Dr. Denny Bastron, Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology,
is the son of a General Practitioner and the father of a Family Practitioner.
His medical background is based in clinical anesthesia, renal physiology
and pharmacology, intensive care medicine, and hospice. Dr. Bastron’s
formal education began at a tender young age when his father enrolled
him in obedience school at Wentworth Military Academy (it didn’t
take). His medical education and specialty training occurred at the
Universities of Iowa and Tennessee . He then went to finishing school
(fellowship) at the hospital formerly known as the Peter Bent Brigham.
After a tour of duty with the United States Air
Force, he taught at Iowa, Arizona , and Texas A&M before returning
to Tucson in December 2002. At Texas A&M, Dr. Bastron was professor
of Anesthesiology and Professor and Head of the Department of Humanities
in Medicine where he coordinated the first year course, Introduction
to Clinical Ethics; taught a second year elective, Professionalism in
Medicine; and participated in the Leadership in Medicine Program. He
also chaired the Scott & White Ethics Committee, founded the Texas
Bioethics Resource Consortium, and was the Associate Medical Director
of the Scott & White Hospice.
Dr. Bastron is a member of the American Osler
Society, the Mark Twain Circle of America , the Anesthesia History Association,
and the American Association for the History of Medicine. At the University
of Arizona he coordinates the history of medicine club and offers electives
in professionalism and clinical ethics.
Dr. Bastron’s main pursuit in life outside
of medicine has been finding novel ways to prolong adolescence beyond
all previous limits, an endeavor at which he has been enormously successful.
VISITING PROFESSORS
April 12, 2006
Rafael Campo, MA, MD, Litt.D.
Harvard Medical School
Rafael Campo, MA, MD, Litt.D. was born in 1964
in Dover, New Jersey. A graduate of Amherst College and Harvard Medical
School, he currently teaches and practices general internal medicine
at Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in
Boston, where his medical practice serves mostly Latinos, gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgendered
people, and people with HIV infection.
He is the author of The Other Man Was Me (Arte
Público Press, Houston, 1994), which won the 1993 National Poetry
Series Award; What the Body Told (Duke University Press, Durham, 1996),
which won a Lambda Literary Award for Poetry; and The Poetry of Healing:
A Doctor's Education in Empathy, Identity, and Desire (W.W. Norton,
New York, 1997), a collection of essays now available in paperback under
the title The Desire to Heal, which also won a Lambda Literary Award,
for memoir. His poetry and prose have appeared in many major anthologies,
including Best American Poetry 1995 (Scribner, New York, 1995), Things
Shaped in Passing: More "Poets for Life" Writing from the
AIDS Pandemic (Persea, New York, 1996), Currents in the Dancing River:
Contemporary Latino Fiction, Nonfiction, and Poetry (Harcourt Brace,
New York, 1994), and Gay Men at the Millennium (Putnam, New York, 1997);
and in numerous prominent periodicals, including DoubleTake, JAMA, the
Kenyon Review, The Lancet, the Los Angeles Times, The Nation, the New
England Journal of Medicine, the New York Times Magazine, The New Republic,
Out, the Paris Review, The Progressive, Salon.com, Slate.com, the Threepenny
Review, and the Washington Post Book World.
His work has also been featured on the National
Endowment for the Arts website and on National Public Radio. With the
support of a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation fellowship, he wrote Diva
(Duke University Press, 1999), which was a finalist for the National
Book Critics Circle Award, the Paterson Poetry Prize, and Lambda Literary
Awards for poetry. He is a recipient of the Annual Achievement Award
from the National Hispanic Academy of Arts and Sciences and a Pushcart
Prize, and he has served as Visiting Writer at Amherst College, George
A. Miller Endowment Visiting Scholar at the University of Illinois,
Champagne-Urbana and Fanny Hurst Visiting Poet at Brandeis University.
He has lectured widely, with recent appearances at the Lannan Foundation,
the Library of Congress, the 92nd Street Y, and other prestigious venues.
