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Back
on Cedar Street, 600 celebrate
John Peters, the Yale System and reunions
By John Curtis
More than 400
medical alumni and friends and close to 200 public health alumni
gathered in New Haven June 5 and 6 for a reunion weekend that
featured a New England clambake, the roasting of retiring public
health professor Lowell Levin, D.Ed., and a symposium on John
P. Peters, M.D., a legendary Yale professor accused of disloyalty
in the McCarthy era.
Alumni began
trickling into the school Friday, June 5, for a series of lectures
sponsored by the Yale Surgical Society in the Hope Building.
Alumni also toured the historical library and Yale-New Haven
Hospital. AYAM President Nicholas M. Passarelli, M.D. 59,
opened the weekend with welcoming remarks in the Hope Building.
Robert H. Gifford, M.D., deputy dean for education, made a presentation
on The Yale System, Its Evolution,
Its Strengths and Problems.
At a symposium
Saturday morning, speakers described the life and achievements
of Dr. Peters, known for his pioneering work in metabolism and
his fight to clear his name during the McCarthy era, when his
loyalty was questioned by a review board.
Before a buffet
luncheon in Harkness Hall, alumni attended presentations on research
at Yale by three professors who discussed new lines of inquiry
in hypertension, womens health and molecular psychiatry. |
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Symposium
honors a hero of metabolism research who fell victim to McCarthy
At a symposium
on John P. Peters, M.D., speakers paid tribute to one of the
nations leading experts in metabolism who stood up to McCarthyism
in the 1950s.
A nephrologist
who taught at Yale from 1922 until his death in 1955, Dr. Peters
came to national attention in the 1930s as secretary of the Committee
of 430 Physicians, a group that advocated reforms that have become
standard features of modern medicine. They believed that the
health of the public should be a concern of government and that
government should be involved in providing medical care. During
the McCarthy era, Dr. Peters views and his signature on
open letters espousing liberal causes surfaced as evidence of
his alleged disloyalty to the United States. Although loyalty
boards twice dismissed the case against him, a third board found
his loyalty questionable and he was removed as a member of a
study section of the Division of Research Grants and Fellowships
of the National Institutes of Health.
Dr. Peters was
distinguished by his persistent efforts to apply scientific advances
to the treatment of patients. At the same time this was
incorporated in a context of moral dignity so that the application
of science to the patient was associated with kindness, with
a great deal of concern and followup, said Donald W. Seldin,
M.D. 43, Professor Emeritus of Internal Medicine at the
University of Texas Southwest Medical Center, in his talk, Reflections
of a Student of Peters. The plain fact of the matter is
that he was a courageous man and a morally dignified man. He
did for the profession what the profession needs, self-criticism,
self-policing. Now, hopefully, Dr. Peters vision of medicine
available to all the people and at high quality will be reinstituted.
The discussion
ranged from his medical contributions to his legal and moral
battles. Catherine G. Roraback, LL.B. 48, a Yale-educated
attorney who represented dissenters in the 1950s, noted that
Dr. Peters became a target of loyalty boards not because he broke
a law, but because he exercised his right of free speech and
association. George D. Lundberg, M.D., editor-in-chief of the
Journal of the American Medical Association, traced the longstanding
acrimony between the Committee of 430 Physicians and the AMA,
which vehemently opposed the reforms the committee proposed.
Many of those reforms, he said, are now integral pieces of medical
practice in this country, such as federal support of medicine
and programs such as Medicaid and Medicare.
Richard M. Peters,
M.D. 45, one of Dr. Peters sons, described how the
loyalty hearings absorbed his fathers final years and,
his family believes, shortened his life. Close to a dozen family
members traveled to New Haven including Dr. Peters granddaughter,
Barbara Ann Peters, M.D. 79.
Franklin H.
Epstein, M.D. 47, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical
School and Beth Israel Hospital, cited Dr. Peters contributions
to the study of renal disease, noting that Dr. Peters was interested
in the chemical derangements of disease. It was the measurement
of the chemical constituents of body fluids that provided the
first of three solid foundation blocks, the cornerstones of Peters
approach, Dr. Epstein said. He understood and appreciated
the importance of accurate, impeccable measurement.
Dr. Peters
most enduring technical achievement was the introduction into
the clinic of the flame photometer, which made possible within
minutes accurate measurements of sodium and potassium in serum
or urine samples. He used those measurements, an exacting analysis
of diet, urine and feces, to treat his patients. Colleagues and
students marveled at his ability to take the raw data and synthesize
it into a logical framework. His associates might experiment
on animals, but he preferred to concentrate on examining disordered
physiology at the bedside with accurate chemical techniques and
the power of logical inference, said Dr. Epstein.
According to
Phillip Gorden, M.D., HS 61-66, the director of the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Dr.
