Alumni

Surgeon, rodeo doctor and, now, senator
Former Yale resident John Barrasso is named to fill a senate vacancy.
John A. Barrasso, M.D., HS ’83, the new Republican U.S. senator from Wyoming, recalls that when he was a resident at Yale from 1978 to 1983, his professors stressed the importance of having a plan before going into surgery. “They would tell us that if you don’t have a plan to begin with on how to solve the problem, you’ll have a much tougher time halfway though the operation,” he said.This advice has served Barrasso well both as an orthopaedic surgeon and as a politician and civic activist. Early in his career, Barrasso’s plan was to provide health care for as many people as possible inside and outside the operating room. That plan...

The physiological and the psychological: how women and men are different
Louann Brizendine, M.D. ’81, never suspected that her third-year psychiatry rotation would lead to...

Policy expert finds answers to large health problems come from diverse teams
In the 30 years that Darryl E. Crompton, J.D., M.P.H. ’76, has worked as a public health lawyer,...
2007-2008 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
OfficersJocelyn S. Malkin, M.D. ’52, HS ’54, FW ’60 PresidentHarold Bornstein Jr., M.D. ’63 Vice...
Notes
A typical Thursday morning usually finds Samuel D. Kushlan, M.D. ’35, HS ’37, attending morning report, reading journal articles in the library and going to internal medicine grand rounds. Retired since 1982, Kushlan, now 95, still drives almost every day to the hospital where he has worked for 70 years and continues to be a role model for younger colleagues.
Kushlan has received many honors...
A typical Thursday morning usually finds Samuel D. Kushlan, M.D. ’35, HS ’37, attending morning report, reading journal articles in the library and going to internal medicine grand rounds. Retired since 1982, Kushlan, now 95, still drives almost every day to the hospital where he has worked for 70 years and continues to be a role model for younger colleagues.
Kushlan has received many honors throughout his distinguished career. In November he received the 2007 Yale Medal in recognition for his years of leadership. The medal, the highest award bestowed by the Association of Yale Alumni, is given annually to five alumni in honor of outstanding service to the medical school and the university.
Born in New Britain, Conn., in 1912, Kushlan was so inspired by his local doctor that by the age of 10 he knew he wanted to be a physician. After graduating from the School of Medicine, he completed his residency at what was then New Haven Hospital, earning a salary of $25 a month. “Medicine was very primitive 70 years ago,” he recalled. His main diagnostic tools were taking a medical history and doing a physical exam—X-rays were the only imaging technique available; and in those pre-penicillin days, the principal medications were aspirin, digitalis, phenobarbital, quinine and morphine. Today more than 4,000 medications are listed in the Physicians’ Desk Reference.
Except for a brief stint at Harvard in 1938, Kushlan spent his entire career at Yale. He established the first endoscopy clinic in Connecticut in 1942 and was the sole member of the gastroenterology section from 1938 until 1955.
From 1967 until his retirement, Kushlan served as the associate physician-in-chief at Yale-New Haven Hospital and as a clinical professor of medicine. When he retired, one of the hospital’s medical services was named for him, although he said he feels out of place among the other legendary physicians—Elisha Atkins, M.D.; John P. Peters, M.D.; Gerald Klatskin, M.D.; Allan Goodyer, M.D.; and Robert Donaldson, M.D.—with whom he shares this honor.
Although he says he does more learning than teaching these days, Kushlan still has some wisdom to impart from the days when the practice of medicine relied more on observation than on diagnostic tests. He advises colleagues to use such simple diagnostic methods as having a patient with back pain lie down to determine its source: if the pain goes away, it’s muscular; if it doesn’t, it’s internal. “I sort of toss in a pearl from time to time to pay my way,” he said.
In addition to his activities at the hospital and the lectures and concerts he regularly attends with Ethel, his wife of 73 years, Kushlan also remains an active member of the executive committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine. “I enjoy the opportunity to be busy,” he said.
Charles R. Rosenfeld, M.D., HS ’67, has stepped down after 30 years as director of the Division of Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. He also stepped down as director of the fellowship training program. He will retain his position as the George L. MacGregor Professor of Pediatrics and continue his research on cardiovascular physiology...
Charles R. Rosenfeld, M.D., HS ’67, has stepped down after 30 years as director of the Division of Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. He also stepped down as director of the fellowship training program. He will retain his position as the George L. MacGregor Professor of Pediatrics and continue his research on cardiovascular physiology during pregnancy. Rosenfeld is in the 32nd year of an NIH grant to study uroplacental blood flow. “My start in pediatrics and exposure to neonatal care and research at Yale influenced my career choices,” he writes.
Steven H. Moffic, M.D. ’71, has begun writing a column, “The Ethical Way,” for Clinical Psychiatry News, a monthly publication for psychiatry specialists. A professor of psychiatry and behavioral medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin, he has also written about psychiatric perspectives on global warming.
Mary Ann Evans, M.P.H. ’80, is working as a substitute teacher in Chicago and Washington, D.C. She has been an active member of the American Public Health Association, participating in the Each One Teach One membership drive.
Rock G. Positano, D.P.M., M.P.H. ’89, a specialist in foot and ankle health, is writing a health column for The Huffington Post. His first columns offered warnings about the dangers of flip-flops and heavy backpacks for schoolchildren. Positano, who directs the Non-surgical Foot and Ankle Service at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City, also writes a health column for the New York Post
