PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS
Changing Demands in Research: Student Perspectives at UTMB
How these essays came to be…

Medical Humanities

Experiencing the Humanities

My decision to pursue a graduate degree in the medical humanities began as a sort of subsidiary consideration. I had long intended to go to medical school – from high school I chose to attend Baylor University, in part based on the strength of its premedical program, and throughout college I remained steadfast in pursuit of this goal, taking the required premedical coursework and making sure to do all of the other things necessary to get into medical school. However, as I grew closer to achieving this goal, I became cognizant of a lingering and increasingly distracting disturbance in the back of my mind. Medical school, and a career as a physician alone, would not, could not be enough. Coincident with my premedical preparations, I had also become aware of a new, and at times overwhelming, passion at Baylor – the liberal arts. It was my inability to set aside my love for literature, philosophy, history, and the like as mere hobby that ultimately convinced me that I must find a way to make these other dimensions a part of my professional life. I became convinced that a full professional life for me could only be one that split time between medicine and the humanities. I became determined to find a way to do both.

However, as I embarked upon the medical school interview trail, I realized that my wishes might be more difficult to satisfy than I had previously believed. Almost no school, especially among the several I was visiting in Texas, possessed a combined degree program of the type for which I was searching. Some of those affiliated with undergraduate institutions suggested that I might be able to create something that might meet my needs, most likely on the side, an extracurricular endeavor, but these promises often seemed sort of empty. I do not believe I was being intentionally deceived – those interviewers all seemed excited with my enthusiasm and were eager to inform me of the many opportunities their institutions likely possessed. However, they also conveyed that such an independent undertaking would likely be an arduous one, time-consuming and difficult to arrange. I left many of these schools conflicted, excited to have potential opportunities, but dismayed to have no more guarantees of these possibilities than the assurances of interviewers who may or may not have truly appreciated the reality of these options.

When I interviewed at UTMB, I expected to find similar circumstances – a school that would be eager to try to accommodate my unique needs, but one that may have difficulty meeting such good intentions as well. I thought this right up until the moment when Dr. Ron Carson, the Director of the Institute for the Medical Humanities (IMH), addressed the body of interviewees at our orientation that morning and revealed the existence of an MD/PhD Program in Medical Humanities. Later that day I returned to Baylor encouraged, reluctant to get my hopes up until I knew that I had been accepted to UTMB’s medical school, but also relieved that that which I had longed for and sought after really existed. I ranked UTMB as my first choice, and, when I was accepted the following spring, made immediate preparations to pursue entrance to the graduate program as well. Medical school without the humanities seemed impossible to me; discovering UTMB and the IMH meant I would not have to make such a choice. When, over a year later, I was finally accepted to the MD/PhD Program, I was elated. The essentials of my life were falling into place, as they had to if I was to continue down this path at all. For me, entrance to the MD/PhD Program was an all or nothing event; either I would be admitted or else I would have to completely reevaluate my professional direction. Fortunately the former occurred, allowing me to continue to where I am today.

I am now beginning my sixth year here at UTMB. My first two and a half years were spent in medical training, and I have been in graduate school at the IMH for these last two and a half years. The first two years of the PhD curriculum at the IMH consist entirely of formal coursework. During these years I took the following courses: Humanism and the Humanities, Bioethics and Law, Religion and Medicine, Humanism and the Medical Humanities, Literature and Medicine, American Doctor-Writers, Foundations of Bioethics, Clinical Ethics, Traditions of Health Care in the U.S., Practicum, Narratives of Illness, Nature and Genetics, Ethics of Scientific Research, Traditions of Medical Ethics, Philosophy and Medicine, Narrative Ethics, and Ethics of Health Policy. And, as occurred during my undergraduate training, a few primary areas of interest emerged during these years. These include narrative and medicine (literature and medicine, narratives of illness, and narrative ethics), clinical ethics, the history and practice of moral medical education, and the practical work of doctoring. It is in these areas that I foresee doing the majority of the scholarly work in my career and upon which I focused my qualifying examinations and will focus my dissertation work.

