White Coat Couture: What All the First-Year Med Students Are Wearing
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Members of the Class of 2013 receive their first white coats from Weill Cornell faculty at the White Coat Ceremony, Aug. 25. |
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"I could have told her to go to the emergency room," Dr. Kendler said. "It certainly would have been something they could handle, and to be honest, there was very little medically that could have been done."
Instead, Dr. Kendler got out of bed and met his patient and her family at the hospital.
"When I got there, the family was grateful — grateful for all the care their mother and grandmother had received, and grateful that, at the end, her doctor was there," he said.
In telling this story as keynote speaker at this year's White Coat Ceremony, Dr. Kendler gave an audience of 101 first-year medical students their first lesson in being a doctor: Sometimes, it's just about being there.
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Dr. Jason Kendler speaks to the 101 students of the new class. |
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Dr. Kendler impressed upon the physicians-to-be that in order to attain the level of personal and professional fulfillment most doctors enjoy, there will be nights when they get out of bed to be at a patient's side, that their words and actions as a doctor carry greater weight and consequence than those of other people.
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Dr. Paul Miskovitz and Dr. Estomih Mtui help students into their white coats. |
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Just before the students were presented with their coats, Dean Gotto gave them a little preview of where they might be in four years.
"The good news is I'm going to read you the Hippocratic Oath right now," Dean Gotto said. "The bad news is I can't administer it to you because you still have four years of medical school to go through. In 2013, you'll stand up in Carnegie Hall with your classmates from Doha, Qatar, and take this oath."
Before gathering in Archbold Commons for the reception, Dr. Fabrizio Michelassi, the Lewis Atterbury Stimson Professor and chairman of the Department of Surgery, delivered an introductory lecture to the students, recalling his own white-coat ceremony in 1969, just two days after Neil Armstrong landed on the moon.
"There are three gifts you receive when entering medical school," he said. "A sense of purpose, a sense of place, and a code of professional ethics. You have already accomplished so much in making it to this day. But much more awaits you."
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The students received new stethoscopes donated by alumni. |
Dr. Fabrizio Michelassi recalls his own white-coat ceremony in 1969. |
Photography by Weill Cornell Art & Photography. Powered by Big Medium™