Rock G. Positano, D.P.M., M.P.H. ’89, a specialist in foot and ankle health, is writing a health column for The Huffington Post. His first columns offered warnings about the dangers of flip-flops and heavy backpacks for schoolchildren. Positano, who directs the Non-surgical Foot and Ankle Service at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City, also writes a health column for the New York Post.
Cargill H. Alleyne Jr., M.D. ’91, associate professor and vice chair for education and research in the Medical College of Georgia (MCG) Department of Neurosurgery, was named the Marshall Allen Distinguished Chair of the department in September. Alleyne went to MCG in 2004 from the University of Rochester Medical Center, where he was chief of the Division of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Neurosurgery...
Cargill H. Alleyne Jr., M.D. ’91, associate professor and vice chair for education and research in the Medical College of Georgia (MCG) Department of Neurosurgery, was named the Marshall Allen Distinguished Chair of the department in September. Alleyne went to MCG in 2004 from the University of Rochester Medical Center, where he was chief of the Division of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Neurosurgery and associate residency program director for the Department of Neurological Surgery. At mcg he directs the Neurosurgery Vascular Service and the Neurosurgery Residency Training Program and co-directs the Cerebrovascular Research Laboratory.
Melissa T. Berhow, Ph.D. ’96, M.D. ’97, assistant professor of anesthesiology at Stanford University, and Rick Bentley welcomed the arrival of their son, Logan Alaric Bentley, on July 20. Logan weighed in at 9 lbs., 12 oz. Everyone is doing well.
Brian “Ari” Cole, M.D., M.P.H. ’95, was selected to join the Harvard-Radcliffe Chorus, one of the Holden Choral Ensembles at Harvard. Cole is currently a student at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, where he recently had the chance to question U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Michael O. Leavitt on the use of steroids in the meat and poultry industry.
Linda G. Marc, M.P.H. ’92, was married on March 30 to Jean R. Clérismé, Ph.D. ’96, foreign minister for the Republic of Haiti. Marc is a researcher in the psychiatry department and in the Cornell HIV Clinical Trials Unit at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University. Clérismé, formerly an ambassador from Haiti to international trade organizations, is an authority on economics, development...
Linda G. Marc, M.P.H. ’92, was married on March 30 to Jean R. Clérismé, Ph.D. ’96, foreign minister for the Republic of Haiti. Marc is a researcher in the psychiatry department and in the Cornell HIV Clinical Trials Unit at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University. Clérismé, formerly an ambassador from Haiti to international trade organizations, is an authority on economics, development and cultural anthropology.
Kee Chan, Ph.D. ’07, was selected by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) as one of four research participants to attend the 57th Lindau Meeting of Nobel Laureates and Students in Lindau, Germany, in July. Chan conducted research at the NIH while completing her doctorate in public health at Yale. Since 1951, Nobel laureates in chemistry, physics and physiology or medicine have convened...
Kee Chan, Ph.D. ’07, was selected by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) as one of four research participants to attend the 57th Lindau Meeting of Nobel Laureates and Students in Lindau, Germany, in July. Chan conducted research at the NIH while completing her doctorate in public health at Yale. Since 1951, Nobel laureates in chemistry, physics and physiology or medicine have convened annually in Lindau to meet with students and young researchers from around the world. The gathering allows participants, most of whom are students, to benefit from informal interaction with the Nobel Prize winners.
Bridgid T. Curry, M.P.H. ’07, M.E.M. ’07, was married on June 2 to Amos H. Presler in Schuylkill Haven, Pa. In August Curry became a presidential management fellow and regulatory analyst at the Environmental Protection Agency in Washington, D.C. Presler attends law school at American University.
Andrea C. Humphrey, M.P.H. ’05, was married in July to Jonathan T. Schmidt, J.D. ’06, in Minnetonka Beach, Minn. She is a doctoral student in international health and development at the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine in New Orleans and a management consultant in Philadelphia. Her husband is an associate at Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll, a law firm in...
Andrea C. Humphrey, M.P.H. ’05, was married in July to Jonathan T. Schmidt, J.D. ’06, in Minnetonka Beach, Minn. She is a doctoral student in international health and development at the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine in New Orleans and a management consultant in Philadelphia. Her husband is an associate at Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll, a law firm in Philadelphia.
Dena J. Springer, M.D. ’04, was married to David E. Novick, J.D., on September 2 in West Hartford, Conn. Springer, who completed her residency at Children’s Hospital Boston in June, is a staff physician at Pediatrics of New York. Novick is an assistant district attorney in the trial division and the sex crimes unit of the New York County District Attorney’s Office.
Stephen Vindigni, M.P.H. ’04, has enrolled at Emory University School of Medicine to pursue an M.D. After receiving his public health degree, Vindigni worked for the National Center for Environmental Health of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, advancing environmental public health. He traveled frequently to Kenya to work on projects related to safe drinking water and to developing a...
Stephen Vindigni, M.P.H. ’04, has enrolled at Emory University School of Medicine to pursue an M.D. After receiving his public health degree, Vindigni worked for the National Center for Environmental Health of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, advancing environmental public health. He traveled frequently to Kenya to work on projects related to safe drinking water and to developing a database to track Kenya’s nursing workforce capacity.
Submit alumni news via email to ymm@yale.edu or send it to Yale Medicine Publications at 1 Church Street, Suite 300, New Haven, CT 06510.
From Other Issues