He is also the recipient of an honorary Doctor of Literature degree
from Amherst College. His newest collection of poetry, Landscape with
Human Figure, was published in April 2002, and won the Gold Medal from
ForeWord in poetry. In August of 2003, W.W. Norton published The Healing
Art: A Doctor's Black Bag of Poetry, new essays on poetry and healing.
Dr. Campo believes that, “Soul-numbing
managed care and mind-boggling technological advancement seem to have
conspired to distance doctors from patients.” Literature, including
poetry, can be effective in restoring empathy to the doctor-patient
relationship.
Read the Medical Humanities article by Rafael
Campo, in the 7 Sept issue of JAMA, "A Piece of My Mind".
vol. 294, pp. 1009-1011.
www.rafaelcampo.com
November 2, 2005
Jack Coulehan, MD, MPH, Director
The Institute for Medicine in Contemporary Society
Jack Coulehan, MD, MPH is the Director of the
Institute for Medicine in Contemporary Society; and Professor of Medicine
and Preventive Medicine at the State University of New York at Stony
Brook, where he chairs the Ethics Consultation Service at University
Hospital . His contributions to the medical literature include epidemiological
studies and clinical research, as well as essays on physician-patient
communication, empathy, medical pedagogy, clinical ethics, and literature
in medicine. Jack's poems and stories have appeared in major literary
magazines and medical journals in the United States , Canada , England
, and Australia ; and his work is widely anthologized. His collections
of poetry include The Knitted Glove (1991), First Photographs of Heaven
(1994), The Heavenly Ladder (2001), and Medicine Stone (2002). His other
books include The Medical Interview: Mastering Skills for Clinical Practice
(4 th edition, 2001), a best selling text on the clinician-patient relationship;
Blood and Bone (co-edited with Angela Belli, 1998); Chekhov's Doctors
(2003); and the forthcoming Second Opinion (University of Iowa, 2006)
Jack's honors and awards include fellowships from the Pennsylvania Council
for the Arts (1988) and National Endowment for the Humanities (1989);
the American College of Physicians Poetry Award (1997), the American
Nurses Association's award for best book (1998), the Merck Fellowship
at Yaddo (1999); and the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative
Medicine award for distinction in the humanities (2004).
April 14, 2005
William A. Grana, MD, MPH
Professor and Head, Orthopaedic Surgery
The University Physicians, The University of Arizona College of Medicine
Dr. Grana received his medical degree from Harvard
University in 1968. He completed his residency at Barnes Hospital, Washington
University, St. Louis in 1975 and a fellowship in sports medicine from
the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center in 1976. He was board
certified in orthopaedic surgery in 1976. He received a master’s
degree in public health administration and policy from the University
of Oklahoma in 1995.
From 1975 to 2000 he was on the faculty of the
University of Oklahoma College of Medicine, including clinical professor
of Orthopaedics and director of sports medicine. Dr. Grana was also
an orthopaedic consultant to Oklahoma State University, Oklahoma City
University and the Texas Ranger’s AAA baseball team, the Oklahoma
Redhawks.
He was a physician member of the U.S. Olympic
Committee’s 1985 Winter World University Games Team in Bulluno
and Cortina, Italy; a member of the 1986 Olympic Festival medical staff
in Houston, Texas; head physician for the United States Team at the
1987 Pan American Games in Indianapolis, Indiana; and a member of the
USOC’s medical staff at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea.
Nationally, he has assumed the role of President Elect for the American
Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine and is the Editor-in-Chief for
the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons educational website called
Orthopaedic Knowledge Online.
He is a consultant to the Chicago White Sox and
a team physician for their Tucson training camps. He is also an orthopaedic
consultant to the University of Arizona Athletic Department and regularly
provides care to University of Arizona athletes.
Dr. Grana’s current professional interests
include sports-related problems that affect the knee, shoulder, ankle
and elbow.
November 3, 2004
Timothy E. Quill, MD
Professor of Medicine, Psychiatry, and Medical Humanities
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry.