 The specific topics of my five qualifying examination questions included narrative ethics, narratives of illness, virtue ethics, moral imagination, and the history of ethics education in medicine. Qualifying examinations at the IMH are a rigorous undertaking. Students typically allow a semester or so to prepare, studying with their committee members, developing topics and formulating reading lists, and becoming sufficiently comfortable with the material to undertake the final examinations. The exam itself consists of two parts: a written exam, during which students have five days to answer five questions as formulated by their advisors, and an oral defense, which occurs after the written exam and allows the student and his/her committee members to further discuss the topics, challenging assumptions and further developing ideas and thought processes. The purposes of the examination are many, but of primary import for me was the opportunity to hone my areas of interest and to allow an extended and self-guided time during which I could explore these topics. The exams provided an amazing introduction to my dissertation work by allowing me to undertake an extended, organized, and rigorous investigation of my own personal medical humanities. Having just completed these examinations a few months ago, I am now working on my dissertation, a process that seemed unfathomable before my qualifying exam preparations.

 The beginnings of my life at the IMH required orientation to a certain degree of culture shock. Having just arrived from the rigorous, regimented, and pragmatic world of undergraduate medical education, I had grown accustomed to a certain way of thinking, of believing, of acting. My formal humanities education threw all of this into disarray and uncertainty, forcing me to reconcile medical and humanistic frames of mind that often seemed in direct conflict or competition. Primary among these reconciliations was an increasing comfort with ambiguity, an understanding of the plurality of values at stake in the medical relationships between health care professionals, patients, and families, and an appreciation of the various ways in which problems could be contextualized and approached.

As I expected when I set out upon this path so many years ago, the humanities have become and will always be an integral part of my life as an academic and as a health care professional. My work was a doctor will always be irrevocably informed and affected by my education and the ways I’ve come to think. I also intend to teach and write as a strict and academic humanist, although I know that this too will also be shaped by my education and career as a doctor. For me, the medical humanities have become far more than the mere application of the humanities to medicine, and/or vice versa. Rather, they are inextricably linked, and, for me, one cannot really exist without the other. It is for this reason that it was essential to undertake these dual degrees simultaneously. Alone, they might not have yielded the symbiotic effects for which I now value them both so highly. I am thankful for the opportunity I’ve been given to be an MD/PhD student. I cannot imagine my education and professional development otherwise.

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Jing-Bao Nie, BMed (tcm), MMed, MA, PhD
Graduated May 1999

The Flying Time with Joys of Learning:

Experiences of a Foreign Student at the Graduate School of UTMB

“Time flies when you have fun” was one of English phrases I learnt at Galveston. I actually experienced what it says in 1993-1998 when I received my PhD training at the Institute for the Medical Humanities (IMH) of University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB). According to Confucianism, we are not born, but learn to be human. Learning, a never-ended process at both individual and collective levels, is the starting point of humanity, a source of happiness, a root of culture and morality, and a way to the highest good. Few joys that human beings can have are comparable to these of studying and learning. Learning with right people and at a right place, such as those at UTMB Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (GSBS), makes the studying time more enjoyable and flying even faster.

Academically and intellectually, the major reasons for me to choose UTMB over other graduate schools lies in the multidisciplinary or interdisciplinary feature of its medical humanities program. In the early 1990s, when surveying the possible places to pursue a PhD degree in humanities and social sciences as related to healthcare, I knew IMH through some publications by its faculty members and The Peterson’s Guide on Postgraduate Studies in North American. I could hardly believe that at a medical school there exists such an Institute whose faculty members have such a diverse academic background: history, philosophy, literature, law, arts, theology and religious studies. At any of other programs throughout North America, one would have to be “disciplined” in either of the history of medicine, medical sociology, philosophy of healthcare, or bioethics. Only at IMH would it be possible to pursue all these fields at one place.

The interview process greatly helped me to become more attracted to UTMB by knowing directly the physical and intellectual environments of IMH. The Moody Medical Library, especially its collections in the medical humanities, is splendid. The “Old Red,” on whose second floor IMH is located, is such a magnificent architecture that survived the horrible hurricane in the first year of the twentieth century and that my underage daughter later referred as “the palace”. Meeting in person the prospective teachers and fellow postgraduate students at the Institute definitely assured me that I would have a challenging but rewarding time in Galveston. As a result, as soon as I received my letter of acceptance from UTMB, I declined other options.