Winter 2012
A friendship endures from Yale to Harvard
Valerie E. Stone, M.D. ’84, M.P.H., and Tina Young Poussaint, M.D. ’83, met at the School of Medicine in 1979, when...

Winter 2012
How a passion for golf set a slacker on his life’s course and to a president’s bedside
Growing up in Cuba, Donald O’Kieffe, M.D. ’64, says he was “headed nowhere fast,” until a love of golf indirectly drove...
Winter 2012
Arthur L. Beaudet, Brian K. Kobilka, and Ira S. Mellman
Three Yale alumni are among the 72 new members inducted into the National Academy of Sciences in May in recognition of...
Winter 2012
Health schools to produce alumni directory
Yale’s health professional schools have contracted with Harris Connect, the largest alumni publication company in...

Spring 2012
A neurologist inspired by his patients
When Irving S. Cooper, M.D., was perfecting the stereotactic cryosurgery to treat Parkinson disease in the late 1950s,...

Spring 2012
An alumnus’ journey: doctor, inventor, and a founder of the UCSD medical school
When Robert Hamburger, M.D. ’51, HS ’54, was a newly minted University of North Carolina graduate, he planned to become...

Spring 2011
Breaking barriers in medicine and race
A medical student in a time charged with racial tension in America, Yvette Fay Francis-McBarnette, M.D. ’50, echoes...

Spring 2011
A doctor and pilot’s journey from a NYC housing project to Atlanta by way of Vietnam
Norman Elliott’s journey to Yale began on a combat mission from Vietnam to the Philippines in 1972. A first lieutenant...

Autumn 2011
Alumnus brings social perspective to post
When Nirav R. Shah, M.D. ’98, M.P.H. ’98, HS ’01, was a medical student, he found a research paper that proved to be...

