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Sidebar:
Alumnus Robert Petersdorf, former AAMC president,
dies in Seattle at 80

Paul Beeson was widely regarded as a scientist and a caring physician,
teacher and mentor.


In 1952, his first year as chair, Paul Beeson posed with the faculty
in front of the Sterling Hall of Medicine. Beeson is fifth from left
in the front row. To his immediate left is nephrologist John Peters,
who made significant contributions to the study of renal disease.


In May 2003, Paul Beeson was reunited with nine of his former residents
when he came to Yale for the unveiling of his portrait, which hangs
in the Fitkin Amphitheater.


In 1961 Beeson and Robert Petersdorf, his chief resident, published their
landmark paper on Fever in the journal Medicine. (See
sidebar below.)




As head of the Association of American Medical Colleges, Robert Petersdorf
believed that medicine had become too specialized and tried to increase
the number of primary care physicians entering general internal medicine
and family practice.
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Infectious disease,
intenal medicine and Paul Beeson
During his 13 years as chair, Paul Beeson made internal medicine at
Yale one of the best departments in the country. He is remembered for
his skill in the laboratory, his compassion for patients and his nurturing
of students and residents.
By Richard Rapport, M.D.

Paul B. Beeson, M.D., former chair of internal medicine at Yale and an
internationally renowned physician and scientist, died on August 14 in
Exeter, N.H., at the age of 97.

Beeson held leadership posts at major academic medical centers, was an editor
of two major textbooks on internal medicine, advanced the study of fever and
infection and was a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Among the honors
he received was the Kober Medal, the highest award given by the Association of
American Physicians. In 1973, Queen Elizabeth II named him an Honorary Knight
Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, a rare honor for
an American, in recognition of his service as the Nuffield Professor of Medicine
at Oxford University.

While at Yale Beeson conducted groundbreaking research, transformed the Department
of Internal Medicine into a national model and cemented his own reputation in
medicine. “When he came it was a relatively small department,” recalled
Arthur Ebbert Jr., M.D., professor emeritus of medicine, who was hired by Beeson
as an instructor in 1953. “He apparently had a mandate to expand the department
and to encourage patient referrals from around the state. Before he came and
reorganized the department, if doctors had a patient they wanted advice on, the
patient went to New York or Boston.”

Beeson the scientist was the first to identify proteins in white blood cells
now recognized as cytokines, signaling compounds used for intercellular communications,
that also play a role in the body ’s response to infections.
With one of his residents, Robert G. Petersdorf, M.D. ’52, HS ’58,
Beeson subsequently wrote a paper on patients with persistent fevers of 101 degrees
or more. Published in the journal Medicine in 1961, the article is considered
a “landmark,”
said Lawrence S. Cohen, M.D., HS ’65, the Ebenezer K. Hunt Professor
of Medicine and Special Advisor to the Dean. Cohen, an intern and resident
under Beeson, told The New York Times that the paper is “as relevant
in 2006 as in 1961, in pointing out causes that were not obvious and
teaching clinicians what they should be thinking about in making a differential
diagnosis.”

Beeson grew up in Anchorage, Alaska, where his father, John Beeson, M.D., was
a general practitioner and surgeon for the Alaskan Railway. When he was 19, Paul
Beeson followed his older brother to McGill University, where both received their
medical degrees. After an internship at the University of Pennsylvania, Beeson
joined his father and brother in practice in Ohio. The lure of research drew
him to Rockefeller University, and he subsequently took appointments at some
of the most prestigious academic and medical centers in the country.

He came to Yale in 1952 from Emory University. When he left New Haven 13 years
later to become the Nuffield Professor of Medicine at Oxford, internal medicine
at Yale was regarded as the premier department in the country. In 1981, the Paul
B. Beeson Professorship in Internal Medicine was established at Yale, endowed
by a former colleague, Elisha Atkins, M.D., and his wife, Elizabeth. In 1996,
the School of Medicine named its medical service in Beeson ’s
honor.

In this article adapted from Physician: The Life of Paul Beeson (Barricade
Books, 2001), author Richard Rapport, M.D., describes Beeson’s
tenure at Yale.

