these just through all the specialties,
  • 01:10:11so that that's an important new initiative.
  • 01:10:15Another one is that we're still in the
  • 01:10:17development stages of it's twofold.
  • 01:10:21One is financial literacy.
  • 01:10:24So that the students when they,
  • 01:10:27you know they,
  • 01:10:28I mean they've been taking money from
  • 01:10:30the from the school and all of a sudden
  • 01:10:33one day they have a job and what do they do,
  • 01:10:37how do they manage that?
  • 01:10:38One of the things that that that
  • 01:10:40the theme that would probably be the
  • 01:10:42first one that we present as a Zoom
  • 01:10:45meeting is on disability insurance.
  • 01:10:47Now this is something that nobody
  • 01:10:48ever talked to me about when I
  • 01:10:49was in medical school,
  • 01:10:50but let's say you become a plastic surgeon.
  • 01:10:53And develop a carpal tunnel syndrome.
  • 01:10:57Then what?
  • 01:10:59So it's not too early when you
  • 01:11:01graduate because it's cheaper than
  • 01:11:03when you're young to get disability
  • 01:11:05insurance that will cover you
  • 01:11:07for these certain disabilities.
  • 01:11:10And another one is the ergonomics.
  • 01:11:16I'm not a surgeon, but I.
  • 01:11:18Remember with horror,
  • 01:11:20standing behind a bunch of blue backs,
  • 01:11:23holding, holding a retractor and
  • 01:11:26wishing I had some place to sit?
  • 01:11:31So so that that whole thing of of
  • 01:11:35ergonomics and its effect on burnout,
  • 01:11:38how they wearing out of the human body.
  • 01:11:41Because we don't take care of it.
  • 01:11:42We're too busy doing what
  • 01:11:44we're trained to do, ends up.
  • 01:11:47Causing burnout and A and a loss
  • 01:11:49of of the physician workforce.
  • 01:11:52So those are the initiatives
  • 01:11:54that we have underway,
  • 01:11:55all directed by the executive
  • 01:11:57committee that you're going to
  • 01:11:59be voting for members of in the
  • 01:12:02moment or we'll be voting on them.
  • 01:12:05So we welcome all of your input.
  • 01:12:09You know your membership in the
  • 01:12:11AY AM comes with your diploma.
  • 01:12:14So you're all members and you're all
  • 01:12:18welcome and you're welcome to come to
  • 01:12:20the meetings and you're very welcome
  • 01:12:22to participate and to let me know or
  • 01:12:25the alumni office know if you have
  • 01:12:27an interest in serving either as a
  • 01:12:29leader of the AYM or to to one of
  • 01:12:33these adventures that I've spoken of.
  • 01:12:35And then the the last one is to
  • 01:12:38support Dean Brown when she goes
  • 01:12:40across the country and visits places.
  • 01:12:42And we've I think we've we in
  • 01:12:44Minneapolis we did a good job of that and
  • 01:12:47probably I think in the San Francisco.
  • 01:12:49So we're we're trying to develop in in
  • 01:12:53the major cities where most of our our,
  • 01:12:56our students end up and we have a lot
  • 01:13:00of alums groups of alums who are who
  • 01:13:03who get together at least by text message.
  • 01:13:06And are prepared to welcome the Dean
  • 01:13:08when she comes to visit those cities.
  • 01:13:11Which reminds me of one other thing
  • 01:13:13that we've done is that as you saw,
  • 01:13:15there were a lot of our students
  • 01:13:18who are going up to our our sister
  • 01:13:21institution to the north and
  • 01:13:23where they'll become lost.
  • 01:13:25But
  • 01:13:29but in an effort to help them,
  • 01:13:31there's they're having a meeting.
  • 01:13:34Of all of them are being gathered there by
  • 01:13:37one of our alums who's who's who set this up,
  • 01:13:40who will have a social gathering,
  • 01:13:43which will also have Yale alums
  • 01:13:45who are on the faculty there
  • 01:13:48at the various institutions.
  • 01:13:50You know that Yale doesn't have it.
  • 01:13:52A real medical school,
  • 01:13:53it's just a bunch of hospitals.
  • 01:13:55I mean Harvard I meant.
  • 01:13:57And the joke about when I
  • 01:13:59was there at the Brigham,
  • 01:14:00the joke was that.
  • 01:14:01The only job the Dean of Harvard
  • 01:14:03Medical School had was to make
  • 01:14:05sure the heating system worked.
  • 01:14:12So there will be a social gathering
  • 01:14:14of of our recent graduates who are
  • 01:14:16just starting in their careers up
  • 01:14:19there in Boston to gather together.