Autumn 2011
In retirement, a urologist finds a new career bringing health care to rural Kenya
Three years ago, Ralph F. Stroup, M.D., HS ’73, a retired urologist, stepped out of his comfort zone and into the...

Autumn 2011
Pioneer in genetic engineering and biotech wins Parker Medal
In the early 1960s, a doctoral student at the University of Pittsburgh wrote to Edward A. Adelberg, Ph.D. ’49, chair of...
Autumn 2011
2011-2012 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Winter 2010
Letter from Haiti
Public Health alum Amelia Shaw writes from a U.N. compound in Port-au-Prince.

Winter 2010
Mental illness at the molecular level
When Eric J. Nestler, Ph.D. ’82, M.D. ’83, HS ’87, joined Yale’s Department of Psychiatry in 1987, he ordered a sign...

Winter 2010
A surgeon’s journey from the early days of chemotherapy and heart surgery
During his 40 years as a practicing surgeon, Andrew J. Graham, M.D., FW ’65, HS ’66, witnessed the early use of...
Winter 2010
Spring Yale Service Tour to Mexico
Yale Service Tours provide a vehicle for Yale alumni, students, and their families to join in global service. Service...
Winter 2010
2009-2010 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Spring 2010
An alumna learns about how low-resource medicine in Borneo
Jennifer Blair, M.D. '04 wriets about her month at a clinic founded by Kinari Webb, M.D. '02, in the rain forest.

Spring 2010
Keeping body and soul together
If you type the name “Halperin EC” into the medical journal search engine PubMed, the results—nine pages worth—seem to...

Spring 2010
The granddaughter of a legend finds her own way as a physician
Sally Winternitz, M.D., HS ’86, grew up in northern New Jersey consumed by things that are typically only passing...
Spring 2010
Medical School Reunion Weekend June 4-6, 2010
Alumni lectures: — Robert Klitzman, M.D. ’85 —When Doctors Become Patients — Jerrold M. Post, M.D. ’60 —When Illness...
Spring 2010
2009-2010 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Autumn 2010
From the operating room to Parliament
As a young man in Latvia, Valdis Zatlers, M.D., FW ’91, had a polite objection to invitations to join the Communist...

Autumn 2010
A cardiologist follows a career in corporate medicine, keeping workers healthy
When Clarion E. Johnson, M.D. ’76, began his career as associate medical director at what was then Mobil Corporation in...
Autumn 2010
2010-2011 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Winter 2009
The long view of psychoanalysis
As a high school student in Manhattan, Jocelyn Schoen Malkin, M.D. ’52, found her calling during a lecture by the...

Winter 2009
From art to medicine and back—how one physician pursued her dreams
As a high school student in New Britain, Conn., Sophie Trent-Stevens, M.D. ’43, made up her mind to see and paint the...

Spring 2009
Alum finds fascination in disease and the end of life
Robert Buckingham, Ph.D. ’78, saw a lot of people die when he served in the U.S. Navy during the height of the Vietnam...

Spring 2009
An international traveler makes himself at home in the world’s great libraries
Wherever Stanley Simbonis, M.D. ’57, travels, he visits the local library. If it’s Athens, you’ll find him in the...

Spring 2009
A life in public health takes an alumnus around the world and back to Brooklyn
Research, teaching and other projects have exposed Michael A. Joseph, M.P.H. ’96, Ph.D., to Zimbabwean health crises,...

Autumn 2009
Health and ecology in Borneo
To explain why she started a clinic in Borneo, Kinari Webb, M.D. ’02, tells the story of a farmer on the Indonesian...

Autumn 2009
A Navajo doctor tends to the spirit and body
When Patricia Nez Henderson, M.P.H. ’94, M.D. ’00, was a child in rural Arizona, her grandfather would come to her...

Autumn 2009
At 86, head and neck surgeon still contributes to medicine and hospice cause he helped found
One medical school memory that Donald P. Shedd, M.D. ’46, HS ’53, holds dear is of the day he walked into the “croup...

