Medicine@Yale publication

Medicine@Yale.

September/October 2007   Volume 3 Issue 5

Inside this issue

Cover stories

Giving back

$23 million grant enables fresh look at stress and addiction

The many sides of stress and addiction

Lightening the load for the physicians of the future

Partnerships

Transatlantic team probes kidney’s role in hypertension

Grants & contracts

People

Lifelines: James Duncan

Lyme disease expert is new section chief and Hughes investigator

Dean for education is appointed Jockers Professor

Student-run clinic wins Ivy Award for community service

Out & about

Awards & honors

Science

A joint effort to tackle obesity and diabetes

Growing spare parts for sick children’s hearts

Advances: Breaking away from child abuse? | For cardiac surgery, your brain on ice | Mom was right: eat your vegetables! | “Touch-me-not” tubes kill bacteria



image pdf icon

Download this issue in PDF format

Student-run free clinic wins Ivy Award for community service

Working at HAVEN Free Clinic has given medical student Emma Barber, who serves as associate director, the chance to meet patients who are “some of the most grateful, humble, amazing people,” she says. Open each Saturday, HAVEN (Health Care, Advocacy, Volunteerism, Education and Neighborhood) offers primary care, social services and free specialty referrals. Since the student-run center opened in November 2005, more than 200 patients have received free medical care.

Ivy Award

Medical students who launched a free clinic in the Fair Haven neighborhood of New Haven received an Ivy Award last spring for their efforts. (From left) Maggie Samuels-Kalow, Ryan Hebert, Mallika Mendu, Christopher Janson, Sara Crager and Andrew Simpson received the award from Yale President Richard Levin.

Along with the gratitude of the patients, HAVEN received thanks this spring in the form of an Elm-Ivy Award, given to people and organizations that further partnership between New Haven and Yale. The awards were established in 1979 with the support of Fenmore Seton, a 1938 Yale College alumnus, and his wife Phyllis, who established an endowment at the Community Foundation for Greater New Haven. Elm Awards are given to members of the New Haven community, and Ivy Awards are given to Yale staff, faculty and students.

HAVEN is based at the Fair Haven Community Health Center and is run by students in public health, nursing, medicine and the Physician Associate Program with assistance from undergraduates. The students work with attending physicians from the School of Medicine, the community and attending clinicians from the Fair Haven Community Health Center.

Although it was designed to provide temporary free care for patients while helping them obtain medical coverage, many patients—a large number of whom are undocumented workers with no health insurance—see the clinic as their primary care provider. HAVEN offers free medications, Saturday hours and a friendly atmosphere, Barber says. image

Jump to top.
Jump to top.

Copyright 2006, Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved. Email comments or suggestions to: editor@info.med.yale.edu