The pre-candidacy course work was extremely heavy. By requirements and choice, I took 18 courses in total: including literature and medicine, the history of American medicine, ethics and healthcare, medical ethics and law, humanism and medical humanities, religion and medicine, arts and medicine, gender and medicine, and humanistic gerontology. Looking back at the curriculum, I am not sure whether one should take that much course work. But I am sure that these courses altogether gave me a solid and broad intellectual foundation from which I continue to benefit ever since. It was indeed fascinating to learn the different approaches of several academic disciplines to the issues related to illness, health and healing. Among the great texts we read were Giambattista Vico’s On Humanistic Education, Matthew Arnold’s Culture and Anarchy, Friedrich Nietzsche’s Beyond Good and Evil, George Eliot’s Middlemarch, Leo Tolstoy’s The Death of Ivan Ilyich, Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis, Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain, and Albert Camus’ The Plague and Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s The Cancer Ward. We were also exposed to practice and reality in various ways, including Dax Cowart as a guest lecturer about his case, visiting AIDS patient at home, and attending rounds in the wards in hospital. Writing course essays was a very effective way of learning research skills, exercising critical thinking, and formatting independent judgements. Besides, I had learnt a lot from my teachers on how to teach.

The qualifying examination—writing about 100 pages in five days for five different questions—was demanding intellectually and psychologically. But this constituted a good preparation for the forthcoming research as one became more familiar with the subject areas directly related to the proposed dissertation topic.

Regarding my post-candidacy experiences, I must say that it was one of my greatest fortunes and honors in my academic life to have Professor Harold Vanderpool as the primary supervisor, Professors Ronald Carson and Michelle Carter as the departmental members of the supervisory committee, Professor Susan Weller from the Department of Social and Preventive Medicine as the outside departmental member and Professor Arthur Kleinman from Harvard as the external mentor. Writing the dissertation under their supervision, an intellectual labor became a much more enjoyable proceeding. Without their encouragement, guidance, and enormous concrete help it would be impossible for me to complete the dissertation, which won the 1999 dissertation award of GSBS and led to a book entitled Voices behind the Silence: Chinese Perspectives on Abortion (Rowman & Littlefield, in press).

IMH created a wonderful environment for learning. All faculty members at the Institute, including Professors Anne Jones, William Wislade, Chester Burns, John Duart, Ellen More, Mary Winkler, and especially then director of graduate program Professor Thomas Cole, are all easily accessible and always helpful. The productive learning environment was also due to the cheerful support from and efficient work by administrative personnel at IMH and BSBS, including Mss Sharon Goodwin and Lewis Ray, with whom I had very positive experiences.

My follow postgraduate students were simply superb. They were my teachers too. Especially, no words can describe sufficiently how much I had benefited from my friendship with now Drs Kirk Smith, Faith Lagay, Lex Bambas and others. They had helped me with so many different matters in so many different ways, to mention only a few, improving my English language in writing and speaking, enriching my knowledge of American culture and social life by travelling with them and visiting their families and friends, and solving concrete problems a foreigner often encountered in a different country.

Basic financial security is always crucial for enjoying learning. Stipends and financial support continuously granted to me by IMH and PSBS were essential for me to study at UTMB and for my family to live with me at Galveston. Meanwhile, the rewards and competitive scholarships constituted the encouragements and honors that urged me to do my utmost. In addition, with the generous help from Professors Carson (the Director of IMH) and Vanderpool and others I also successfully obtained a one-year full doctoral fellowship and the funding for the field work of my dissertation research project from external sources. It turned out that the importance of the skill of grant writing could never be overemphasized for the later development of my career. I am glad I learnt it at UTMB.

One of the wonderful features of UTMB was the commitment and actual financial support of IMH and PSBS to the participation of the graduate students in national and international conferences. Presenting papers at academic conferences not only contributed directly to my professional development but also resulted in publications as journal articles and book chapters.

As a student from China with training in traditional Chinese medicine and several year’s teaching experience at a Chinese medical school, with my Chinese colleagues I organized several China-U.S. academic exchange activities held in China. These extra-curriculum activities were so enjoyable due to the active participation of some faculty members as well as my fellow students at IMH.