Autumn 2009
Alumni tour Smilow Cancer Hospital
During this year’s reunion, about a dozen alumni toured Smilow Cancer Hospital, which is scheduled to open in October....
Autumn 2009
2009-2010 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...
Autumn 2009
Wanted: images of yesteryear
In preparation for the School of Medicine’s Bicentennial in 2010,Yale Medicine is seeking archival photographs, motion...

Spring 2008
A doctor’s passion for medical storytelling
Lisa Sanders, M.D. ’97, HS ’01, loves a good story and has built her career around her narrative skills, beginning with...

Spring 2008
A gastroenterologist moves around the country and into a top job at UCSD
An academic journey that began at Yale’s Ezra Stiles College in 1971 has led David A. Brenner, M.D. ’79, HS ’82, from...

Spring 2008
A public health alumna brings social justice to the campaign for healthy food
Michele Simon, M.P.H. ’90, J.D., is incensed that businesses spend $36 billion annually “on marketing to get people to...
Spring 2008
Casting call for standardized patients
The Yale School of Medicine (YSM) Standardized Patient Program invites alumni, their families and other interested...
Spring 2008
2007-2008 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Autumn 2008
A career fighting infectious disease
James L. Hadler, M.D., FW ’80, M.P.H. ’82, said that his relatives, many of whom are physicians, sometimes tease him...

Autumn 2008
A primary care physician finds peace of mind in concierge medicine
On a typical day two years ago, Steven Fugaro, M.D. ’81, saw a patient in his solo primary care practice every 10 to 15...

Autumn 2008
Physician Associate alumni hold reunion
About two dozen alumni of the Physician Associate Program gathered in June for their fourth annual reunion. The...
Autumn 2008
2007-2008 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Winter 2007
Avian influenza—it’s strictly for the birds
Sitting in his Rome office, gazing at cypress trees and terra cotta rooftops, Juan Lubroth, D.V.M., M.Phil. ’92, Ph.D....

Winter 2007
A road trip in Latin America and a lifelong interest in a debilitating endemic disease
In 1966 a young Harvard graduate with a B.A. in Romance languages and literature set out on a three-month drive through...

Winter 2007
Sharing a home, a family and science—two alumni try to make a difference
Jonathan and Bonnie Rothberg share not only a home and family but also a passion for probing the mysteries of the human...

Winter 2007
Three Yale alumni received Lasker Awards in September
Three Yale alumni received Lasker Awards in September for outstanding research in medicine. For 61 years the Albert...

Spring 2007
Blending the clinical and the statistical
For more than two decades physicians have carried in their pocket copies of the Goldman Index, a list of factors to...

Spring 2007
From sleepless nights and a study of narcolepsy to chairing a leading program
When most lights in the dormitory went out, David Kupfer’s stayed on. A history and economics major at Yale College,...

Spring 2007
A rebel with “medicine in his veins” becomes a scientific researcher in India
When Manohar V.N. Shirodkar, Med ’54, M.D., initially rebelled against a family tradition and rejected medical...
Spring 2007
2006-2007 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Autumn 2007
A PA alumna serves those who served
How many alumni of the Physician Associate Program receive visits at work from U.S. senators, the secretary of defense...
Autumn 2007
An American doctor finds home on opposite sides of the Pacific Ocean
Alice Shepard Cary, M.D. ’45, HS ’47, recalls sitting on a tatami mat made of woven straw, her legs tucked neatly...
Autumn 2007
2006-2007 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Spring 2006
Sauces, sunflowers and letters home
Christopher P. Coppola, M.D., HS ’01, didn’t get much sleep during the four months he spent as a surgeon at Balad Air...

Spring 2006
A long, full and active life—keeping fit and taking on lots of jobs
“The trouble with retirement is that you never get a day off,” is a saying quite familiar to Henry E. Markley, M.D....

Spring 2006
A Montana doctor’s 30 years of medicine without a safety net
On January 7, 1984, Ron Losee, M.D. ’44, tramped out the front door of the hospital in Ennis, Mont., and into the snowy...
Spring 2006
The passing of two with years of service to the medical school
As the new year opened, Yale Medicine received word of the passing of two people with long-standing connections to the...

Autumn 2006
Crossing the country to promote global health
Karen Kiang, M.D. ’97, approached the podium at the public library in Telluride, Colo., with an enthusiasm and none of...