Timothy E. Quill, M.D. is a Professor of Medicine,
Psychiatry, and Medical Humanities at the University of Rochester School
of Medicine and Dentistry. He is also the Director of the Center for
Palliative Care and Clinical Ethics, Director of the Program for Biopsychosocial
Studies, and palliative care consultant in Rochester, New York.
Dr. Quill has published and lectured widely about
various aspects of the doctor-patient relationship, with special focus
on end-of-life decision making, including delivering bad news, nonabandonment,
discussing palliative care earlier, and exploring last-resort options.
He is the author of several books on end-of life, including Physician-Assisted
Dying: The Case for Palliative Care and Patient Choice (Johns Kopkins
University Press, 2004), Caring for Patients at the End of Life: Facing
an Uncertain Future Together (Oxford University Press, 2001) , and A
Midwife Through the Dying Process:Stories of Healing and Hard Choices
at the End of Life (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996) , and numerous
articles published in major medical journals including “Death
and Dignity: A Case of Individualized Decision Making” published
in the New England Journal of Medicine. Dr. Quill was the lead physician
plaintiff in the New York State legal case challenging the law prohibiting
physician-assisted death that was heard in 1997 by the U.S. Supreme
Court (Quill v. Vacco).
Dr. Quill received his undergraduate degree from
Amherst College (1971), and his M.D. from the University of Rochester
(1976). He completed his Internal Medicine residency in 1979 and a Fellowship
in Medicine/Psychiatry Liaison in 1981, both from the University of
Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry. Dr. Quill is a Fellow in
the American College of Physicians, an ABHPM certified Palliative Care
consultant, and a founding member of the American Academy on Physician
and Patient.
Contact Information:
Palliative Care Program
University of Rochester Medical Center
601 Elmwood Avenue, Box 601
Rochester , NY 14642
Phone: 585-273-1154 Fax: 585-275-7403
E-mail: timothy_quill@urmc.rochester.edu
April 14 , 2004
John Stone, MD,
Professor of Medicine (Cardiology) Emeritus
Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia.
John Stone, MD is Professor of Medicine (Cardiology)
Emeritus at Emory University School of Medicine. For 19 years he was
Director of Admissions and Associate Dean. Prior to that, he worked
in cardiology at Grady Hospital , where he founded the program in Emergency
Medicine, now a full department in the School of Medicine . He has taught
often for Emory College through the years, including the British Summer
Studies Program in Oxford , England (Creative Writing and Literature
and Medicine).
Born in Jackson , Mississippi , Dr. Stone graduated
from Millsaps College , then received his M.D. degree from Washington
University School of Medicine. He trained in Medicine and Cardiology
at the University of Rochester and Emory University , joining the Emory
faculty in 1969. Dr. Stone has three times been selected Best Clinical
Professor at Emory and has given the Graduation Address for the School
of Medicine four times. He received the Thomas Jefferson Award from
Emory (1983) and the Emory University Scholar / Teacher Award (1990).
In 1987, he received the Theobald Smith Award, the highest academic
award of Albany Medical College , for "distinguished service to
mankind in the fields of science, medicine, and teaching." In April
1996, he received the Nicholas E. Davies Memorial Scholar Award from
the American College of Physicians for scholarly activities in the realm
of the humanities. Dr. Stone received the Georgia Governor’s Award
in the Humanities in 1992. In 2000, the Medical Alumni Association honored
Dr. Stone with the Evangeline T. Papageorge Distinguished Faculty Award
for excellence in teaching. Dr. Stone has received honorary degrees
from Miami University , Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine,
and Albany Medical College . In April 2003, he received the Mastership
designation (MACP) from The American College of Physicians.
Louisiana State University Press publishes Stone's
poetry: THE SMELL OF MATCHES (1972); IN ALL THIS RAIN (1980); RENAMING
THE STREETS (1985); WHERE WATER BEGINS (1998). MUSIC FROM APARTMENT
8 : New and Selected Poems, will be published by LSU in 2004. His work
has twice received a Literature Award from the Mississippi Institute
of Arts and Letters (1986 and 1999). (Former winners include Walker
Percy, Ellen Gilchrist, and Barry Hannah.)
