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BOOKSHELF
Flashcards for the boards
BOOK NOTES
Book notes
IN CIRCULATION
Library keeps a watchful eye on what
works on the Web
ON CAMPUS
Paul Berg
Mariale Hardiman
Robert Ballard
Rachel Cohen

Christoph Lee and Suzanne Baron delayed their clinical clerkships in order
to develop a set of flashcards to help medical students prepare for Step
1 of the Medical Licensing Exam. The cards are now being marketed by McGraw-Hill.

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Flashcards for the
boards
How two frustrated students decided to make studying for the Step 1
exam easier.
By Cathy Shufro

The project began after a bridge game in mid-January 2003, when two medical
students were commiserating about preparing for the board exam. Bridge
partners Suzanne J. Baron and Christoph I. Lee were frustrated by studying
for Step 1 of the United States Medical Licensing Examination—no
single source seemed to provide the information they needed about pathology.

To assemble the basic facts about more than 300 diseases covered in the
pathology section of the exam, the two second-year students leafed through
a half-dozen review books and textbooks. Somebody ought to make the job
easier, they reasoned. And so, although they don’t bet on their
bridge games, Baron and Lee decided to gamble: they would develop a study
aid, a set of flashcards, and they would sell it to a publisher.

Their efforts paid off. McGraw-Hill liked the idea, and three months after
Lange FlashCards: Pathology came on the market last summer, more
than 3,000 sets had sold. McGraw-Hill may translate the cards into Chinese,
Greek, Italian, Spanish and Turkish for students in international medical
schools who will take the Step 1 before applying for residencies in the
United States.

Ironically, preparing the manuscript meant even more of the hard work
that Baron and Lee had complained about. “I have a stack of review
books this high in my apartment,” says Baron with a laugh, holding
her hand waist high.

The flashcards cover disorders in 13 systems in the human body, from the
heart to the immune system. To put the facts in context, Lee and Baron
wrote a clinical vignette for the front of each card, and facts about
the disease on the back. As Lee and Baron worked, they realized that students
would find the cards useful not only in preparing for the boards, but
also for studying pathology when it was taught in class. Two of their
professors, John H. Sinard, M.D., Ph.D., HS ’93, FW ’94, associate
professor of pathology and ophthalmology, and Deborah Dillon, M.D. ’92,
associate research scientist in pathology (now at Harvard), checked their
manuscript for accuracy.

To find time for the project, Lee and Baron asked Nancy R. Angoff, M.P.H.
’81, M.D. ’90, HS ’93, associate dean for student affairs,
for permission to postpone their clinical clerkships, which their classmates
began in June 2003. Angoff agreed that the project was consistent with
the philosophy of the Yale System. “Students are encouraged to find
the things they’re passionate about and explore them in depth,”
she said. “I love the fact that they saw a need and they were going
to be the ones to fill it.” (This was not the first effort by Yale
students or residents to prepare a study guide. Tao Le, M.D., HS ’03,
co-wrote First Aid for the USMLE Step 1 while a Yale resident,
with the help of students Antony Chu, M.D. ’02, and Esther Choo,
M.D. ’01, who worked on the 1999 edition of the study guide.)

“We owe a lot to the Yale System,” says Lee. Still, when they
saw their friends begin work in the hospital, Baron recalls, “we
felt a little left behind.”

They have something to show for their time: a stack of 286 four-by-six
flashcards, which retail for $29.99. (The authors receive royalties of
10 percent.) As they apply for residencies in internal medicine (Baron)
and diagnostic radiology (Lee), they’re also working on flashcards
for pharmacology and for biochemistry and genetics.

Recently, Baron spotted the cards on a shelf at the Barnes & Noble
bookstore near her home in suburban Boston. “I said, ‘That’s
me!’ That was a huge thrill.”



Bookshelf is a column in Yale Medicine focusing on matters related
to books and authors at the School of Medicine. Send ideas to Cathy Shufro
at cathy.shufro@yale.edu.
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Book notes
The Optimist: Meditations on Medicine
by Howard M. Spiro, M.D., professor emeritus of medicine (Science &
Medicine) This compilation of essays by Spiro, which have appeared
regularly in the pages of Science & Medicine since 1994, ranges
broadly in subject from patients to technology to the state of medicine.
Spiro addresses some recurrent themes: the importance of listening to
the patient, consolation of the patient and the role of the physician
as mediator between technology and patient.

