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In search of medicines shifting frontier The forward edge of medical knowledge may be an elusive target for teachers, students and clinicians. That doesnt bother Herb Chase, the schools new deputy dean for education. By John Curtis Herbert S. Chase Jr., M.D., believes in bringing medicine to what he calls the edge, the constantly expanding outer limit of medical knowledge or the most detailed explanation [of a given topic] that we have right now. It is to the edge that doctors must now turn in treating their patients, says the new deputy dean for education. And as the edge of knowledge advances with each new discovery, medical students must learn how to find and evaluate it. It was the edge that brought Chase to Yale. Last April he came to the Cushing/Whitney Library to talk about the Internet as a research tool in medicine. In the audience were at least two members of the search committee for the deputy deans position. At the time Chase had no plans to leave Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, where he has spent 22 absolutely fabulous years and received high honors for his teaching, including the universitys Presidential Teaching Award. The lure of spreading his vision for education across a broader canvas proved too great to resist, however. On July 1, he will formally begin his Yale duties. Until then Chase plans to visit New Haven once a week to meet with faculty and students. Chase will continue to live in New York City, where his wife is a lawyer and one of his sons is still in high school. He has another son in college. Medical education, Chase says, has become all consuming. He used to dabble in photography and play classical guitar, bassoon and clarinet. He still goes to the opera but has little time for activities outside his work and family. Staff Writer John Curtis visited Chase at Columbia recently. An edited transcript of their conversation follows. What
are the challenges facing medical education, around the country
and at Yale? One of the challenges of medical education is teaching the content at the right time. We have a pretty good view of what we need to teach. The problem is finding the right spot. We often teach genetics concepts in the first year, which is appropriate. Then we teach abnormal genetic makeup in the second year, and that is more suitable to the third and fourth year. A good deal of the basic science would be much more interesting to the student in the third or fourth year. Most medical schools are behind electronically. Say youre a patient and Im your doctor. I have core knowledge, which allows me to figure out what youve got. It also allows me to find information in the library. Now my role is not to look into my brain and see whats up there. Thats ludicrous. Thats likely to reveal old information. I go to electronic search engines right here at my fingertips. Finding the edge is a skill. Assessing the edge is a skill. Medical students must be provided adequate computing facilities. The curriculum must demand that they use computers. At
Columbia, you directed interdisciplinary basic science courses
for first-year students. Do you plan to encourage similar courses
at Yale? For a long time, the national boards were given in June of the second year. There was no compelling reason to have the students start the clinical years in March, April or May because their minds would not be on the task. Thats all changed. You can hook up online and make a date to take the boards in January. That alone, as absurd as it may sound, may be the linchpin of the whole reorganization nationwide in terms of fully integrating medical educationstarting the clerkships earlier, starting the clinical material earlier and then bringing basic science into the clinical years. Traditionally,
departments have determined course content. How do you secure
departmental cooperation in integrating courses? The departments also play a critical role in helping the student develop medical decision-making skills. Why do we teach basic science? We obviously teach basic science so we know the molecules of the body and how they work. But theres a much more important lesson from basic science, one that is long-lasting. We teach basic science so that the student learns the scientific method and how to apply the scientific method at the bedside. Yale has a leg up on everyone because it has the thesis. This, in spades, gets the student up to speed in terms of analyzing and assessing data. We need to divide the curriculum into two equally important units. One is content. You cannot proceed in medicine without a core of knowledge. A second, equally important goal is to provide process, to find ways for the student to master the scientific method. How
can technology help us gain access to the latest knowledge derived
from advances in research at the molecular level and the mapping
of the human genome? How
do you educate physicians to become more than technicians, and
how do you ensure that they treat the patient, not just the disease? Graduates leave medical school feeling comfortable with part of the patient rather than the whole patient. If you come to me with heart disease, am I more likely to give you a medicine than send you for an operation because I am an internist? If you go to a surgeon are you more likely to be operated on than receive medicine? Activities that focus on the whole patient need to be built into the curriculum. Yale has this fantastic new elective called Womens Health. Its very successful. The focus is on the person. Yale could devise a number of short, meaningful whole-patient views of medicine. Integration of the basic sciences reinforces the whole-patient view as well. If one studies only the physiology of the system or the cell biology of the system, we are deconstructing. We could reconstruct these disciplines into a functional view of the whole patient as we rotate through the body. How
can you instill in the faculty the notion that teaching, as well
as clinical or research excellence, is a path to recognition
and advancement? We need to define the career path for teachers. Who will lead the educational programs when we all retire? Faculty development of great educators is as important as the development of great scientists and clinicians. Yale has created a clinician-educator track and that is a major step forward. This will guarantee that Yale remains one of the great medical universities in the world. YM
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