In short, as a PhD student at UTMB I had a great time. Galveston was, is, and will continue to be special for me: the faculty and staff members, the classmates, the friends, the conversations, the classes, the brown bag seminars, the Old Red, the cadavers up the floor of IMH, the sunlight, the sea wind and waves from the gulf, the walks on beach, the vast field, the country fairs, the parties, the beer and wine, the Mexican food, even the long and burning summers. Galveston is also special for my family and our youngest family member was born there at the hospital. Taking advantage of writing this essay, I would like to publicly thank all the teachers, friends, fellow students and many others in North America, especially those at IMH, who had kindly supported and helped us.

In the late 1960s and the first half of the 1970s, as a village boy and a son of “class enemy” at the somehow remote area in Southern China, the world beyond the hills surrounding my home village was far beyond me even in the wildest imagination of mine. When I decided to go to North America in the late 1980s, to significantly expand my intellectual horizons and life experiences, was my dream. With my time at UTMB, together with one and half years as a MA student in sociology at Queen’s University in Canada and one year as a postdoctoral fellow at the Centre for Bioethics of the University of Minnesota, I certainly realized my dream. My present career is consistent with my plan before I went to UTMB. Actually, living and working in New Zealand realized a dream I never though could come true, i.e., undertaking academic works at a beautiful and peaceful countryside location. What I had learnt at UTMB well prepared me to conduct original multidisciplinary or interdisciplinary research, to teach effectively in New Zealand and China with students from medicine, law, sciences, humanities and social sciences, and especially, to continue to learn with joy.

Jing-Bao Nie, BMed (tcm), MMed, MA, PhD
Senior Lecturer, Bioethics Centre, University of Otago, New Zealand
Visiting Professor, Wuhan University, China
Undergraduate institution: Hunan College of Chinese Medicine, China
Age: 42
Gender: Male
Nationality: Chinese

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Alison H. Rutledge, PhD
Graduated May 2005

Neither Past Nor Future, But This Moment

Live neither in the past nor in the future,
but let each day’s work absorb your entire energies,
and satisfy your widest ambition.
—William Osler

Everything I can say about my UTMB graduate school experience — from the first step, taking the GRE on a wintry day in Iowa, to writing my dissertation now —seems different from the experience of my fellow graduate students. Of course everyone’s situation is unique, and of course every essay will tell a different story. But I seek a second Ph.D. as a woman in her fifties and a former psychologist; that makes my story unusual, I suspect, by any standard.

As a returning student I have been teased about many things: being insane for embarking on such a masochistic exercise; trying to revert to childhood by assuming the student role; avoiding a real job in the real world. Other people’s choices often look strange from the outside. But for the person making the choices, sometimes it feels like the path of life has narrowed and narrowed until there is one door left to go through. You open that door because it is the only one. In my case, I opened the door to the Gulf of Mexico, brilliant flowers, dolphins and pelicans, hard and wonderfully satisfying intellectual work, and a southern hospitality that must be felt to be believed.

No one embarks on a late second Ph.D. without a long and probably traumatic backstory. Mine is fairly gruesome in its particulars, but like most such stories it generically involves loss, betrayal, illness, struggle and repeated failures to adjust to change, and ultimately waiting quietly, and sadly, for the future to unfold and present me with expectations. In a way, it didn’t seem to matter what I did. But I knew I could no longer practice clinical psychology.

In this ordeal I was deeply fortunate to have loving family support, and I flew from Iowa to Houston to visit my brother for a week in the spring of 1999. I had never been south of Kansas City, at least not in the Central Time zone. I was amazed by the green, the warmth, the silky air, and the friendly people. In the Midwest, people are known for their niceness, helpful-ness, and politeness—but not friendliness. I soon realized that in Texas you cannot stand in any line, anywhere, without somebody striking up a conversation and sooner or later calling you “honey.” It took some getting used to, but I liked it. In Galveston, I especially loved the ocean and the architecture, and I wondered what it might be like to live there.