A Doctor’s Visit: Three Novellas & Five
Short Stories
by Siegfried J. Kra, M.D., associate clinical professor of medicine
(Lorenzo Press) These fictionalized stories, based on the author’s
personal history and experiences, explore the emotional lives of doctors
and their patients and bring the realities of the medical profession to
life.

Clinical Nuclear Cardiology: State of the Art and Future Directions,
3rd ed.
by Barry L. Zaret, M.D., the Robert W. Berliner Professor of Medicine,
and George Beller, M.D. (Mosby) This book describes the most recent
developments in technology, instrumentation and radiopharmaceuticals used
in nuclear cardiology applications.

Invisible Cities: A Metaphorical Complex Adaptive
System
by Chloé E. Atreya, Ph.D. ’04, M.D. candidate (Festina
Lente Press) This work of creative nonfiction explores the principles
of complex adaptive systems to demonstrate how art and science inform
each other.

Academia to Biotechnology: Career Changes at
Any Stage
by Jeffrey M. Gimble, M.D. ’82 (Elsevier Academic Press)
This book evaluates the abstract and practical aspects of moving from
a university laboratory to a position in the biotech industry. It shows
the parallels and contrasts between a postdoctoral fellowship and a job
at a biotechnology company, and it provides “how-to” guides
for the preparation of manuscripts, patents and grants.

Viral Encephalitis in Humans
by John Booss, M.D., FW ’71, professor of neurology and laboratory
medicine, and Margaret M. Esiri (ASM Press) The authors provide guidelines
for diagnosing and treating viral encephalitis. Their recommendations
reflect advances in molecular virology, imaging technology and molecular
pharmacology.

Acid Related Diseases: Biology and Treatment, 2nd ed.
by Irvin M. Modlin, M.D., professor of surgery (gastroenterology),
and George Sachs, D.Sc. (Lippincott Williams & Wilkins) This textbook
explores the history, biology and treatment of acid-related diseases,
including gastric and duodenal ulcer disease, gastroesophageal reflux
disease, and the role of H. pylori.

Principles and Practice of Radiation Oncology, 4th ed.
by Carlos A. Perez, M.D., Luther W. Brady, M.D., Edward C. Halperin,
M.D. ’79, and Rupert K. Schmidt-Ullrich, M.D. (Lippincott Williams
& Wilkins) This text is designed to provide a better understanding
of the natural history of cancer, the physical methods of radiation application,
the effects of irradiation on normal tissues and the most judicious ways
in which radiation therapy can be used to treat cancer patients.

From Neuroscience to Neurology: Neuroscience, Molecular Medicine, and
the Therapeutic Transformation of Neurology
by Stephen G. Waxman, Ph.D., M.D., professor and chair of neurology,
pharmacology and neurobiology (Elsevier Academic Press) Containing
chapters by more than 29 internationally recognized authorities, this
book reviews the development of new therapies in neurology from their
inception in the laboratory to their introduction into the clinical world.
It also explores evolving themes and new technologies that offer hope
for even more effective treatments and, ultimately, cures for currently
untreatable disorders of the brain and spinal cord.

A Woman’s Guide to Menopause & Perimenopause
by Mary Jane Minkin, M.D. ’75, HS ’79, clinical professor
of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences, and Carol V. Wright,
Ph.D. (Yale University Press) Drawing on new information from recent
research, this book offers advice for women dealing with physical and
emotional health issues surrounding menopause. Topics include the pros
and cons of hormone replacement therapy; controlling the symptoms of PMS;
and treatments for menopause-related hot flashes, insomnia and depression.

Cut Your Cholesterol: Featuring the Exclusive Live It Down Plan
by David L. Katz, M.D., M.P.H. ’93, associate clinical professor
of public health and medicine, and Debra L. Gordon (Reader’s Digest
Association) With advice about nutrition, physical activity, supplements
and stress-management techniques, this book provides a plan to reduce
cholesterol and lower blood pressure.

Cancer: Principles & Practice of Oncology,
7th ed.
by Vincent T. DeVita Jr., M.D., HS ’66, the Amy and Joseph Perella
Professor of Medicine, Samuel Hellman, M.D., HS ’62, and Steven
A. Rosenberg, M.D., Ph.D. (Lippincott Williams & Wilkins) Acclaimed
as “the ultimate authority on cancer,” this volume reflects
the latest breakthroughs in molecular biology, cancer prevention and multimodality
treatment of every cancer type.

