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Commencement photos
Commencement 2002
Commencement awards
In a changed world, the agenda for
public health remains much the same
Commencement honors

Graduates Anita Karne, Kamyar Madani, Reza Vagefi and Premila Bhat are
framed in the view panel of Marlyanne Pol-Rodriguezs digital camera
on Commencement Day in May. They were among 112 medical students receiving
their Yale diplomas.
Photograph: Terry Dagradi
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Commencement 2002
A large class, an inspired speaker and a tall order to do some
good in the world.
Click here for Commencement photos
During their second-year show three years ago, the Class of 2001 sang
(to the tune of Jesus Christ Superstar), Well
all take a fifth year before were done. Meant as a joke, the
lyric was almost prophetic. Many in the class did stay for a fifth year.
Meanwhile, the number of students in the Class of 2002 who took a fifth
year was lower than average. These two anomalies swelled the ranks of
this years graduating class to 112, the largest in recent memory.

The students choice of Commencement speaker was also a departure
from the norm. Paul E. Farmer, M.D., Ph.D., has followed an unusual path
since he received a medical degree and a doctorate in anthropology from
Harvard in 1990. He works in Haitis central plateau, tending to
the rural poor in the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. He also
travels the world, defying the experts as he finds ways to bring medical
care to tuberculosis patients in Peruvian slums or Russian prisons.

When we began to treat AIDS patients in rural Haiti, it was dismissed
as neither cost-effective nor sustainable, Farmer said. In
fact, some experts argued that it was downright irresponsible to use antiretroviral
drugs in a setting of such squalor. I underline the word experts here
because such critiques have never, in my experience, come from poor patients
and their families. I have never had someone say, You know, doc,
Im very interested in treatment, but being a Haitian Im really
not cost-effective.

In closing, Farmer urged the new doctors to use their skills to change
the face of medicine.

Try not to constrict your borders to the confines of a single hospital,
he said. The rest of the world is out there. This world will find
you, even if you are hidden away in a hospital or a lab. It is my hunch
and my hope that you will succeed in the challenge now before medicine,
now before doctors-to rebuild modern medicine on a foundation of evidence
and equity.

Dean David A. Kessler, M.D., awarded Farmer the Peter Parker Medal for
his contributions to medicine. You demonstrate that there is all
the difference in the world between a profession and a calling,
Kessler said. Dr. Farmer, you teach us what it means to have a calling.

John Curtis

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Commencement awards and honors
Bohmfalk Prize
Frederick J. Sigworth, Ph.D.
Richard Belitsky, M.D.

Healthcare Foundation of New Jersey Humanism in Medicine Award
Guadalupe Garcia-Tsao, M.D.

Leah M. Lowenstein Prize
Marie E. Egan, M.D.

Francis Gilman Blake Award
John S. Hughes, M.D.

Betsy Winters House Staff Award
Haider A. Akmal, M.D.

Parker Prize
Michael S. Singer

Miriam Kathleen Dasey Award
Rocco A. Iannucci
Rebekah G. Gross
 Norma Bailey Berniker Prize
George King-Tso Lui
 Deans Prize for Community Service
K. Claire Stylianopoulos
Emmanuelle M. Clerisme

Healthcare Foundation of New Jersey Humanism in Medicine Student Award
Anna Gibb Hallemeier
 Campbell Prize
James S. Castle
K. Claire Stylianopoulos
 Perkins Prize
R. Griff Kelley Jr.
 Merck Book Award
Kebba M. Jobarteh
John A. Davis
 M.D./Ph.D. Award
Scott R. Floyd
Nataki C. Douglas
 M.D./Ph.D. Alumni Award
Michael S. Singer
 Connecticut Society of American Board of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
Prize
Hyacinth N. Browne
 New England Pediatric Society Prize
Elizabeth M. Bird
Diana I. Bojorquez
 Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Award
Jeanne K. Tyan
 Connecticut Chapter of American College of Surgeons Prize
Prashanth Vallabhajosyula
 Connecticut Academy of Family Physicians Award
R. Griff Kelley Jr.
 Dr. David and Arthur Schuman Award of Excellence in Family Practice
Corey L. Martin
 Endocrinology Society Medical Student Achievement Award
Daniel A. Hoit
 Peter A.T. Grannum Prize
Nataki C. Douglas
 Lauren Weinstein Award
F. Nikki Pinkerton
 ACP-ASIM Internal Medicine Award
Joyce M.S. Oen-Hsiao
 Cortlandt Van Rensselaer Creed Award
Kebba M. Jobarteh
 Norman Herzig International Fellowship
Marc A. Davis

