This is the html version of the file http://www.bmc.org/news/BUMedNewsOct01.pdf.
G o o g l e automatically generates html versions of documents as we crawl the web.
To link to or bookmark this page, use the following url: http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:PHk-dcke9NYC:www.bmc.org/news/BUMedNewsOct01.pdf+site:www.bmc.org+dennis&hl=en


Google is not affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its content.
These search terms have been highlighted:  dennis 

Page 1
C
arrying short white lab coats that
signify a commitment to the med-
ical profession, 154 first-year med-
ical students assembled before family and
friends for the seventh annual White Coat
Ceremony held Sept. 7 on Talbot Green.
A tradition at BUSM since the fall of
1995, the White Coat Ceremony was insti-
tuted as a means of fostering humanism in
medicine. BUSM Dean Aram Chobanian,
MD, provost of BU Medical Campus, wel-
comed the new students and spoke of the
many problems facing health care today,
including the state of managed care, the
changing roles of physicians, and the diffi-
culties in caring for underserved populations.
Phyllis Carr, MD, who joined BUSM as
associate dean of Student Affairs and associ-
ate professor of medicine in August, also
welcomed the students. Carr spoke of her
own experience in first donning a white coat
and addressed the importance of making this
a conscious and thoughtful experience.
Keynote speaker Deborah German, MD,
senior associate dean of Medical Education
at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine,
provided the class of 2005 with "Lesson
Number One," eliciting from the group
MedCenter
News
O C T O B E R 2 0 0 1
B O S T O N M E D I C A L C E N T E R , B O S T O N U N I V E R S I T Y S C H O O L S O F M E D I C I N E , P U B L I C H E A LT H A N D D E N T A L M E D I C I N E
The medical center community gathered as one on Sept. 14 in the Harrison
Pavilion lobby for a memorial service following the tragic events of Sept. 11.
BUSM Dean Aram Chobanian, MD, provost of BU Medical Campus, and Elaine
Ullian, BMC president and CEO, addressed the gathering. Representatives from
the Pastoral Care Department, including the Rev. William Alberts, Rabbi Paul
Levenson, Imam Salih Yucel and Sister Claire Hayes, offered prayers and
thoughts.
INSIDE
continued on page 8
SDM receives $555,000
HIV/AIDS oral health grant
S
DM has been awarded the largest Ryan White CARE Act Dental
Reimbursement grant ever given to any of the nation's dental schools.
Funded by the U.S. Treasury, the $555,000 grant is allocated to the
school's patient care services dedicated to providing oral health services to people
living with HIV.
"We are extremely pleased to receive this funding and continue our work of
advocacy and care for our patients living with HIV," said SDM Dean Spencer
Frankl, DDS, MSD. "This award attests to the efficacy of our program and the
steadfast dedication of our providers and staff who manage the program."
SDM has received a Ryan White CARE Act grant annually since 1990.
Seventy-four applicants in 24 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico
will receive grants under the HIV/AIDS Dental Reimbursement Program of the
Ryan White CARE Act. This program pays dental schools and post-doctoral
dental education programs for unreimbursed costs that they incur in treating
patients with HIV/AIDS. In 2000, the Dental Reimbursement Program sup-
ported dental services for almost 29,000 Americans living with HIV/AIDS.
The Ryan White CARE grants are named for a young hemophiliac who
contracted AIDS through a blood transfusion in 1984.
A community united
Team supports
organ donor
families
Page 2
BMC
welcomes
walkers
Page 3
Grant helps
fight
drug abuse
Page 5
White Coat Ceremony welcomes students into medical careers
Left: Suzanne Sarfaty, MD, assistant dean of
Student Affairs, assists Anthony Annese '05, in
putting on his lab coat at the ceremony. Inset:
The BUSM class of 2005 recites the Hippocratic
Oath.