  • 01:14:21We planning one for our Yale
  • 01:14:23graduates here in in in in Milford,
  • 01:14:25but it kind of they they weren't
  • 01:14:27terribly interested in it,
  • 01:14:28I guess because they don't.
  • 01:14:30They're not worried about culture shock,
  • 01:14:32but anyway that's that's so
  • 01:14:38that's what we've been up to.
  • 01:14:40The next thing is that you've been
  • 01:14:44asked to vote for new members of the
  • 01:14:49executive committee and I want to
  • 01:14:52thank the the expiring members who now
  • 01:14:55become emeritus and America members.
  • 01:14:59So you're being asked for them,
  • 01:15:00the, the nominees.
  • 01:15:03And this year, I think probably
  • 01:15:06for the first time your ballot has
  • 01:15:08had some information about them.
  • 01:15:09Before it was just a series of names.
  • 01:15:13So now you have some information about
  • 01:15:14them and and hopefully some pictures.
  • 01:15:16I think we got pictures from everyone.
  • 01:15:19Linda Armstrong is works for Novartis
  • 01:15:24and New York and is in the class of 88.
  • 01:15:29Miriam Askari in the class of 97,
  • 01:15:32she's a has already served two
  • 01:15:35years as a executive committee
  • 01:15:39member and she's up for reelection.
  • 01:15:42Elizabeth Quatraki is a psychiatrist
  • 01:15:46in at in Boston class of 94.
  • 01:15:53Amaya Kulkarni is a someone
  • 01:15:57coming up for a reelection.
  • 01:16:00It's in the O6M D and Jill
  • 01:16:04Silverman of class of 79 in New
  • 01:16:08York is coming up for reelection.
  • 01:16:11She to the associate to
  • 01:16:14the executive committee.
  • 01:16:16We have two nominees for the
  • 01:16:21YAA, the alumni association.
  • 01:16:23We get delegates to that.
  • 01:16:26And we we have two delegate
  • 01:16:28nominees that are on the ballot.
  • 01:16:31Jennifer Troy is a dermatologist in
  • 01:16:34Chicago from a class of of O3 who
  • 01:16:38was one of the people who who there
  • 01:16:42is a website where you can go on
  • 01:16:44and and express your interest in
  • 01:16:47serving in a leadership position in
  • 01:16:49a Y AM and she did that and she's now
  • 01:16:52going to be a delegate to the YAA.
  • 01:16:56And Wilhemina Covar in the past of 77,
  • 01:17:01is a pain specialist in Florida
  • 01:17:04and Central Florida.
  • 01:17:05And so she is the other nominee
  • 01:17:07for the YAA delegates.
  • 01:17:10If you want to serve in any of those roles.
  • 01:17:14Again, there is a website and
  • 01:17:16I forget what it is,
  • 01:17:18but it's the alumni office
  • 01:17:22or you can contact.
  • 01:17:23The the Just a Y AM at Al dot
  • 01:17:27Edu and let us know We're always
  • 01:17:31looking for able bodied souls.
  • 01:17:34All right now time and a real
  • 01:17:38pleasure for me to award the 2023
  • 01:17:41Distinguished Alumni Service Award.
  • 01:17:44So Dean Brown, you'll need to come up here.
  • 01:17:48It's nice to be able to
  • 01:17:49tell the Dean what to do,
  • 01:17:56so it's a great honor this year,
  • 01:17:59a particular honor to to present this
  • 01:18:02to a member of their alumni class,
  • 01:18:06and the reward recognizes the alumni service.
  • 01:18:09And this year it goes to Harold Mancus,
  • 01:18:12Mancusi, Ungaro Junior.
  • 01:18:27You, you come over here.
  • 01:18:34It's a real pleasure because Harold was
  • 01:18:36the president of the association when I
  • 01:18:38first joined the executive Committee,
  • 01:18:40and so I've known him all these years.
  • 01:18:43So the Ale School of Medicine
  • 01:18:45is proud to count you Harold,
  • 01:18:47among its graduates and bestow upon you
  • 01:18:50the Distinguished Alumni Service Award.
  • 01:18:54As Secretary, Vice President,
  • 01:18:55and President of the Way, AY AM,
  • 01:18:59you provided consistent leadership and
  • 01:19:02unstinting support for the best and
  • 01:19:05most beloved traditions at the school,
  • 01:19:08your service continued as a delegate
  • 01:19:10to the Yale Alumni Association on the
  • 01:19:1350th anniversary of your graduation.
  • 01:19:15Those traditions remain strong
  • 01:19:16because of the work you and your
  • 01:19:19colleagues have done to shine a light
  • 01:19:21on the Yale system enduring value.