Autumn 2006
When numbers matter: an epidemiologist improves health care for the homeless
Can statistics help the health of New York City’s homeless? Bonnie Kerker, Ph.D. ’01, is convinced that they can. Over...
Autumn 2006
2006-2007 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Summer 2005
65 years out of Yale and still practicing
In Minot, N.D. (population 36,567), the local tourism board had to make up a slogan to help outsiders remember the...

Summer 2005
FDA’s top safety critic keeps a watchful eye on the public good
Whenever David J. Graham, M.D., M.P.H., HS ’81, wonders whether he made the right career move from Yale-New Haven...

Summer 2005
With an interest in the past, admissions dean doubles as a chronicler of local lore
Two years after receiving his medical degree, Thomas L. Lentz, M.D. ’64, made the decision, along with his wife,...

Spring 2005
The eternal triangle of a sound health system
The ongoing drama of Bill Kissick’s life involves a triangle, not of romance, but of health policy. The three sides of...

Spring 2005
Hunting the secrets of the cell in San Francisco, and game fish across the globe
John D. Baxter, M.D. ’66, HS ’68, has an imposing presence. At 64, he is a tall, strongly built man with shaggy hair,...

Spring 2005
Turning the tide of AIDS in New Haven, in a collaborative style
When Yale College turned him away as an applicant in 1961, it came as a shock to Matthew F. Lopes Jr., M.P.H. ’77. He’d...

Spring 2005
Gordon receives the Peter Parker Medal for years of service
Martin E. Gordon, M.D. ’46, has taken on many roles in his varied career. Of late the semiretired gastroenterologist...
Spring 2005
Three med school alumni elected to Institute of Medicine
Three alumni of the medical school were elected to the Institute of Medicine in October. They are:Francine M. Benes,...
Autumn 2005
From Yale to Africa, an alumna finds her niche
On a typical morning in Malawi’s rainy season, which runs from November to May and brings mosquitoes out in force,...
Autumn 2005
A pediatrician who treated not just the children, but the whole family
As a research fellow at Yale in 1948, Morris A. Wessel, M.D. ’43, joined in the landmark “rooming-in” study by the late...
Autumn 2005
Tap dancing through medicine, from surgeon to song-and-dance man
While a medical student at Yale, Brock Lynch, M.D. ’47, sang and tap danced in a hospital fund-raising play. He...

Autumn 2005
Reunion 2005
Although the reunion in June officially kicks off with a Friday evening dean’s reception followed by the clambake on...

Winter 2004
A surgeon takes aim at bias in health care
If you log onto MEDLINE and search for papers by Augustus A. White III, M.D., Ph.D., HS ’66, most citations will be...

Winter 2004
For NASA veteran, alumni post offers chance to help students reach their goals
When Howard A. Minners, M.D. ’57, M.P.H., was a boy growing up in Garden City, N.Y., his parents hoped he’d aspire to...

Winter 2004
Working on a broad canvas, physician-artist finds perfection amid life’s many flaws
It is 5:30 a.m., and the sun hasn’t yet risen on this fall day in Providence, R.I. On the third floor of an old house...

Winter 2004
Online CME site, voted best of the Web, reflects the curiosity of its creator
In the mid-1990s, just as the Internet was starting to take off, Harry A. Levy, M.D., M.P.H. ’82, looked at the...

Winter 2004
New leadership for the alumni association
Hospitals horrified Donald E. Moore, M.D. ’81, M.P.H. ’81, beginning the day he visited his dying father.“I was able to...

Summer 2004
Challenging Freud, starting a revolution
A residency requirement became a passion for one doctor and changed the field of psychiatry.As a neurology resident at...

Summer 2004
Public health alumna watches over a growing cohort of female veterans
Irene Trowell-Harris’ brothers and sisters must have thought she was joking when she pointed to a plane flying over...

Summer 2004
“Population doctor” applying tools of genomics in quest for prevention strategies
Seven years after his graduation, Gualberto Ruaño, Ph.D. ’92, M.D. ’97, isn’t content to treat one patient at a time....

Summer 2004
Alumnus named dean at SUNY Upstate
Steven J. Scheinman, M.D. ’77, HS ’80, FW ’84, professor of medicine and pharmacology and chief of nephrology at the...