In a changed world, the agenda for public health
remains much the same.
The prospects for public health altered dramatically on the morning that
journalist Mark Schoofs left his New York City apartment in search of
coffee and was greeted by the sight of a gaping hole in the World
Trade Center.

You are being graduated into a world that has changed, the
Wall Street Journal reporter told students from the School of Public Health
at their May 26 Commencement ceremony at Battell Chapel. Things
are different.
Some of you may find yourselves organizing vaccination
or treatment against the deliberate infliction of disease, said
Schoofs. But I suspect that most of you will not work directly on
terrorism. And, without belittling the war on terrorism, that is as it
should be.

In a single day, he said, malaria kills almost 3,000 people. Tuberculosis
kills about 5,500 people, and aids another 8,000-a toll of more than 15,000
people daily. Thats five World Trade Center attacks, ten towers
collapsing, every day.

For the 123 students graduating with degrees in public health, Schoofs
said the terrorist threat should underscore the impact of politics on
public health. It was a political vision that led those 19 hijackers
to mass murder. But it is also politics that condemns many thousands to
die of preventable or treatable infectious diseases every year,
said Schoofs, a 1985 Yale College graduate who won a Pulitzer Prize for
his coverage of AIDS in Africa in 2000. Parents still lose their children
to infections that could have been prevented by inexpensive vaccines.
African-Americans die at higher rates than whites and receive inferior
care, even after accounting for differences in socioeconomic status. Thats
politics, said Schoofs.

He rejected the argument that the terrorists were motivated by anger over
poverty and injustice. They were not poor, and their attack was not a
protest but rather an act of pure destruction and obliteration.
To counter this, he said, public health graduates must insist that
every life matters
Partly this is sheer pragmatism-infectious diseases
do not stay in marginalized groups, but leak out into the general public,
and your job is to protect the public. But insisting that every life matters
is also a profound political statement, perhaps the most profound statement
you can make. In doing so, he told the graduates, you are
putting forth a philosophy that is the exact opposite of callousness and
nihilism.

The Rev. Thomas Gariepy, the student speaker, also emphasized the
political determinants of health. He said that while the diseases
afflicting people may have changed little over time, the political forces
that influence disease are unique to our era. Social justice is
born in political engagement, said Gariepy, a Catholic priest who
was among the graduates. If public health is social justice, then
for us, public health will be political engagement.

Cathy Shufro
Terry Dagradi is a photographer with Med Media Services at the School
of Medicine.

Commencement awards and honors
The School of Public Health awarded 114 masters degrees and nine
doctorates at Commencement exercises at Battell Chapel on May 26. s

Deans Prize for Outstanding M.P.H. Thesis
Michael Chan
Inhibited HIV and SIV Replication by Polymorphic VIF Sequences

Shalini Kapoor
A Needs Assessment of Orphan Children and Their Caregivers in the KwaZulu
Natal Province in South Africa

Karen Sautter
Protecting Children in Times of Terror: Lessons From the Cold War

Katherine Van Loon
Informed Consent: A Study of the Experiences of Clinical Trial Researchers
in South Africa

Award for Excellence in Teaching
Robert Dubrow, M.D., Ph.D.

The Henry J. (Sam) Chauncey Jr. Inspiration Award
Chanda Cashen

The Cortlandt Van Rensselaer Creed Award
Eric Ashton
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