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From the housestaff - one side of the story ...
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Title: What is Due to Rice and What is Due to Kempner
Contributor: Morton Bogdonoff, Chief Resident: 1954-1955
A memorable moment during my tenure as chief resident was when we
were hosting Sir George Pickering, Professor of Medicine at Oxford. We were
on rounds with Dr. Walter Kempner at the "Rice House."
When we returned to Dr. Stead's office, Gene asked Sir George what he
thought about Dr. Kempner's program.
Pickering's answer was, "I say, quite remarkable! But it is rather
difficult to tell what is due to the rice and what is due to Kempner."
Title: The Bigger Man with the Bigger Picture
One of my favorite Stead stories occurred at a departmental research
seminar. When Jack Myers finished discussing his work on
hepatitis blood flow, Gene Stead offered some severely critical comments
that dramatically left Jack Myers speechless.
Then, from the back of the old conference room on the second floor
near Osler Ward, came a voice in a stage whisper from John Burnum, "The
Bigger Man with the Bigger Picture."
Title: Essays on the Practice of Medicine
For those who worked with Eugene A Stead, Jr. when he was chairman
of the departments of medicine first at Emory and then at Duke in the
1940's to the '60's, this collection of essays edited by Barton Hayes
provides an opportunity to once again engage Stead's ideas on medical
teaching and medical care. For those who only knew him by reputation,
this volume captures his voice. The discussions at bedside rounds,
research conferences or morning report were always marked by a manner of
definitive authority. The Professor (as he was referred to by almost
everyone in all departments of the medical center) writes as he speaks,
in a style that reveals no uncertainty.
Stead spoke eloquently of both the science of clinical medicine
and its human touch. During the time he directed the department, he
maintained his own roster of patients and thus could demonstrate what he
meant when he discussed patient care. Three citations are
particularly cogent:
- "The care of the patient should be carried out by doctors who are
interested in giving service to people. Good doctors believe that
patients can legitimately make demands on doctors, and because the ill
are not rational, these demands do not have to be rational."
-
"The code of ethics for a profession must require of its members
behavior of benefit to society of a nature not expected from
non-professionals. Today I see many non-professional doctors in
practice.
A few weeks ago on a Sunday, one of my neighbors, 55 miles away from his
home, had a small stroke. He asked me to talk to his wife and call his
doctor. He had a history of hypertension and atrial fibrillation. The
doctor, who was the only one of his group of four who knew the patient,
declined to talk on the telephone with my neighbor and referred him to
his colleague. The colleague arranged for him to telephone on Monday
morning and make an appointment with the doctor who had refused to talk with him
Sunday. The appointment was for the following Friday at which time
coumadin was started. I believe doctors who practice this way are not
members of a profession. Either coumadin was not indicated or it should
have been started immediately with coverage by heparin for the first
three days. This doctor was certainly not a member of the medical profession.
I doubt you could even call him a skilled craftsman." (p.198)
-
"We know that any doctor who knows what he or she knows and can
comfortably say, 'I don't know' is a safe doctor"
Title: Birth of the PA Program
Dr. Stead was like so many other chairmen of department of medicine
of his time in that he had he had an outstanding record of clinical
research, was recognized as a superb bedside clinician, deeply committed
to the careers of the young people in his department, and very much
aware
of the politics of academic medicine. He belonged to all the important
societies, served as a senior consultant to the National Institutes of
Health and was a founding member of the Institute of Medicine.
However,
he was very different in one fundamental way: he was interested in all
aspects of medicine -- its practitioners in the community, its faculties
in private and public universities, its ties to government, to industry
and the dynamics among all the disciplines that take care of people.
But
he was not only interested; he worked very vigorously at instituting
changes in all those spheres. He was -- and still is -- as much a
deliberate activist as any Young Turk could ever be. And this book
includes essays that describe the innovative programs he had a major
in developing, and it makes it clear how far he reached beyond his own
department.
The most controversial at the time it was launched in 1964 is the
Physician Assistant program. It is likely to be remembered with his
name
more than any other interest, including being one of the first people to
successfully perform right heart catheterization to study cardiac output
in man.