Summer 2004
Brother and sister honored by Bridgeport Hospital
Two Yale alumni were among six individuals honored for their support of Bridgeport Hospital at a recent celebration of...

Spring 2004
Speaking the language of prevention
When Donald O. Lyman, M.D. ’68, oversees a media blitz against smoking in California, he draws upon his training in...

Spring 2004
For another public health trailblazer, a tobacco control milestone in the Bay State
Howard K. Koh, M.D. ’77, M.P.H., is another Yale medical alumnus who has won a major battle in the tobacco wars as a...

Spring 2004
Roaming the world’s hot spots, ensuring that care reaches those who need it
Almost two decades after completing his residency in internal medicine at Yale, Michael V. Viola, M.D., HS ’66, was...

Spring 2004
Three Yale alumni elected to Institute of Medicine
Three Yale alumni were among 65 new members elected to the Institute of Medicine in October. They are John D. Baxter,...

Fall/Winter 2004
What makes a tyrant tick? Ask a political psychologist
In 1965, the CIA presented an unusual job opportunity to the young psychiatrist, then completing his residency at the...

Fall/Winter 2004
Looking to mechanics to explain what cells do and how they develop
Mavericks start out young, it seems. Once, after performing an advanced earth science experiment with other...
Fall/Winter 2004
Straddling law and medicine, and looking for an answer to the malpractice crisis
When health policy guru Troyen A. Brennan, M.P.H. ’84, J.D. ’84, M.D. ’84, began his studies at the School of Medicine...
Winter 2003
Gut feeling
Temperatures hit the 100-degree mark and just kept climbing on the summer day when Juanita Merchant tackled Lava, the...
Winter 2003
For Nobelist educated at Yale, “It’s like winning the lottery”
Almost a century after mass spectrometry was first used to analyze small molecules, a Yale doctoral alumnus and former...
Winter 2003
A long life, steeped in science and medicine
Elizabeth R. Harrison, M.D. ’26, one of the first women to graduate from the School of Medicine and pediatrician to...
Winter 2003
A Yale connection to Thailand—and the King of Siam
When Kanya Suphapeetiporn, M.D., Ph.D. ’02, finishes her pediatrics residency in Brooklyn and heads home to her faculty...
Winter 2003
Cell biologist wins Lasker prize
James E. Rothman, Ph.D. ’71, the Paul A. Marks Chair of the Cellular Biochemistry and Biophysics Program and vice chair...
Winter 2003
Wanted: early copies of Yale Medicine
Calling all alumni who may be contemplating an attic-cleaning: we’d like your back issues of Yale Medicine. Of...
Winter 2003
2001-2002 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
OfficersFrancis R. Coughlin Jr., M.D. ’52 PresidentDonald E. Moore, M.D. ’81, M.P.H. ’81 Vice PresidentFrancis M. Lobo,...

Summer 2003
Back to school with Colombia’s top doctor
Although he believes that Colombia already has too many medical schools, José Félix Patiño, M.D. ’52, HS ’58, is...

Summer 2003
In Lost in America, a Yale surgeon opens up memories of his father
The latest and most personal book by Sherwin B. Nuland, M.D. ’55, HS ’61, Lost in America: A Journey With My Father,...

Summer 2003
A dinner guest inspires a mission to help former slaves
The night her husband brought a Sudanese guest home for dinner, Cynthia Hymes Bell, M.P.H. ’84, heard a story that...

Summer 2003
Ten lines a day, for 78 years
Albert Doty Spicer, M.D. ’37, D.M.D., was 13 when he wrote the first entry in his diary—and every day since, for 78...
Summer 2003
2003-2004 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...
Summer 2003
Wanted: early copies of Yale Medicine
Calling all alumni who may be contemplating an attic-cleaning: we’d like your back issues of Yale Medicine. Of...

Spring 2003
Hunting down the “hostile” gene
The tools that Redford B. Williams, M.D. ’67, HS ’69, FW ’70, is using to “try to save the world” have changed, but his...

Spring 2003
Private practice on an island paradise, of sorts
Practicing medicine on Martha’s Vineyard introduces an extra variable in decision making for Karen Casper, M.D., HS...

