Medicine@Yale Magazine

Medicine@Yale.

June/July 2005   Volume 1 Issue 1

Inside this issue

Cover stories

The big questions

New Kavli center for neuroscience research will untangle mysteries of the human brain

Molecular gamble

Yale physiologist elected to National Academy of Sciences

Trailblazer

Magazine innovator celebrates 101 years with gifts for his medical school “family”

People

Lifelines: Expert on gene-swapping joined molecular biology at its very beginnings

For new deputy dean, focus is on top-notch care, service to patients

Kidney researchers celebrate a banner year

Unconventional physician-filmmaker receives “genius” grant

New HHMI investigator says appointment liberates his science

Awards & honors

Science

Analysis of genome reveals clues to macular degeneration

Vaccinating wildlife suggests a new strategy in continuing battle against Lyme disease

Advances:  Salmonella “syringe” ready for its close-up | Possible cancer inhibitor found in worm study

Health

A heart is repaired, the patient grows up: Program helps growing number of adult survivors of congenital disease

More integrated care for cancer patients, collaboration of scientists and clinicians are goals of proposed new YNHH building

Advances: New test easier for patients to swallow. | Study finds payoff in wider HIV testing

Partnerships

Pfizer and Yale join forces for research and education

A long, fruitful collaboration: Bristol-Myers Squibb and Yale

Drive to cure blindness hits $5 million

Class of 1954 makes a lasting impact with scholarship gift

Grants and contracts

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Unconventional physician-filmmaker receives “genius” grant

When Gretchen K. Berland, M.D., embarked on a research project in 2001 aimed at improving health care for the disabled, she took an unusual approach: she gave video cameras to three people in wheelchairs and asked them to record their lives.

Berland, an assistant professor of medicine who had worked as a producer for public television before medical school, hoped to make an intimate, first-person film that would give physicians and policymakers a fresh perspective on the day-in, day-out realities of coping with life in a wheelchair. The film that resulted, titled Rolling, won the Grand Jury Prize for best documentary at the Lake Placid Film Festival.

Gretchen K. Berland, M.D.

Gretchen Berland

Still, one of Berland’s mentors, Harlan M. Krumholz, M.D., director of the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program at Yale, wondered whether Berland’s maverick style might deny her work the academic recognition he thought it deserved.

He needn’t have worried. Berland’s work was validated in a big way last fall, when she won one of the John D. and Catherine T.MacArthur Foundation’s famed “genius” grants.

“It’s very empowering to know an organization like MacArthur believes in your work,” says Berland, an assistant professor of medicine who serves on the core faculty of the Clinical Scholars Program.

Berland says that her film adds new perspective to the doctor-patient relationship, which she believes is undermined by the typical 15-minute office visit. The subjects of Rolling are “real and dimensional,” she says, and we see their disability in the context of their whole lives.

Berland says she receives 100 inquiries about Rolling every week, and she has answered more than 7,000 requests for videotapes from throughout the world.

She used to charge $15 for tapes to cover her costs, but since winning the $500,000, no-strings-attached MacArthur, she has been distributing copies for free.

Berland is grateful for the openminded encouragement she has received at Yale.“My work is very nontraditional,” she says, “and they knew that when I came here. Not many other universities would have supported that.”

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