Back in the cold Iowa April, I used my novice Internet skills to find out more about Galveston. Not until then did I realize the big buildings on the east end of the island—farther east than my brother and I had driven during our two visits—were not more hotels, but hospitals, and that Galveston was home to a large medical school. Intrigued, I investigated job openings and academic programs at UTMB. By accident I landed on a page describing the Institute for the Medical Humanities (IMH), and I read with interest about this remarkable group of dedicated scholars and ethicists. Then I learned the IMH had a graduate degree program; finally I saw the list of courses, and I was riveted. There were courses on medicine and philosophy, history, literature, law, humanities, and religion, with titles like “The Ethics of Health Policy,” and “Narratives of Illness.” These were areas I was deeply interested in as a psychologist and citizen. My stressful job in a large state hospital was raising many questions for me about the development of an ethical culture in the workplace, and the most compassionate ways to provide high-quality care to vulnerable populations.

What did I have to lose? I sent off for the application materials. I mulled them over for some time, and then figured I could take the GRE (for the second time, but the first time was in 1973!) and if I failed, that would be the end of it. So a snowy December day found me in a cubicle on the Iowa State University campus answering multiple-choice questions on a computer. I didn’t fail, so I sent the scores off to UTMB—when I hit that computer button, it was a portentous moment, as if I were committing myself to who knew what—and went home to pull together the rest of the application materials, which were many. Official transcripts, some thirty years old; forms to fill out; letters of recommendation, including one from a certain former professor who was still alive; a writing sample; a statement about what I wanted to do. That was a bit of a problem because I didn’t know what one actually did as a medical humanist, so I called the IMH admissions director to ask, and she and I had a nice talk.         

Months went by, and then one day I got the call. I was offered a slot in the fall of 2000 as an IMH doctoral student; would I accept?

At this point I became consternated. My application had been a pipe dream, more to see if I could get accepted than to really turn my life upside down. I realized I had no money to live on if I were to become a full-time student without a job. I realized I could never afford out-of-state tuition. I hadn’t written a term paper in decades. I was not willing to get by without good health insurance. I didn’t know a soul in Galveston. I said all this to the IMH admissions director, and that I would think about it and get back to her. She seemed disappointed. I told her I was thrilled, but . . . I had to be realistic too.

Three or four days later I got a call from the IMH graduate program director, who offered me a four-year package: a graduate assistantship with a small stipend, in-state tuition, and good health insurance.

The universe, it seemed, had come up with some expectations for me.

I dithered and dallied for awhile, but at heart I knew I truly was going to go to Texas. The next few months were full of arrangements. I remodeled part of my house to make it more attractive for rental, found a property management company, got an apartment in Galveston via a real estate company online, decided what to take with me and got a storage unit for the rest of everything I owned, and took my cats to a friend’s farm. I ended up caravanning down Interstate 35 in a U-Haul with my adult son, and his fiancée and her parents and brother and sister in another car. What could have been a doleful, lonely business was made festive with an overnight stop at fiancée’s grandma’s house in Topeka, and the next night dinner at a great BBQ joint in Keller, Texas, where I tasted my first (and far from my last) Shiner Bock.

Of course the day came when my traveling companions went back to the Midwest, and I was in a one-bedroom apartment in a complex like a rabbit warren and not even a cat for company. But I developed a sort of fierce stoicism. This is no worse, I said to myself with gritted teeth, than what you have been through before. I walked to campus, went to orientation, registered, and finally started classes on a hot day in September. And then the world opened up in a new way.

Taking a history class taught by a brilliant man who loves his subject and loves teaching is an experience I would wish for everyone. Dr. Chester Burns is a master. He treated us students with a respect we could not help but return. He was formal yet warm, direct yet tactful, solemn yet funny. I worked hard to keep up with the reading, participate in class discussion, take my first in-class midterm in ages, and write the final paper. One day I was sitting on the floor in the Moody Medical Library between shelves of medical journals, doing something I remembered from the past: taking down one journal after another to leaf through the tables of contents to see if I could find something interesting. Like most libraries, the Moody Medical library smells good. I had that pleased, fresh feeling of starting a new semester and exploring new territory. It struck me then, on that floor with a tall stack of fat journals next to me, that I was happy. There was nothing in the world I would rather be doing at that moment.     