Peters studies of body water, electrolytes, and acid-base
balance were extremely important in the management of patients
with diabetes mellitus. |
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Yale
System thriving, says new deputy dean
Although it
is alternately misunderstood, revered, tolerated and adored,
the Yale System is alive and well, Robert H. Gifford, M.D., deputy
dean for education, told alumni gathered in the Hope Building
during reunion weekend. Dr. Gifford noted that the wheel
has simply come round again and cited F.P. Underhill,
who chaired the schools curriculum committee in 1922. The
student, Dr. Underhill complained at the time, has
become the defenseless recipient of an overwhelming mass of facts.
Reaffirming
the goals of Milton C. Winternitz, M.D., who served as dean of
the medical school from 1920 to 1935, Dr. Gifford said, Memorization
of a mass of facts was far less important than a
well-rounded education in fundamental principles, training in
methods of investigation and acquisition of the scientific habit
of mind. Burdening the students with a heavy curriculum
discourages independence and initiative and leaves little time
for electives, independent thought or reading in the library,
Dr. Gifford said.
Underlying the
Yale System is the presumption that graduate students are mature
individuals with a strong motivation to learn. As a result, attendance
is not taken at lectures, small group teaching is emphasized
and there are no grades or class rankings. Although examinations
remain anonymous, a qualifying exam must be passed in every course
and all students must write a thesis based on original research
in order to graduate. According to Dr. Gifford, the school still
adheres to these principles, but the number of lectures has gradually
increased. And honor societies such as Alpha Omega Alpha, which
recognizes only the top students in each class, have somewhat
undermined the Yale Systems traditional opposition to class
rankings, he said.
The freedom
accorded to students brings with it a responsibility that is
at times ignored, Dr. Gifford said. He took students to task
for what he described as a cavalier attitude towards
small group seminars which depend on student to student interaction.
Attendance, he said, tends to drop, particularly around the time
of the second year show in February and national board
examinations in the spring.
While most of
the faculty support the system, he said, a minority look
at it with some derision as a way for students to slip by without
academic rigor, to be self-indulgent, spoiled, entitled to do
anything they want.
Dr. Gifford
also took on the issue of payment of faculty who assume major
teaching burdens. Most faculty, those who give lectures or moderate
seminars, receive no remuneration, and that is appropriate. But
asking someone to be a course coordinator, to organize a new
course, to chair a curriculum committee, to organize and run
a new course is a very different matter, Dr. Gifford said,
and, in my judgment, should be accompanied by partial salary
support. He proposed enlarging an educational fund so that
those who shoulder unusual time commitments to teaching can receive
a portion of their salary for their efforts.
Noting the curriculum
requires attendance at too many lectures, Dr. Gifford called
for more case-based conferences as an alternative. |
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At
EPH reunion, a global perspective
Public health
has become a global affair, John Ashton, M.D., told alumni of
Epidemiology and Public Health who gathered for their annual
reunion on June 5. Todays pressing issuesHIV and
AIDS, drugs, food technology, genetic engineeringknow no
boundaries, said Dr. Ashton, the keynote speaker for the reunion.
Although he is regional director of public health in Liverpool,
England, Dr. Ashton said he felt like a virtual alumnus
of Yale, because of his work over the past decade with Lowell
Levin, M.P.H., 60, D.Ed., who retired this year.
Dr. Ashton made
his reference to Dr. Levin during his talk, Health Threats to
Urban Life; Is It Too Late to Save Our Children? We need
a public health response which is a global public health response,
Dr. Ashton said, contrasting the present with the past. The
cities of 150 years ago could quite happily think of themselves
as self-contained. We are now at the point where the majority
of the worlds people will be living in large cities and
towns. Most babies are being born into large towns and cities
for the first time. Increased speed of travel and the increased
urbanization of the planet often divorce health issues from their
local origins and deny public health workers local solutions,
he said.
He noted a danger
in the concentration in cities of large numbers of young men
with no stake in their communities. The events in Jakarta
over the last two weeks are the tip of an iceberg which we have
yet to see, he said, referring to riots in Indonesia in
May. Is it too late to save the cities? In many ways that
is the wrong question. The fate of our cities is indivisible
from the fate of the planet.
Many of those
at the reunion had come to bid farewell to Dr. Levin, who started
teaching public health at Yale in 1963 and plans to continue
teaching part-time in his retirement.
Its
unfortunate that it takes Lowell threatening to leave that brings
us all together, Dean Michael H. Merson, M.D., joked before
turning reflective. We would never want Lowell to leave
us. He will be a major part of our school for many years, even
though he claims to be retiring.
Friends and
colleagues took turns telling tales about Dr. Levin at a Friday
evening roast under a tent on the lawn in front of the EPH building.
Dr. Merson described Dr. Levins unorthodox approach to
founding the schools international division. There
is no record of this division ever being created, the dean
joked, noting that he can find no memos, no paperwork, nothing
to trace the divisions history. Mr. Levin simply created
it, he said. Lowell just took advantage of people being
out of town and on sabbatical.