IN THE COUNTRY OF HEARTS, a book of new and collected
essays, was originally published by Dell and reprinted by LSU Press
(1996). Most of these essays appeared first in The New York Times Magazine,
others in Journal of the American Medical Association, Discover, MD
Magazine.
Stone is co-editor (with Drs. Richard Reynolds,
Lois Nixon, and Delese Wear) of ON DOCTORING, an anthology of Literature
and Medicine (Simon and Schuster). The book is presented annually as
a gift from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to students entering
U.S. medical schools; the book is now in its 3rd edition. More than
200, 000 copies of ON DOCTORING have been distributed.
Stone’s work has appeared in such publications
as Poetry, The American Scholar, The New York Quarterly, The Georgia
Review, The Southern Review, New England Review, and Poetry Northwest.
His work has been widely anthologized, including The Norton Introduction
to Literature and Contemporary Southern Poetry.
Stone has read and lectured at celebratory events
at well over 100 institutions in 39 states and given named lectures
at Yale, Stanford, Tulane, Vanderbilt, Brown, and The Mayo Clinic. Stone
wrote the libretto for CANTICLES OF TIME, a choral symphony (music by
Samuel Jones) that won the Music Award of the Mississippi Institute
of Arts & Letters (1991). In February 2001, Stone and the pianist,
William Ransom, performed a program called “The Poet and The Pianist”
at New York 's Carnegie Recital Hall.
Articles about John Stone and his writing appear
in the following journals: The Lancet (Vol. 349, p. 275, January 25,
1997) and The American Journal of Medicine (Vol. 101, No. 4, p. 447,
October 1996). His work was a front-page feature in the Wall Street
Journal on March 3, 1998.
March 31 and April 1, 2004
Rita Charon, MD, PhD,
Professor of Clinical Medicine
Founder and Director of the Program in Narrative Medicine at
the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University in New
York City.
The 2004 Medical Humanities Lecture will feature
Rita Charon, MD, PhD. She will visit our campus 31 March and 1 April
2004. Dr. Charon, a Harvard Medical School graduate, holds a PhD from
Columbia University, where she studied the work of Henry James. Recently
featured on NPR (28 October 2003, Morning Edition with Bob Edwards),
Dr. Charon here explains her innovative teaching methods for medical
students and residents: the concept of parallel charts. This way of
keeping charts gives students an opportunity to record a regular chart,
but also, and parallel with that, a chart of their emotional reactions
to the patients they see.
Dr. Charon is Professor of Clinical Medicine
as well as Founder and Director of the Program in Narrative Medicine
at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University in
New York City. She is a general internist in practice in the Associates
of Internal Medicine in Presbyterian Hospital. She has designed and
directed Columbia's teaching programs in medical interviewing, humanities
and medicine, and narrative medicine. She edits the journal Literature
and Medicine (Johns Hopkins), and co-edited Stories Matter : The Role
of Narrative in Medical Ethics (Routledge, 2002). Her essays and reviews
have appeared in the Annals of Internal Medicine, Journal of the American
Medical Association, Literature and Medicine, The Lancet, and the New
England Journal of Medicine. She has recently been awarded a Guggenheim
Fellowship, and is working on a book titled Narrative Medicine to be
published by Oxford University Press.
Here is an excerpt from Dr. Charon's article
in the American Journal of the Medical Sciences (May 2000, vol. 319,
number 5, pp. 285ff.). She writes about literature and medicine:
“Many great literary texts, King Lear,
The Divine Comedy, Middlemarch, The Wings of the Dove, The Magic Mountain,
The Sound and the Fury – are attempts to make sense, artistically,
of illness and death. The tradition of the physician-writer –
John Keats, Francois Rabelais, Anton Chekhov, William Carlos Williams,
Walker Percy, Richard Selzer, Ethan Canin, among many others, - reflects
the overlap between the methods and concerns of literature and medicine.