  • 01:19:24Dean Veternets once said in in
  • 01:19:27laying out his vision for what
  • 01:19:29would become the Yale System,
  • 01:19:31every effort must be made not to stifle
  • 01:19:34the opportunities for learning by
  • 01:19:36building up a great machine for teaching.
  • 01:19:39As a first year medical student,
  • 01:19:42you authored Michelangelo,
  • 01:19:43the Bruges, Madonna,
  • 01:19:45and the Pickle the Themini Altar,
  • 01:19:48a volume that grew out of your
  • 01:19:51undergraduate thesis at Yale College.
  • 01:19:53And combined art history with detective work,
  • 01:19:56You realize that that this achievement
  • 01:19:59would have been impossible in
  • 01:20:01the traditional medical school
  • 01:20:03environment that regulated how
  • 01:20:05students spent every waking minute.
  • 01:20:08You also recognize that when students
  • 01:20:11take responsibility for their own
  • 01:20:13education and learning and have the
  • 01:20:15freedom to pursue their own passions,
  • 01:20:17the result is an extraordinary
  • 01:20:19line of leaders who.
  • 01:20:21Push the boundaries of medicine
  • 01:20:23to better serve humanity.
  • 01:20:25A lifelong learner,
  • 01:20:26you have always welcomed opportunities to
  • 01:20:30explore the work going on at the school.
  • 01:20:33Living in Texas and then California,
  • 01:20:35you frequently returned to New Haven
  • 01:20:38to be of service to the association.
  • 01:20:41You knew that if your fellow alumni
  • 01:20:43could become similarly involved
  • 01:20:44with the ongoing work of the
  • 01:20:46school that they would like you.
  • 01:20:48Be strong voices for the Yale system.
  • 01:20:51While serving on the AY
  • 01:20:53AM Executive Committee,
  • 01:20:54you promoted reunion programming
  • 01:20:58that highlighted the achievements
  • 01:21:00of outstanding School of Medicine
  • 01:21:02graduates and illuminated how
  • 01:21:04their unique experience at Yale
  • 01:21:06contributed to their success.
  • 01:21:08Beyond reunion programming,
  • 01:21:10AY AM recorded oral histories of
  • 01:21:13returning alumni who reflected on
  • 01:21:15how the Yale system affected their
  • 01:21:17personal and professional lives.
  • 01:21:20This serves as a perpetual tribute
  • 01:21:22to and case for the Yale System.
  • 01:21:25This system system shaped you,
  • 01:21:27and in a real way,
  • 01:21:28you've had a profound impact on it.
  • 01:21:33Today, your friends, family,
  • 01:21:35classmates salute you for your
  • 01:21:37service to the Yale School of
  • 01:21:39Medicine and its ideals.
  • 01:21:40You're our true son of Yale.
  • 01:22:00I just like to say a couple of words.
  • 01:22:05I really appreciate this.
  • 01:22:07I've always said that contributing
  • 01:22:11here was sort of payback for what,
  • 01:22:13Yeah, was giving me.
  • 01:22:15And as I was listening to the Dean
  • 01:22:18and looking around, I realized that.
  • 01:22:22You're all here because we're paying it
  • 01:22:25forward to the next group of graduates
  • 01:22:28and having stood where Mac is and
  • 01:22:33bestowing the award and and realizing
  • 01:22:36how important Yale is to some of us,
  • 01:22:40I'll just say it's it's as good
  • 01:22:42to receive as to give right here.
  • 01:22:52I guess add one thing not not came
  • 01:22:57through in that citation that this
  • 01:23:00the association has an archive of
  • 01:23:04these talks that were given by by
  • 01:23:08graduates talking about how the Yale
  • 01:23:11system had influenced their lives.
  • 01:23:13It's it's a real unfortunately we
  • 01:23:16the association not being abused
  • 01:23:18collecting association doesn't have
  • 01:23:20the the the money to to make this
  • 01:23:23available but it hopefully someday
  • 01:23:25it will become available and some of
  • 01:23:27the people that are there were Deans
  • 01:23:29of of other medical schools 1 Nobel
  • 01:23:33laureate etcetera so and and some just
  • 01:23:36practitioners who gave their time to
  • 01:23:38talk about how the Yale system Justice
  • 01:23:41Harold has said had shaped them.
  • 01:23:43And made their their
  • 01:23:46successful lives possible.
  • 01:23:48So I just want you to know that that exists.
  • 01:23:51Maybe someday we'll have a way of getting
  • 01:23:54it available to the to all of the alums.
  • 01:24:03Oh, is this on YouTube? Oh.
  • 01:24:06It tells you how old I am.
  • 01:24:07I don't have a future.
  • 01:24:12I mean, what?