Healthcare for Children on the Autism Spectrum:
A Guide to Medical, Nutritional, and Behavioral Issues
by Fred R. Volkmar, M.D., the Irving B. Harris Professor of Child Psychiatry,
Psychology and Pediatrics in the Child Study Center, and Lisa A. Wiesner,
M.D., HS ’82, FW ’83, assistant clinical professor of pediatrics
(Woodbine House) This book offers parents of children with autism
spectrum disorder information on issues such as sleep problems, unusual
eating habits and impulsive or aggressive behaviors.

Locating Medical History: The Stories and Their
Meanings
edited by Frank Huisman and John Harley Warner, Ph.D., professor and
chair of the Section of the History of Medicine (Johns Hopkins University
Press) At a time when the study of medical history is facing choices
about its future, these scholars explore the discipline’s distant
and recent past in order to rethink its missions and methods today.

Group Psychotherapy and Recovery From Addiction:
Carrying the Message
by Jeffrey D. Roth, M.D. ’78 (Haworth Press) This book examines
recovery, demonstrating the elements of the group process, including free
association, resistance, transference and boundary management, and lets
readers compare and contrast participation in a psychotherapy group and
in a Twelve Step group.

Experiences of Depression: Theoretical, Clinical, and Research Perspectives
by Sidney J. Blatt, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry and psychology (APA
Books) Using clinical examples and empirical investigations, Blatt
demonstrates the value of considering the psychological dimensions of
depression. He identifies two primary sources of depression: feelings
of loneliness and abandonment and feelings of failure and worthlessness.
Understanding these differences helps to elucidate the nature, etiology
and treatment of the disorder.

Field Guide to Internal Medicine
by David S. Smith, M.D., associate clinical professor of medicine,
Lynn E. Sullivan, M.D. ’96, assistant clinical professor of medicine,
and Seonaid F. Hay, M.D., assistant professor of medicine (Lippincott
Williams & Wilkins) This volume offers an overview of internal
medicine, including discussions of pathophysiology, clinical presentation,
diagnosis and management of medical emergencies and the most common diseases
encountered among hospitalized patients.


The descriptions are based on information from the publishers.

Send notices of new books by alumni and faculty to Cheryl Violante, Yale
Medicine, P.O. Box 7612, New Haven, CT 06519-0612, or via e-mail to
cheryl.violante@yale.edu.
In Circulation
Library keeps a watchful eye on what works on the
Web
In days of yore—before the year 2000, that is—libraries generally
set up websites for their patrons “and assumed everyone could use
them without a problem,” recalls Richard Zwies, M.L.I.S., Web services
librarian at the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library.

Those days are over. A new research genre, based on usability studies,
reflects libraries’ growing interest in streamlining their websites.
Usability studies test how easily users can navigate a site, whether their
aim is to scan the contents of the latest issue of a journal, track down
an article or find out if a book is on the shelf. If a study shows that
users are confused, librarians can change labels or reconfigure links.

The new approach has caught on fast. When the Association of Research
Libraries offered an interactive Web-based class on usability studies
last fall, 72 of its 123 member libraries, including Yale, signed up for
the 90-minute session.

“The virtual front door of the library is becoming more important
than our actual, physical front door,” says Zwies. In the 2003-2004
academic year, researchers, physicians, students and other users knocked
on that front door—the Cushing/Whitney home page—more than
4.4 million times. In comparison, people walked into the library 329,000
times that year. Zwies says people use the Web for research because it’s
accessible from almost anywhere, day and night.

Zwies just completed a small usability study of the medical library home
page. He timed five volunteer testers as they tracked down several types
of information. Zwies also counted the number of visitors to the “front
door” for a week: users clicked on it 30,000 times. The most popular
link? Webmail. Zwies actually finds that encouraging, as it suggests that
many people at Yale set their browsers to the library home page. The second
most popular link was to electronic journals.

The study showed that the site is generally easy to navigate, so Zwies
plans only small changes. Even for this minor redesign, which eliminated
redundant links, he sketched a new “wire frame,” Web parlance
for the site’s “bone structure.” He then passed that
on to Web designer Patrick J. Lynch, director of the MedMedia Group at
its-Med, saying, “... it’s like a rough skeleton and Pat puts
flesh on it.” (The home page already has some flesh on it, by the
way: a woodcut of a cadaver, taken from the 16th-century anatomist Andreas
Vesalius’ De Humani Corporis Fabrica. Visit http://info.med.yale.edu/library/.)