Stead's idea that the practicing physician would benefit -- have
more time for continuing education and manage a larger practice-was
prompted into action by an experience I happened to witness personally.
It occurred at a regional American College of Physicians postgraduate
meeting held by members of the faculties of Duke and the University of
North Carolina. So few were the number of practicing physicians
attending
that they were outnumbered by the faculty. Stead noted that one of
physicians, Dr. Amos Johnson, was a solo general practitioner with a
very
busy practice in a small town in the eastern rural area of the state.
"Amos, how do you manage to get up here to attend our courses? I
see you up here almost all the time. Who covers your practice?"
"It's easy, Dr. Stead. I have an assistant."
"Who is he? I didn't know you had another doctor in practice with you."
"I don't. I have a man who was a medic in the Korean War."
Later that evening, as I was driving Dr. Stead home from the
conference, he talked about Amos Johnson's unfailing attendance at
post-graduate courses. "We have to go see the fellow that Amos has
working for him."
The next week we went down to Garland, NC, met the assistant who
was seeing many patients independently, checking with Dr. Johnson when
there was any uncertainty, and who was clearly well-accepted by the
patients. On the trip back to Durham, Stead said, "We're going to make
people like Amos' associate."
And thus was born the PA program.
Title: Birth of the Research Training Program
The Research Training Program was conceived primarily with
Phillip Handler who was chairman of biochemistry at the time (later to become
President of the National Academy of Sciences). Both young and senior
physicians spent one to two years in the laboratories of basic
scientists working with newest techniques and methods in the then emerging
discipline
of molecular biology. It set a model for what was eventually to become
the MD/PhD programs now so important to sustaining investigative
laboratories all throughout academic medicine.
Title: Stead's Introduction of Computer Technology
The introduction of computer technology to the daily work of the
medical service was another new program launched by Stead. The
emergence
of the cardiac care units that were having such a remarkable effect on
the
outcome of patients with myocardial infarction were filled with new
machines collecting an extraordinary amount of recorded data. Stead saw
that the high technology required skills in collecting and analyzing the
mass of data that was collected. He needed experts in working with
computers. He began a program that linked the schools of Engineering
and
Medicine in ways that had not occurred before. Bioinformatics is now a
thriving discipline everywhere and the computer has made it possible for
the daily practice of medicine to be guided by the most up-to-date
information provided by the Internet. The National Library of Medicine
and the large array of electronic journals are at the right hand of
every physician.
Not all innovations were successful, however, and Stead describes
the extraordinary initial success and then abrupt failure of an
experiment
in nursing care. It was named the Hanes project for the ward of the
hospital where it was based. Directed by a gifted Professor of Nursing,
Thelma Ingles, the program would likely have evolved into the creation
of the independent Nurse Practitioner long before such a training unit was
developed at Columbia University. But it wasn't to be, and Stead
relates the details of why the venture had to be cancelled. It is a most
instructive story of administrative tunnel vision.
Title: Stead Essays on the State of Medical Education
There are several essays on the state of medical education -- what
should be taught, and what should not -- on the role of community
hospitals, and on the ever growing cost of medical care. Stead's ideas
are provocative and he leaves no doubt that he believes the medical
profession must look after its affairs with greater diligence.
An introductory note to the section entitled "Health Care and the
Nation: Where are we Going?" makes clear his fundamental social
philosophy:
"On May 25, 1961, President Kennedy announced that the United States
would
land a man safely on the moon before 1970. The resources of the nation
were mobilized and the goal of moon walking was met. Many thoughtful
people in this country are puzzled by the fact that we can undertake a
project of this magnitude and yet have no solution for poverty, ignorance,
prejudice, greed, racism and war."
We seem to be facing the same dilemmas now. In talking with Dr.
Stead recently it is clear he would have us marshal our intellectual
energies and political resources in a national effort to find those
solutions. He would establish a compulsory two-year period of national
service for all high school or college graduates, and he believes that
the young people so enlisted would be the discoverers and the providers of
the solutions.
As Bart Haynes points out, Stead at 95 years is still an
enthusiastic spokesman for change and this volume makes it clear that
has always marked his career.
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