Ultimately, both literature and medicine follow individual characters
or patients from their origins to their destinies, answering, in somewhat
different ways, the urgent and universal questions of human beings,
“Where do I come from?” and “Where am I going?”
January 26, 2004
W. Kenneth Holditch
Research Professor Emeritus
University of New Orleans
W. Kenneth Holditch is a Research Professor Emeritus
from the University of New Orleans, where he taught for 32 years. He
is the founding editor of The Tennessee Williams Journal and has published
numerous short stories, poems, periodical articles, and critical essays
on William Faulkner, Tennessee Williams, Lillian Hellman, Walker Percy,
Richard Ford, Anne Rice, and many others. Holditch was a founder of
the Tennessee Williams Festival in New Orleans, Tennessee Williams Festival
in Clarksdale, Mississippi, and the Pirate's Alley Faulkner Society,
and the Words and Music Festival. In 1974 he created a French Quarter
literary walk and still conducts the tours. Long term plans include
a biography of John Kennedy Toole as well as a novel about growing up
in the Mississippi. His full-length play on Tennessee Williams has been
given two staged readings by Irma Duricko at Lincoln Center in New York
and is still a work in progress. His recorded narration was used as
a voice-over in an off-Broadway production produced and directed by
Erma Duricko, Derelicts and Dreamers .
In 1997 Holditch was keynote speaker at the Great
Lakes The-atre Festival in Cleveland, Ohio, and has lectured extensively
in the U.S. and Europe on Tennessee Williams and other Southern authors.
He has participated in symposia at the Alley Theatre in Houston, Tennessee
Williams Symposium at the University Alabama and the University of Minnesota.
He is an annual speaker at the Hartford Stage for their Tennessee Williams
Marathon. In recent years, he had concentrated much of his attention
on Williams. His works on the playwright include a monograph about Williams
in New Orleans, The Last Frontier of Bohemia . He co-edited with critic
Mel Gussow the two Library of America volumes (2000) that include thirty-three
plays of Tennessee Williams. He collaborated with Richard Freeman Leavitt
on Tennessee Williams and the South , a photo biography of the playwright,
which was published in 2002.
He was awarded the Louisiana Endowment of the
Humanities Lifetime Achievements Award for 2001. He and Marda Burton
have recently completed their book on Galatoire's restaurant, which
will be published in November, 2003
November 19, 2003
Abraham Verghese, MD, MFA, DSC(Hon.), Director
The Center of Medical Humanities and Ethics and Professor of Medicine
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.
Abraham Verghese, Director of the Center of Medical
Humanities and Ethics and Professor of Medicine, University of Texas
Health Science Center at San Antonio, graduated from Madras (India)
Medical College in 1979, completed his residency in internal medicine
at East Tennessee State University, and his fellowship in infectious
diseases at Boston University. He received an M.F.A. from the Iowa Writers
Workshop in 1991.
Dr. Verghese went to Texas Tech, El Paso, in
1991 as a professor of medicine and chief of infectious diseases. He
is board-certified in internal medicine, infectious diseases, pulmonary
medicine and geriatrics. In 2000 he was appointed Grover E. Murray Distinguished
Professor of Medicine. He has received the President's medal for teaching
from Texas Tech University, many student teaching awards, the Nicholas
Davies Award from the American College of Physicians, and an honorary
Doctor of Science degree from Swarthmore College.
He has published extensively in the area of pneumonia,
infections in the elderly, HIV infection and on topics related to medical
humanities. He has been the commencement speaker at Johns Hopkins, Loyola
University, Medical College of Georgia, the University of Connecticut,
Northwestern University and UT San Antonio.
Dr. Verghese is the author of My Own Country:
A Doctor's Story, a book that was nominated for the National Book Critic's
Circle Award and was made into a television movie for Showtime. That
book is now being taught at many medical schools across the country.
His second book is The Tennis Partner: A Doctor's Story of Friendship
and Loss, which was also a national bestseller and is being made into
a movie. His work has appeared in The New Yorker, Esquire, Sports Illustrated,
Granta, TALK, The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Atlantic
Monthly.