I had other classes, and the graduate assistantship was interesting but not too demanding. I was asked to read essays and grade them, read books and talk about them, help facilitate POM meetings, go to morning rounds with the Family Medicine Department residents, and photocopy reams of syllabus material. There were colloquia and grand rounds and brown bags to attend. I had worked in hospitals and been part of medical care teams before, but never at a teaching hospital. My first two years of coursework and assistantship work were quite marvelous. It was a whirlwind of satisfying intellectual stimulation. In addition, the second year, I got a part-time job working with a grant in the psychiatry department. They needed telephone interviewers to talk to people all over the country about their mental health or illnesses. Even though I was no longer a psychologist, I knew I could have a meaningful telephone conversation with someone about his or her history of depression. This job led to a part-time job in another department where I sit face-to-face with patients and give them batteries of neuropsychological tests. This work is technical and exacting, but not stressful or emotionally draining, and I find the contact with patients very rewarding.

I had to check with Mr. Bennett in the Graduate School about moonlighting while I had an assistantship. Mr. Bennett was a good friend to me. He never failed to help with procedural details, and he knew just where to find the answer to any question I had. He told me that as long as I kept up my grades and satisfied the requirements of the assistantship, there was no problem with making extra money on grants. To be cautious, I kept the number of neuropsych batteries down to two a week as long as I was still taking classes.

Periodically my advisor would mention that the comprehensive exams lay ahead. I only dimly remembered them from my first Ph.D.; as I recalled, they were unpleasant. I told my advisor that I simply could not think any further ahead than the next class, the next assistantship assignment, the next brown bag. Like a dissertation, like finding a job after graduation, comps were just too far away in the future to seem real. Having a foreshortened sense of the future can be one of the sequelae of unresolved loss, and I seemed to have that symptom to a great extent. (That first fall, I had not even realized there would be a Christmas vacation until some point in September when I studied the academic calendar. I remember the shock of relief I felt when I realized I could go home and see my sister and my son and friends again, at Christmas.)

Meanwhile there was a lot of activity. I went to Nashville one year and Baltimore the next, to the annual meetings of the American Society of Bioethics and Humanities. I presented papers twice to the IMH Student Colloquium. I had a long creative period of writing poetry, and I got some of it published. I wrote a proposal to present a paper at a Poetry and Medicine conference at Duke University, and it was accepted. I have been asked to work on other grants involving psychological testing, in various departments on campus. I built warm friendships with other students, support staff, work colleagues, and through a writing group, Quaker meeting, and the Unitarian Church. My brother and I visit often, and to my astonishment my son and his (at last) wife moved to Houston in late 2002. My cup ranneth over.

Comprehensive examinations were indeed difficult when I finally got ready for them. I wish I could say they were a challenging and fulfilling experience, but I found them just terribly stressful. For IMH comps one writes an essay a day—between twelve and twenty pages—for five days, on subjects one has more or less prepared for by having discussions with one’s faculty committee members along with extensive reading. The most I can say now is that they are behind me and I am glad. It took me a long time to recover and feel like working on anything more. I did learn one valuable lesson from the ordeal: if you can write fifty indifferent pages in one week, you have no excuse not to write an adequate dissertation in one year.

I had written a dissertation before, of course, but it was a based on a quasi-experimental design in clinical/social psychology. In the social sciences, dissertations follow a rigid template and the writing style is academic and dry. I had to continually suppress myself to meet the requirements and turn in a piece of work dull enough to pass muster. All I wanted to do, really, was finish and get out into the world so I could practice psychology and do some good for very sick people. I enjoyed my dissertation and thought it was pretty good, but I had no wish to publish it or work any part of it up for publication. Now I am working on a dissertation that has more meaning for me, in a (slightly) more lively and impressionistic writing style. When I feel unenthusiastic, it calls me; my friends tell me to get back on it; I watch the pages add up in wonderment. It has taken on a certain worth in its own right and demands to be worked on whether I feel like it or not.

In my impulse to use this essay to express gratitude for all the learning experiences and fortunate connections I have made during this unexpected phase of my life, I do not wish to sound altogether like a Pollyanna. I have had hurtful interchanges with professors and occasional unpleasant experiences at work. I have written proposals to give presentations at national conferences and been turned down. I have applied for scholarships and not won them. I applied for a job in my new field that seemed perfect for me, and received only a form letter saying I was not what they were looking for. Being fortunate enough to have the opportunity and time to study and learn is no buffer from ordinary life stresses and fears about the future.