Usability testing will be a perennial task, says Zwies. “As Web
technologies arise that might be useful to our patrons’ research,
we will want to test them on human beings. We will be testing and tweaking,
testing and tweaking.”

—Cathy Shufro



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On campus

What role for the states in stem cell research?
When scientists wanted to discuss the safety of recombinant DNA technologies
in the mid-1970s, they convened the Asilomar Conference, where they agreed
on guidelines that would minimize risk while allowing the research to
blossom, said Stanford biochemist Paul Berg, Ph.D. The first researcher
to combine DNA from two different species, Berg shared the 1980 Nobel
Prize in chemistry.

Berg doubts that a conference could resolve the current dispute about
human embryonic stem cell research, because it centers not on science
but on politics, ideology and moral beliefs. The Bush administration limits
federal funding for research to a handful of embryonic stem cell lines,
and Congress may even criminalize some therapeutic stem cell research.
The pending legislation, said Berg in a September talk sponsored by the
Bioethics and Public Policy Seminar Series, would deny 290 million American
people access to potential therapies.

Berg supports efforts such as the recent ballot initiative approved by
voters in November in California, which opened the way for state funding
of stem cell research. “There is a role for the state to act for
the welfare of its citizens,” he said.

—Cathy Shufro

A molecular link between the brain and learning
“When axons send signals that are received by dendrites, learning
is taking place,” said Mariale M. Hardiman, Ed.D., the principal
of a high-achieving public elementary/middle school in Baltimore and a
speaker at a symposium in October celebrating the 35th anniversary of
the Yale Child Study Center’s Comer School Development Program (See
“Leaving No Child Behind”).

“We know that [making a] connection is important,” Hardiman
said, citing the way a teacher and student may connect in the classroom.
“What is fascinating is that it is happening on a molecular level.”

Hardiman has developed a “brain-targeted teaching” model that
applies neuroscience to teaching. Teaching, she said, is most effective
when it builds on what students know and prods them to learn more as they
embark on a task.

Unfortunately, said Hardiman, the No Child Left Behind Act favors higher
test scores over activities that require higher-order thinking. “What
I see across the country is that education is moving back to a time when
teaching was primarily test- and textbook-driven. While this traditional
style of teaching has a place in our educational system, brain research
seems to support more active, experiential teaching and learning,”
she said.

—John Curtis

Using revolutionary technology to find “a
rusty old ship”
After he discovered the wreck of Titanic in 1985, Robert D. Ballard,
Ph.D., heard from his mother. “That’s all they’re going
to remember you for,” she said, “having found a rusty old
ship.”

Since then Ballard, founder and president of the Institute for Exploration
at Mystic Aquarium, where he works with Dean Emeritus Gerard N. Burrow,
M.D. ’58, HS ’66, has gone on to find PT 109 and Roman trading
ships, among others. But his real accomplishment in finding the Titanic
was the validation of a new approach to exploring the 72 percent of the
Earth under the sea. Frustrated by the limitations of sending people underwater,
he developed a telepresence—remotely operated vehicles with sophisticated
digital cameras. “It had all the characteristics of my submarine,
except me,” he said in October during the Wayne O. Southwick Lecture
for the Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation. “The first
application of this new exploratory technology was the discovery of the
Titanic.”

When he saw the high degree of preservation on the ship—including
a chandelier still hanging in the ballroom—he came to another realization.
“It hadn’t dawned on me that the sea was a museum,”
he said.

—J.C.

A moral argument for fighting diseases of the poor
Rachel M. Cohen called for a new approach to drug research and
development based on need, not profit, in a September talk sponsored by
the Justice and the Allocation of Health Care working group of the Yale
Interdisciplinary Bioethics Project.

“We have made a societal choice that drug development should be
confined to the private sector and that medicines are a commodity like
any other that should be developed in order to maximize profit,”
said Cohen, U.S. director of the Doctors Without Borders/Médecins
Sans Frontières Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines. As
a result, most new drugs benefit inhabitants of the world’s richest
nations and little is invested in drugs for diseases of the developing
world, such as tuberculosis and malaria.

“Well, we’re sick of it,” she said, calling for a global
framework that would define a health agenda, commit wealthy nations to
contribute to health care internationally and strengthen international
mechanisms for exchanging research results. “Our patients are dying,
and we need to change the rules. We need a needs-driven global approach
to thinking about how to finance research and development, with a general
acknowledgement that research is failing poor people.”

—J.C.
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