Spring 2003
In retirement, surgeon cuts a new swath as globetrotter, volunteer
Minimally invasive surgery has been something of a mixed blessing for thoracic surgeon Louis R.M. Del Guercio, M.D....

Spring 2003
From the tables down at Mory’s, six degrees of separation
Another bit of mystery surfaced at a dinner for New Haven-area alumni leaders late last summer following the White...
Spring 2003
2001-2002 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...
Spring 2003
Wanted: early copies of Yale Medicine
Calling all alumni who may be contemplating an attic-cleaning: we’d like your back issues of Yale Medicine. Of...

Autumn 2003
A new mash for a new millennium
Intensive training for handling wounds prepared Air Force Major John C. Lundell, M.D. ’94, for the casualties he might...

Autumn 2003
Medicine and society have changed—but not conditions for residents
When Ruth Potee’s father started his medical residency at Boston City Hospital in 1949, the system was pretty simple:...

Autumn 2003
From Brooklyn to the vineyards: how a surgeon became a country doctor
Alexander Zuckerbraun, Ph.D., M.D. ’55, often finds fresh fruits and vegetables in the back of his pickup truck—in late...

Autumn 2003
On the front lines of the battle to provide affordable care
New Britain General Hospital was the eighth-largest employer in town two decades ago. Now it’s number one. That may...
Autumn 2003
2003-2004 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...
Autumn 2003
Wanted: early copies of Yale Medicine
Calling all alumni who may be contemplating an attic-cleaning: we’d like your back issues of Yale Medicine. Of...

Autumn 2003
Lycurgus “Bill” Davey receives the Peter Parker Medal
In a ceremony in the Beaumont Room on May 27, Lycurgus M. Davey, M.D. ’43, HS ’52, was honored with the Peter Parker...
Winter 2002
From doctor to lawyer—and now the presidency
When Francis R.Coughlin Jr., M.D. ’52, decided to quit surgery at age 58, he reinvented himself as a medical...
Winter 2002
“My vocation is my vacation”
AYAM Vice President Donald E. Moore, M.D. ’81, M.P.H. ’81, practices family medicine in Brooklyn, N.Y., concentrating...
Winter 2002
New committee members
New members of the executive committee are Cynthia B. Aten, M.D. ’81; Sharon L. Bonney, M.D. ’76; Joseph F.J. Curi,...
Winter 2002
A Yale couple, facing polio, found themselves “called to rise”
“The city streets were deserted at 11:30 p.m. It was a balmy spring night in 1945 when my husband, Larry, and I set out...
Summer 2002
2002-2003 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...

Spring 2002
Spotlight falls on anthrax case
A case of inhalation anthrax discovered in a small Connecticut hospital in November gave Ramin Ahmadi, M.D., M.P.H....
Spring 2002
At “the game”
The latest installment of “The Game” brought almost 400 alumni, faculty, students and their guests to the Yale Bowl on...
Spring 2002
A Boston reunion
Over cocktails and hors d’oeuvres, about 50 Boston-area alumni and guests gathered at a reception at the Café Louis on...
Spring 2002
2001-2002 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...
Autumn 2002
A bid to fight hunger
Among the more interesting items at the medical school’s annual Hunger and Homelessness Auction have been an evening at...
Autumn 2002
Wanted: early copies of Yale Medicine
Calling all alumni who may be contemplating an attic-cleaning: we’d like your back issues of Yale Medicine. Of...

Autumn 2002
Two honored for service to alumni association
Two alumni who graduated 10 years apart were honored at reunion this year for their service to the School of Medicine....

Autumn 2002
Disasters, natural and other, top the agenda for returning public health alumni
Disaster management was the topic of the day as public health alumni gathered on June 7 for their annual reunion....

Autumn 2002
Spotlight on Surgery
The Yale Surgical Society sponsored a well-attended grand rounds on the Thursday afternoon of reunion weekend, with a...
Autumn 2002
2001-2002 Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine
The Executive Committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine directs association activities, links the School...
Autumn 2001
For 500 alumni and their guests, a return to New Haven
At this year’s reunion, alumni donned hard hats for a tour of the Congress Avenue Building and put on their thinking...



