The ability to recognize and attend to the personal needs of a patient is as essential in medicine as providing the most technologically advanced procedures and care. Relieving the suffering of a fellow human being – physical, social, emotional or spiritual – not just eradicating the disease or treating the injury, marks a compassionate physician.

The West Virginia University School of Medicine promotes humanism and professionalism throughout the continuum of physician education from the first day in medical school until retirement from medical practice. The faculty takes great pride in training respectful and compassionate physicians in conjunction with their rigorous training and honors those individuals that demonstrate the attributes of integrity, excellence, compassion, altruism, respect, empathy and service by induction into the Gold Humanism Honor Society.

Recently, 13 medical students, two resident medical students and two faculty members were inducted into GHHS, an organization that recognizes individuals for practicing patient-centered medical care by modeling these attributes.

“We are still a relatively new organization in the School of Medicine so it is important that we recognize the accomplishments of our colleagues,” said Norman Ferrari, M.D., vice dean for education and academic affairs and chair of the WVU Department of Medical Education. “These individuals were nominated by their peers by answering a series of questions including, ‘who would you want as your own personal physician?’ and ‘who would you want to care for a loved one like your own mother?’ We felt blessed to host nearly 100 family members to witness the induction of these candidates.”

Humanism in medicine describes relationships between physicians and their patients that are respectful and compassionate. It is reflected in attitudes and behaviors that are sensitive to the values, autonomy, cultural and ethnic backgrounds of others.

This message is carried into communities across West Virginia through the outreach programs and projects sponsored by the School of Medicine. West Virginia is the only state where all counties are included in Appalachia and the School’s training in cultural diversity includes a unique module on the socioeconomic and social mores of this population.

The WVU chapter of GHHS also works closely with the Health Sciences Center Faculty Development office to engage faculty in all health sciences disciplines such as nursing, dentistry, pharmacy and public health in role modeling and educating health professionals in the area of humanism.

The Gold Humanism Honor Society at West Virginia University School of Medicine was founded in 2008 by six faculty members with more than 140 years of collective service to the School and to the people of West Virginia. The WVU Chapter was made possible with a grant from The Arnold P. Gold Foundation.

Photo: Inductees into the WVU School of Medicine’s Gold Humanism Honor Society include Class of 2016 students Lindsay Bach, Brian Dilcher, Emily Fridenmaker, Rebecca Furby, Nicole Garcia, Lauren Gioia, Chelsea Knotts, Andrew Kung, Benjamin Lasure, Sean Hanlon, Katherine Seachrist, Blair Suter and Kylen Whipp. Resident medical students include: Andrew Friedmann, M.D. – Orthopaedics and Hillary Morley, M.D. – Pediatrics. Faculty members include Hannah Hazard, M.D. – Surgery and Arif Sarwari, M.D. – Internal Medicine.

-WVU-

TDS: 06/15/2015

CONTACT: Tara Scatterday, Communications Specialist, WVU School of Medicine
304-293-0630, tdscatterday@hsc.wvu.edu
Follow @WVUToday on Twitter.