Beeson sat behind a glass-topped desk, rolling a letter opener around in his
fingers, while the patients admitted during the night were presented to him by
the residents. Laboratory tests had become more sophisticated since Beeson ’s
own house officer days, but history and physical examination remained central
to the process of diagnosis. The impact of technological innovation was slight,
in spite of cardiac catheterization and even early angiography. Laboratory values,
X-ray results and physical examination were expected to be reported efficiently
by the sleep-deprived residents. Long-windedness was abbreviated by an impatient
tapping of the letter opener. The house staff soon learned that, while their
new chair didn’t like mistakes, he tolerated them as a function of learning.
What he could not tolerate was thoughtlessness. When it was uncovered that a
patient had been treated unkindly or misused, as happened the day a resident
referred to a homeless, alcoholic patient as “a 35-year-old bum,” the
letter opener snapped unhappily to the desk and the room quieted while the offending
resident searched in vain for an escape. This happened rarely, a testimony to
both residents and chief, but when it did occur it was remembered for the life
of the perpetrator.

Teaching on the wards
Tuesdays and Thursdays, after morning report, Beeson left his office
with the residents and students assigned to his service, walked past
the Fitkin Amphitheater and climbed upstairs to the wards where he consulted
for two hours—all year long. Beeson approached the bedsides of
the patients, who were exposed on all sides and confronted by a crowd
of people they barely knew, and immediately sat down. He had come to
believe, possibly from his practice experience in Ohio, that standing
by a patient’s bedside places the doctor in a position of dominance
that makes many ill people want to be somewhere else. He wished to place
them at ease and so he reduced the distance between them by sitting unhurriedly,
an act that suggested interest in each patient, rather than the disease
being discussed. As the resident presented the history, physical examination,
laboratory and X-ray findings, a task that sometimes took a while, Beeson
said nothing. He allowed the younger doctors to discuss the problem themselves,
develop a differential diagnosis, and argue about what made one possibility
more likely than another. If speculations behind the curtains drawn around
the bed grew too outrageous, Beeson gently guided the discussion back
toward reason. Sometimes he said nothing at all, or simply agreed with
the diagnosis and what was being proposed to manage the illness. Occasionally
he differed altogether, as in the case of a third-year medical student
admitted late one night in 1953.

The student was Sherwin B. Nuland, M.D. ’55, HS ’61,
later a Yale surgeon and gifted writer, who had been brought to the emergency
room with a very high fever and, the admitting resident thought, an enlarged
spleen. The temperature elevation alone wasn’t a great worry, but Nuland
was clearly sick, and a spleen that can be palpated expands the possibilities
in several nasty directions. Because they didn’t know what was the matter
with him, the residents did what they often did then (and now)—they gave
him antibiotics and started to work up the fever. Nuland later noted, “I
was evaluated from one end of myself to the other, carrying a diagnosis of either
mononucleosis or hepatitis—no one being sure which. After about three days
like this the Professor came to make rounds, examined me briefly, looked at his
retinue and pronounced,
‘This boy had a strep throat a few days ago, but he’s fine
now. He can be discharged.’ I don’t suppose this is a major
triumph diagnosed by Dr. Beeson, but what impressed me most was the gentleness
with which he treated his residents when he had shown them to be in error,
and his certainty.”

A growing faculty and more specialists
The tendency toward subspecialization had begun, and the Department of
Medicine was forced to add faculty members with more focused interests
than only general internal medicine. While recognizing this requirement,
Beeson was reluctant to abandon his lifelong view that internists should
be generalists. But by 1954, this position, learned from both his father
and Soma Weiss, M.D., the legendary Harvard physician and mentor, was
difficult to defend, and new fellowship-trained faculty members were
hired. With support from Vernon W. Lippard, M.D. ’29, dean of the
medical school, Beeson and the Yale department were now in a position
to recruit from the best talent available.

As the department added more faculty, it also grew in other dimensions. Space
was always an issue (one cardiologist ’s lab was in
a remodeled coat closet off the Fitkin Amphitheater), and was relieved only slightly
when the West Haven Veterans Hospital opened. The private Memorial Unit was constructed,
allowing department attending staff to admit insured private patients and residents
an opportunity to care for them, as well as for the nonpaying patients admitted
to the Grace-New Haven Hospital. All of the faculty, with the exception of the
dean, were entirely indifferent to the funding sources for the care of any of
these sick people. The faculty and house staff were paid a salary by the medical
school; this income was not linked to nor influenced by months spent attending
on the wards, number of patients seen or procedures performed, number of research
papers published nor volume of work done as measured by any other scale. Patients
were admitted through the clinics, emergency room or privately, and they were
taken care of by the same attending physicians and the same house staff regardless
of their type of insurance—or its lack.

