Medicine@Yale publication

Medicine@Yale.

Novmeber/December 2008   Volume 4 Issue 5

Inside this issue

Cover stories

No one loved Yale more than Nick
Nicholas Spinelli narrates “Company C and Friends,” a film about his Class of 1944.

Sixty years on, the last wishes of a prisoner of war are realized

Public health studies to be advanced by two major new grants

People

Expert on race’s role in medical care wins fellowship

Lifelines: Leo Cooney

Women’s health advocate honored for distinguished leadership
RSS - Women's Health Research at Yale: factoring in gender

Head Start founder is honored for lifetime of leadership

Scientist lauded for studies of dormant stem cells as therapy

Psychologist, community leader receives Yale’s highest honor

Out & about

Science

Asthma: from mouse to man and back again
RSS - A simple blood test might identify most severe asthma

Advances: Cellular "antennae" guide developments | Blood vessel gene affects brain region | Getting a grip on the opposable thumb | A novel fix-it kit for faulty genes
RSS - You can't change your genes—or can you?

Health

Technology tackles difficult digestive problems

New curriculum focuses on diverse issues arising at life’s end

Wiring up hospitals to speedily treat stroke

Partnerships

Grants & contracts



image pdf icon

Download this issue in PDF format

September 6: Transplantation and Organ Donation Awareness Fair.

June 17: A celebration of the DONALD J. COHEN PROFESSORSHIP IN CHILD PSYCHIATRY was held at the Child Study Center (CSC). Cohen, a pioneer in child psychiatry, was Sterling Professor of Child Psychiatry, Pediatrics and Psychology, and director of the CSC from 1983 until his death in 2001. More than 200 friends, corporations and foundations contributed more than $2.7 million to establish the Cohen Professorship. The first holder of the new professorship is Associate Professor Matthew W. State, M.D., Ph.D., an expert on the genetics of child psychiatric disorders and mental retardation. 1. From left: Phyllis M. Cohen, Ed.D., Donald Cohen’s widow and associate clinical professor in the Child Study Center, and Carol Schaefer, M.S.W., former clinical professor and longtime associate of the CSC. 2. From left: Judit Ungar, president of the Tourette Syndrome Association (TSA), Thomas Israel, a 1966 alumnus of Yale College, State and Sue Levi-Pearl, TSA vice president for medical and scientific programs.

June 17: Donald J. Cohen Professorship in Child Psychiatry


September 6: Transplantation and Organ Donation Awareness Fair.

August 26: At the annual WHITE COAT CEREMONY, members of the School of Medicine’s newly admitted Class of 2012 donned physician’s jackets, formally marking their entrance into the medical profession. 1. Anant Mandawat is congratulated by Richard Belitsky, M.D. (back to camera), the Harold W. Jockers Associate Professor of Psychiatry and deputy dean for education. 2. First-year students (from left) Amy Schoenfeld, Rany Woo, Alisse Hauspurg, Alexandra Ristow, Stacey Kallem and Regina Myers. 3. (From left) Oluwatosin Onibokun, Raj Chovatiya and Samrawit Goshu. 4. Excited family members snapped pictures of the assembled class in front of Sterling Hall of Medicine.

White coat Ceremony

White coat Ceremony


September 6: Transplantation and Organ Donation Awareness Fair.

September 6: The Yale-New Haven Transplantation Center sponsored a TRANSPLANTATION AND ORGAN DONATION AWARENESS FAIR on the New Haven Green at which organ recipients and families of donors, including living donors, shared their stories to encourage members of the community to donate organs for the estimated 100,000 American patients awaiting transplantation surgery. 1. (From left) New Haven Mayor John DeStefano Jr. and Marna P. Borgstrom, president and CEO of Yale-New Haven Hospital (YNHH), listen to a speaker. 2. Borgstrom with Patsy Twohill, YNHH employee and heart transplant recipient. 3. Heart transplant recipient Pete Kenyon.


September 9: A ceremony at the Oslo Concert Hall in Norway.

September 9: In a ceremony at the Oslo Concert Hall in Norway, Pasko Rakic, M.D., Ph.D., the Dorys McConnell Duberg Professor of Neurobiology and professor of neurology, was among three recipients of the inaugural KAVLI PRIZE IN NEUROSCIENCE. (From left) Sten Grillner, Ph.D., professor of neuroscience at Sweden’s Karolinska Institute, Thomas M. Jessell, Ph.D., professor of biochemistry and molecular biophysics and Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at Columbia University and Rakic accept Kavli Prize medals from His Royal Highness Crown Prince Haakon Magnus of Norway.


Jump to top.
Jump to top.

Copyright 2008, Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved. Email comments or suggestions to: editor@info.med.yale.edu