![]() | |
(From left) Dr. Antonio M. Gotto Jr., Dr. Ralph Nachman, and Dr. Andrew Schafer. |
|
"I first heard about him abstractly as this giant in the field who could do everything," said Dr. Pecker, vice chairman of educational affairs, program director and professor of clinical medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College.
Almost a decade later, Dr. Pecker would find himself leading the intern selection committee for Dr. Nachman, then the chairman of the Department of Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College.
"I worked pretty closely with him throughout that," Dr. Pecker said, "and everything they said about him was true, but more so. His research accomplishments speak for themselves. He put vascular biology on the map. His papers are the most heavily quoted."
| "I first heard about Dr. Nachman abstractly as this giant in the field who could do everything." – Dr. Mark Pecker |
Dr. Schafer also announced the creation of the Ralph L. Nachman, M.D., Distinguished Visiting Professorship in the Department of Medicine.
Dr. Herbert Pardes, president and CEO of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital; Dr. David Hajjar, senior executive vice dean and executive vice provost of the Medical College; and Dr. Orli Etingin, director of the Iris Cantor Women's Health Center, introduced Dr. Nachman at the tribute.
![]() | |
(From left) Dr. E. Darracott Vaughan, Dr. Nachman and Dr. Mark Pecker. |
|
Dr. Etingin first met Dr. Nachman in the early 1980s; she was a hematology resident and Dr. Nachman was her attending.
"He has this incredible ability to use basic scientific information and weave it together with clinical cases," Dr. Etingin said. "It was very inspiring to me as a resident. He is an amazing clinician but also a scientist. I wanted to be able to learn clinical medicine from him. He taught 'bench to bedside' long before translational medicine was a catchphrase."
In the winter of 1990, Dr. Nachman, then the director of the Division of Hematology-Oncology, was named the chairman of medicine and its physician-in-chief.
"Being asked to be the chair of the Department of Medicine is no fluff job," Dr. Hajjar said. "You really have to have made your mark as a scientist.
| "He taught 'bench to bedside' long before translational medicine was a catchphrase." – Dr. Orli Etingin |
Just one year later, he was appointed director of laboratories for clinical pathology at the Hospital and became a Medical College faculty member as an instructor in medicine. Dr. Nachman was named director of the Division of Hematology in 1968 and made professor of medicine in 1972. In 1979, he served as the co-director of the joint M.D.-Ph.D. program.
Dr. Nachman has previously served as vice chairman, acting chairman and acting co-chairman of the Department of Medicine.
For two years, 1987 to 1989, he served as a member of the Board of Overseers, representing the faculty of the Medical College.
![]() | |
With the help of Dr. Schafer (left), Dr. Nachman, an avid Yankees fan, unveils a gift from the Department of Medicine — an official Yankees-Steiner stretcher. |
|
"He was a very well-respected scientist who was suddenly thrust into a chairmanship," remembered Dr. E. Darracott Vaughan, chairman emeritus of the Department of Urology and the James J. Colt Professor of Urology at Weill Cornell. "He very quickly picked up the management and changing business aspects that were going on at the time. He realized there was a need for internal medicine and refocused the residency training so you could have of the option of patient care or academics. That was a bit of a surprise for someone who had primarily worked in research."
While Dr. Nachman deftly balanced the scientific, clinical and political roles of his career, Dr. Etingin remembers him as a man who was reluctant to embrace the more social aspect of his responsibilities.
"Over the course of all of his years, Dr. Nachman had to attend all these various dinners and grand rounds and commemorative events, and sometimes there were black-tie events during the week," Dr. Etingin said. "And there was nobody like Ralph who could be present at one of those and still be out the door by 8 o'clock. It's often a joke that when we see someone leaving one of these functions early that they're 'pulling a Nachman.'"
Photography by Amelia Panico.
Powered by Big Medium™