Page 2
ƒ
MedCenterNews
W
hile the goals of education
have remained constant over
the years, the new students
arriving at SPH, SDM and BUSM pres-
ent some marked differences from their
counterparts of a generation ago. New
technologies, scientific breakthroughs
and changes in cultural attitudes have
left ­ and will continue to leave ­ large
imprints on tomorrow's health care
professionals.
"As a result of the tremendous recent
advances in technology, the students of
today learn differently from their earlier
counterparts," said SDM Dean Spencer
Frankl, DDS, MSD. "These students
have never known life without a comput-
er, and 90 percent of their course material
is electronic, based on both the Web and
CD-ROM discs. They have wireless
access to the Internet while in class, as
well as intranet access to many course
Web sites developed by the faculty.
"State-of-the-art laboratories, such as
the Simulation Learning Center that pro-
vides SDM students with virtual learning
experience, exemplify the school's com-
mitment to technology and staying
abreast of the latest advances," Frankl
continued. "As the dental and medical
professions become increasingly more
integrated, computer technology becomes
more vital to patient care."
While the numbers of students
enrolled in the four-year DMD program
at SDM and the four-year MD program
at BUSM have stayed relatively the same
over the years - approximately 100 and
150 respectively - a component that
has grown is the Division of Graduate
Medical Sciences. This year there are 575
students in the division's programs.
SPH has also seen a rise in the num-
ber of incoming students. SPH now
matriculates about 250 students per year,
more than double the number of just 15
years ago.
According to SPH Dean Robert
Meenan, MD, MPH, MBA, this year's
entering class at SPH is much more het-
erogeneous than classes that entered 15 or
20 years ago. "Whereas we once admitted
mostly part-time, working students in
their 30s from the Boston area, we now
admit a large number of young, post-bac-
calaureate students from across the coun-
try, as well as a substantial number of
international students from around the
globe," he said. Preliminary statistics
show that SPH's 225 incoming students
range in age from 22 to 54 years, and
come from 25 different countries.
"The new class at SPH is at the same
time more and less qualified than its
predecessors," Meenan continued. "They
possess greater academic capabilities, as
measured by GRE scores, GPAs and com-
puter literacy, but have less public health
experience and appreciation of broad
social and political forces.
"These changes are exciting and chal-
lenging. They require us to make major
changes in curriculum and student servic-
es so that we can better serve a much dif-
ferent student body today," he added.
BUSM's class of 2005 reflects another
cultural trend - the entrance of more
women into a profession that even 20
years ago was predominantly male.
According to John O'Connor, MD, dean
for Admissions at BUSM, the number of
women accepted by the medical school
has increased over the years, from 10 per-
cent in 1971 to 33 percent in 1981, and
to nearly 50 percent in 2001.
O'Connor explained that not all
female applicants accepted by the school
this year chose to attend, but roughly
one-half of all the students initially
accepted were women. "The medical
school accepts men and women in the
ratio in which they apply," O'Connor
said. "The applicant pool of women is
steadily rising."
Student profiles reflect the times
Team supports
organ donor families
T
he flip side to every successful organ donation story
is the fact that one family's joy is another family's
sadness.
Recognizing the heartbreaking and difficult circumstances
surrounding organ donation, BMC, in conjunction with the
New England Organ Bank (NEOB) and the Education
Development Center, has developed a Family Support Team
to enhance family-centered care near the end of the life of a
loved one. The team concept is part of a federally funded
research study on end-of-life care and organ donation. BMC
is one of only three hospi-
tals in New England select-
ed to participate.
"Facing the death of a
loved one is extremely
difficult," said Robin
Ohkagawa, RN, donation
coordinator for the NEOB
at BMC. "In many cases,
families consent to organ
donation because it allows
for something positive to come out of the tragedy of a loved
one's death. The Family Support Team at BMC helps make
sure that the needs of family members of a patient nearing the
end of life are addressed. The team is empowered to assist
them in many ways - for example, helping explain their
loved one's condition and the different tests being done, help-
ing to find lodging for out-of-towners, listening to stories
about their loved one, serving as an advocate for the family, or
simply offering the family a cup of water."
The multidisciplinary Family Support Team includes staff
from Pastoral Care, Neurosurgery, Pediatric Social Work, and
nurses from the Emergency Department and the Pediatrics/
Adolescent Care and Intensive Care units. Each member must
complete a full-day training course to become part of the
support team.
"Along with providing optimal family-centered care, the
study aims to enhance communication between the families
and the clinicians working with dying patients, and to develop
trusting relationships between health care staff and donor
families - increasing consent for organ donations,"
Ohkagawa added.
Richard Dennis, MD, chief of Surgical Critical Care
Medicine at BMC, associate professor of surgery and anesthe-
siology at BUSM, and principal investigator of the two-year
study, said the results of the Family Support Team could help
hospitals around the country to enhance the quality of the
end-of-life care being provided. "My hope is that we can learn
better procedures and set a precedent that helps make a diffi-
cult time a little easier on those being left behind, while, at
the same time, creating a system that makes the transition for
the organ recipient as smooth as possible," he said.
"
"My hope is that we can
learn better procedures and
set a precedent that helps
make a difficult time a little
easier on those being left
behind ..."
­ Richard Dennis, MD
Robert's tired body was weakening. He was at the top of
the waiting list for a new kidney, but the call seemed
like it would never come. Although each ring of the
phone brought hope, it was immediately followed by
disappointment. Then the call came...
Mark, a 21-year-old male, had been fatally injured
in a car accident, and his kidney was a match for
Robert. With this ultimate gift, Robert can now look for-
ward to living life to the fullest, and Mark's family can
take comfort in knowing that part of him lives on.
BU Medical Campus students study on Talbot Green.