About 200 people
came to the roast and reunion. Maybe this time youve
come to see if hes really going to do what he keeps threatening
to dosay bye-bye to Yale, Joel Kavet, M.P.H. 67,
master of ceremonies, told the crowd. We risk the prospect
of turning Lowell Levin loose on an unsuspecting world.
Friday morning,
alumni attended a series of seminars on a variety of public health
issues, including HIV/AIDS, urban health, alcohol and asthma.
In the afternoon, alumni panels described their experiences and
discussed the relevance of programs to public health practice.
For many alumni,
the reunion was more than a coming together of former classmatesmany
had crossed paths in their professional lives. Its
striking, said David A. Kessler, M.D., dean of the medical
school, at a Friday afternoon luncheon for EPH alumni. There
are so many of you that I know and have grown up with.
Dr. Kessler
singled out one alumnus who served as his mentor in Washington
in the 1980s: Samuel P. Korper, MPH 69, Ph.D. 76,
was honored as this years distinguished alumnus. I
decided, on a volunteer basis, Dr. Kessler recalled, to
spend some time on the Hill. I walked in in 1981 and I knew nothing.
I had no idea of how that town worked. Working as an unpaid
aide to the Senates labor and human resources committee,
Dr. Kessler was assigned to reauthorize three programs. I
had no idea what to do. It was at that time I was fortunate enough
to meet Sam. Dr. Kessler, of course, went on to become
commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. I could
not have been in a position to contribute and function in that
town had I not been trained by Sam Korper. He has shown throughout
his career such tremendous dedication to improving the health
of our country.
Dr. Korper started
his career as a Peace Corps volunteer in Nyasaland in central
Africa. By the time he and Dr. Kessler met, Dr. Korper had been
in Washington for about three years. Dr. Korper worked at the
Department of Health and Human Services and the National Institutes
of Health, where he was director of the division of legislative
analysis. He now serves as senior advisor to the Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services Administration.
In his talk
to alumni, Dr. Korper offered a mixed view of the state of public
health in this country. Too few graduates are seeking long-term
careers in the public health, he lamented. On the other hand,
he added, the opportunities in public health, in both the
public and private sectors, from the molecular to the global,
are truly breathtaking.
The ethos of
public health, he noted, includes public service, usefulness
and altruism. It is, he said, a profession that has an
incredible array of critically important responsibilities. |
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Yale
scientists offer glimpse of cutting edge research
We are
in the midst of one of the great revolutions in the history of
medicine, Richard P. Lifton, M.D., Ph.D., told medical
school alumni during the reunion weekend, referring to progress
in charting the human genome.
Dr. Lifton,
professor of medicine, genetics and molecular biophysics and
biochemistry, was one of three faculty researchers who highlighted
their work to alumni. Joining him were Carolyn Mazure, Ph.D.,
professor of psychiatry and director of the Donaghue Womens
Health Investigator Program at Yale; and Eric J. Nestler, M.D.,
Ph.D., director of the molecular psychiatry program. Dr. Nestler
studies genetic and
biomedical links to addiction.
Dr. Lifton searches
for genetic causes of diseases such as hypertension. Underlying
the medical revolution he described are tools that include genetic
maps of human chromosomes and the development of complete physical
maps of the genome.
With these
tools we can begin to unravel the source of those diseases,
Dr. Lifton said. Ultimately it gives us some insight to
develop new strategies to treat those disorders. He cited
a family in which high blood pressure was identified in 23 members
and was subsequently linked to a single gene, one of 10 genes
he and members of his team have isolated that regulate blood
pressure. After more than five years of exciting progress in
this work, his lab is poised to apply the knowledge to more common
forms of the disease affecting at least 50 million people in
this country alone. We can offer them specific treatment
tailored to the genetic abnormality, Dr. Lifton said. This
has really accelerated the pace of biomedical research. We can
apply those tools coming out of the Human Genome Project to the
investigation of disorders such as hypertension.
Women, noted
Dr. Mazure, live about six years longer than men on average but
spend more time in the hospital. We do need to know more
about how to keep women healthy, she said. We need
more data for understanding and treating the disorders which
women present.
Although federal
regulations require the inclusion of women in federally-funded
research projects, that was not always the case. The assumption
frequently was made that treatment and procedures which were
developed for men also worked for women, said Dr. Mazure.
We now have a growing body of significant data to cause
us to revisit those assumptions.
Dr. Nestlers
laboratory, in a study of gene expression using transgenic mice,
has found that turning on certain genes recreates biochemical
and behavioral changes characteristic of addiction. Dr. Nestler
is trying to understand lasting effects of addiction on the brain.
Scientists believe these changes are regulated by gene expression
in neurons in areas of the brain known as the mesolimbic dopamine
system.
We can
examine an animal, said Dr. Nestler, study molecular
changes in specific brain regions, demonstrate that those changes
are important for the behavior of addiction in our animal models,
and then use that information to come up with ways to perturb
that system in people. This information is critical to
the understanding of relapse and recurring addictive behavior,
and may very likely provide the basis for new treatments for
addiction in the next five to 10 years. |