JUN-A-6

 

THE CONCERN OF A PARENT OF THE GWU MEDICAL STUDENT

GOING WITH ME TO INDIA, WHO IS ALSO DEAN FOR RESEARCH,

ELICITS THIS RESPONSE

 

June 6, 2002

 

Dear Fred:

 

Attached is, FYI, an account of the pedagogy, from my side, and the life-changing experiences, from the student's side, of my most recent trip to Dharamsala.  There was no worry about, or even mention of, hostilities in the very different world of J and K (Jammu and Kashmir, along the "Line of Control") closer then than we would be later.

 

I am aware of the responsibilities I carry in leading the sons and daughters of our own and other medical schools, and will not deliberately endanger them, as I am less reluctant to do on my own.  Most medical missions, however, by their very nature in relief to impoverished peoples, take place in unstable settings.  But, this is not part of the setting of the  "life-changing" challenges that I would contrive for the students; life is tough enough for the different cultures in contact under just the subsistence circumstances without adding geopolitical struggles.

 

I had mentioned that the summer schedule has several of these "entry level" medical missions (because of freshman medical students rising sophomore schedules) that I supervise very tightly, going over every patient with every student and having a regular didactic session about what lessons they can extract daily.  Although labor intensive, I believe that may be why these "first encounters" are so rewarding for them.  In other parts of the year in which elective clinical rotations may fit for seniors, I make expeditions further up the clinical ladder, often in surgical safaris in which I have juniors and seniors (as exhibited by our own junior John Sutter, and our own just graduated senior Elizabeth Yellen---and as presented by them to the students and staff here in Ross Hall on April 10---who were both in Ladakh with me as first-encounter novices and both went with me to Malawi, to be tossed together "into the deep end of the pool."  Pictures of these experiences in both ends of the spectrum are attached as access to a sampler.

 

At present, my next excursion is "on hold" although "still on" to the Spiti Valley in Northen India (see original plan and the modifications in the attachments.)   The later plans will be under advisement as conditions change with erring on the side of safety.

 

Thanks for your support!

 

GWG

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