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David Coleman, Nancy Angoff, Herbert Chase and James Jamieson were among
the faculty helping students with their white coats.


Forrester Lee, assistant dean for multicultural affairs, welcomed Caleb
Korngold to Yale.

Hasani Baharanyi donned his white coat for the first time.

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A call to professionalism
As 100 new medical students begin their education, a physician defines
the principles of their calling.
At the beginning of the White Coat Ceremony in August, Dean Robert J.
Alpern, M.D., assured the 100 members of the Class of 2009 that they were
where they belong. “The admissions committee did not make any careless
errors in admitting you to our medical school,” he told the crowd
in Harkness Auditorium. “If we do our jobs, and you do yours, years
from now students will walk these halls wondering if they belong in the
same institution as the Class of 2009.”

Before they received their white coats, keynote speaker David L. Coleman,
M.D., HS ’80, professor and interim chair of medicine, noted that
the ceremony started in this country in 1993 as an effort to “acknowledge
the professional ideals that are the essence of being a physician.

“Professionalism,” Coleman continued, “drives how we
live, how we aspire and how we learn. … I have come to believe that
it is the inseparable weaving of scientific discipline with humanism that
is at the core of professionalism. We cannot and will not be humane physicians
without employing science. And we cannot and will not be medically competent
physicians without employing humanism.”

The principles of professionalism rest on the pillars of nonmalevolence,
beneficence, patient autonomy, justice, inquisitiveness, competence and
teaching, Coleman said. They require, among other things, that physicians
do no harm, advocate on behalf of patients rather than themselves, strive
to do good, respect decisions made by patients and seek equity and justice
in the delivery of care. “It should deeply bother everyone in this
room that 48 million Americans are without some form of health insurance,”
he said.

In concluding, Coleman cautioned the students to prepare to make sacrifices.
“Medicine will require a great deal from each of you, and very importantly,
it will give back a great deal to each of you,” he said. “If
you can find your balance while fulfilling the ideals of professionalism,
you will attain the immeasurable and enduring rewards that your new profession
offers. I hope your white coat will always inspire your aspirations and
your ideals, from this day forward.”

—John Curtis
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Back row, Fabienne Meier-Abt, Katherine Uyhagi, Ellen Vollmer, Martin
Dominguez and Corey Frucht; front row, Maya Kotas, Rachel Rosenstein,
Julie Xanthopoulos and Sara Crager. |
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John Forrest helped Rebecca Bruccoleri on with her white coat. |
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Dean Robert Alpern welcomed Michelle Collins to the medical school.
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Titilope Oduyebo after group portraits outside the Sterling Hall of Medicine.
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