Such administrative issues always impose on the time of a department chair, and
Beeson expected them. What he did not necessarily expect was the growing line
of petitioners that never seemed to shrink outside his office door.

Beeson still ran the entire department with only a secretary. Of course, the
tasks were far beyond those of a routine secretarial job. His secretary, Betsy
Winters, who would later have an award, the Betsy Winters House Staff Award,
named in her honor, was responsible not only for scheduling appointments, phone
calls, typing and mimeographing —the general business
of running the office—but also for managing grant applications to the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), intern and resident applications and medical student
evaluations and monitoring the queue outside Beeson’s door. Whenever people
showed up, regardless of their rank, Winters found a way to coax a few more minutes
out of the chair’s schedule for them.

A caring mentor
Dedication to the careers of students, residents and faculty is a labor-intensive
activity. The students, who often entered medical school with no idea
about what clinical medicine really involved, were sometimes overwhelmed
when they found out. Patients admitted to teaching centers in the late
1950s were often so sick they could not be cared for in a community hospital,
and the mortality rate was as high as 10 percent on the Yale medicine
wards. These patients were hospitalized for long periods, and the house
staff and students developed relationships with them not available in
today’s technology-rich day-surgery and outpatient environment.

An intern from 1958 remembers his young female patient with meningitis being
treated with the new technique of injecting intrathecal penicillin, the drug
infused into spinal fluid through a lumbar puncture needle in order to achieve
high concentration at the site of infection. This was a procedure advocated by
Beeson, who recommended that, even though she was improving, the spinal taps
be continued until the patient was completely without fever. An arithmetical
error was made by the nurse preparing the infusion, and instead of 10,000 units
of penicillin, the intern pushed in 1 million. The patient convulsed and died.
The intern, who had been taking care of the young woman since her admission,
also collapsed. Beeson was called by someone still left standing, and immediately
came to the ward, gathered both nurse and intern and took them into an empty
room. After the tears slowed and a little calm had been restored, he explained
to the two young people that errors are certain to be made in the care of the
desperately ill, and that everyone involved in their care assumes part of the
responsibility for what happens on the wards —the triumph
and the loss. By involving himself in the accident, and reminding them that it
was he who chose the treatment, Beeson comforted the nurse and intern at least
a little, and helped them to know that they were supported. Next, they told the
family exactly what had happened. There was no lawsuit.

In the first rank of internal medicine
By 1960, the administration of a major department of medicine such as
Yale’s had become much more than the chair and one secretary could
manage. A business manager was added to the staff and took over fiscal
responsibility for the department, as well as management of the growing
volumes of reports that the NIH and other funding agencies expected.
Even this increased manpower did little to allow Beeson the freedom for
laboratory research and unhurried individual meetings with students he
had so valued at Emory and during his first years at Yale. He became
a clever and capable administrator, but never the kind of merciless program
director consumed by competition for money, faculty and patients.

The Department of Medicine had joined the first rank, competing with
Harvard, Johns Hopkins and Columbia. A 1964 article about Yale in Newsweek describing
the medical school as “good, if not outstanding,”
brought this quietly outraged response from John Bowers, M.D., who had
been dean at two medical schools, member of the Atomic Bomb Casualty
Commission and later president of the Macy Foundation: “The medical
school at Yale has consistently ranked as one of the top schools in the
country, with an excellent faculty and students. ... Recently a distinguished
colleague at a New York medical school told me the Department of Medicine
at Yale was unquestionably the most outstanding in the country—and
neither he nor I are sons of Old Eli.”

Beeson’s students make their mark
While the department expanded both in depth and scope, some people left,
of course. The vast majority of Beeson-trained academics found careers
in the best medical schools in the country; 27 went on to hold major
administrative positions at other universities. All of these academic
physicians continued to train their own students and house staff in the
image of their teacher, valuing patient care, instruction of house staff
and clinical research above their own advancement.

As the success and size of the department continued to grow, so did Beeson ’s
own prestige, both at Yale and nationally. This was not the result of self-promotion,
but happened as a natural function of his unassuming manner and what Lewis Landsberg,
M.D. ’64, HS ’70, and the rest of the house staff called the “Beeson
mystique.”

“What was it, we wondered, that contributed to the aura of greatness
that surrounded this man? When Beeson walked into a room everybody stood
up. His very presence imbued the Department of Medicine at Yale with
an organic unity that was felt by third-year clerks and full professors
alike. No one wanted to appear unworthy in behavior, demeanor or medical
knowledge in the eyes of Dr. Beeson,” Landsberg recalled in a letter.

At Yale, Beeson continued to take morning report himself in his office at 8 o ’clock,
he still attended on the wards throughout the year and he gave the introductory
lecture to the third-year medical students annually as they began their clinical
training. At this lecture, a gravely ill person was chosen from among the hospitalized
patients and brought to the Fitkin Amphitheater. As students who had studied
only basic sciences, these 24-year-olds about to enter the wards for the first
time had little understanding of the disease being presented. Neither was it
their professor’s intent to teach them details of that specific illness
or class of diseases as he carefully and slowly interviewed and then examined
the patient on those fall afternoons. What a comfort it was to these bewildered
students when they were then told:

“As your acquaintance with clinical teachers grows, you will observe
that although each of them has special knowledge and experience in some
area of clinical medicine, they make no pretense of knowing it all. You
will also find that clinicians frequently disagree, and that each of
them comes to wrong conclusions from time to time. ... Biochemists and
pharmacologists have ‘hard’ facts to propound. We, on the
other hand, deal with such commodities as pain and nausea. We must accept
any kind of problem. We cannot insist on working with inbred strains
of people, we cannot control the environment from which they come, we
know that their recollection of past events is faulty and we cannot reduce
them to subcellular fractions to determine what is going on. ... We live,
therefore, in an atmosphere of doubt and uncertainty, and make our decisions
and take our actions on the basis of probabilities. ... So these are
some precepts you must consider: Give each patient enough of your time.
Sit down; listen; ask thoughtful questions; examine carefully. ... Be
appropriately critical of what you read or hear. ... Follow the example
set by William Osler: ‘Do the kind thing and do it first.’ ” YM

Richard Rapport, M.D., is a neurosurgeon in Seattle.


Alumnus Robert Petersdorf, former AAMC president,
dies in Seattle at 80
While this issue of Yale Medicine was in production, we learned
of the passing of Robert G. Petersdorf, M.D. ’52, HS ’58,
former president of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC),
as well as chair of the University of Washington Department of Medicine,
dean of the School of Medicine at the University of California, San Diego,
and president of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. It seemed
fitting to remember him on the same pages as Paul B. Beeson, M.D., former
chair of internal medicine, who mentored Petersdorf early in his career.

The two met in 1952, when Beeson had just begun his tenure as chair and
Petersdorf was in his last year of medical school. In 1996, when Petersdorf
accepted the Kober Medal from the Association of American Physicians,
he remembered what Beeson had told him that day: “The secret to
success in [academic medicine is] to get one’s hands dirty in the
laboratory.”

Five years after they met, when Petersdorf was chief resident, Beeson
asked him to begin working on a paper describing 100 patients who had
been ill for more than three weeks, had episodic fever of more than 101
degrees and had remained undiagnosed after one week in the hospital.
This work was published under both their names in the journal Medicine in
1961 as “Fever of Unexplained Origin,” an article that remains
one of the most frequently cited papers in medical literature.

Petersdorf went on to lead premier medical centers and departments around
the country, as well as several medical organizations. He died on September
29 in Seattle of complications of strokes at the age of 80. Colleagues
remembered him as a mentor to young physicians and as one of the foremost
infectious disease experts in the United States.

As AAMC president from 1986 to 1994, Petersdorf sought to improve the
nation’s system of medical education through efforts to increase
the number of primary-care physicians, strengthen efforts to enroll underrepresented
minorities, support the role of teaching hospitals, encourage academic
physicians to devote more time to teaching and advocate for limits on
the demands of residency training. He also succeeded in improving communication
between medical educators and Congress, in an era when national health
policies and budgets increasingly affected medical schools and their
teaching hospitals.

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