Here arises an obvious question: What am I going to do with this degree? At first I had fantasies about teaching at a university or working at a medical school or a think tank in an ethics program. I thought about the pleasures of doing research and publishing articles and writing books—a very fulfilling way of life. Alas, I am sure it is, but it is not to be had for the wishing when one is advancing toward the second half of one’s fifties. I have found from bemused experience that medical schools and universities are rightly anxious to hire young, eager, and energetic aspiring scholars who have the starry-eyed ambition to get tenure, to publish mightily, and to make names for themselves in the field. I am more of a nondriven but seasoned professional who looks for a niche both to contribute to and appreciate the state of the art in Medical Humanities. There is no way to predict if such a way will open. As before, I wonder what will be expected of me in the days and years to come.

For now, I work three-quarter time doing neuropsychological evaluations and clinical interviews with patients with AIDS for three different grants. When I got the job, I was happy to resign my assistantship so another student could benefit from the same generosity I experienced in the IMH. I work on my dissertation, an exegesis about first-person published narratives of mental illness. I have not strayed far from psychology after all. I remain interested in the ethical aspects of long-term care for the psychiatrically disabled; the psychology of unethical research-ers; the meaning of the insanity defense; the treatment of animals in research; and ethical responses to the exigencies of managed care in psychiatry. If I ever imagined that my identity as a psychologist was something I could step out of like a coat, I was wrong. Now I have blended parts of psychology with parts of the study of ethics and medical humanities. It feels like a happy merger, whatever happens.

Oh, and I tend to call people “sweetie” when I am standing in line. And outside my window as I write this, a lime tree is heavy with beautiful fruit.

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Angela Lea Scott
Combined MD/PhD Program

I spent my teens and early twenties deciding to become a doctor. Years of soul-searching, volunteering in hospitals, talking to family and friends, and comparing visions of possible alternate futures lead me step by step from extra biology classes in high school to the white coat ceremony. Looking back now, the decision to attend medical school took up a substantial part of my life. I struggled with it and the process is necessarily now part of who I am.

I decided to attend graduate school in minutes. I happened upon a link to the Institute for the Medical Humanities while looking through UTMB’s website in preparation for a medical school interview. I remember finding a list of graduate courses offered at the IMH – Narratives of Illness, Traditions of American Medicine, Clinical Ethics, Interpretation of Texts. By the time I had read to the end of the page I knew I would apply. It seems like, and was, a relatively huge change of plans. Yet I had such an easy time making the decision that it didn’t seem then, and still doesn’t, seem like a decision at all. It was love at first site. There was no decision to be made.

“What do you plan to do with a degree like that?” I heard my father trying to decide what tone of voice to take. I knew what he was thinking. God, she’s almost there – I thought we were done with this. I remembered all the times I’d expressed doubts about medical school. I really wanted to be a teacher. I really wanted to go into law, or policy. I really, secretly, wanted to write. These felt like confessions to me, like somewhat subversive hobbies I would necessarily have to give up to do what I ultimately felt called to do – practice medicine. After all the years of struggling I felt that I wanted the instant, personal, face to face reward of making a difference in an individual’s life. Yet I still felt strongly that I could, perhaps, contribute something to the field of medicine outside of the clinic – something more abstract, more lasting. I felt like the things that drew me to medicine were issues that needed attention in the surrounding social and political context before they could ever be translated into better care at the bedside. And although I had already given myself to medicine, I still anticipated the claustrophobia of the examining room. A graduate degree felt like an open window into the world of research, policy and education, and thanks to the option of a combined MD/PhD program, I no longer had to leave part of myself behind in choosing a career.

I don’t remember if I had any strong feelings one way or the other about UTMB as a candidate medical school before I found the IMH. I was not searching for graduate schools at the time, and I didn’t apply to any other graduate program. I came to UTMB to work with the faculty in my department, and although I’ve since had many valuable experiences with other things that the campus has to offer, I still think of the IMH as the reason I’m here. To my knowledge, UTMB offers the only MD/PhD program in the Medical Humanities in the country. Other schools with strong bioethics or humanities departments have rumored to allow medical students to work toward graduate degrees in these fields, but not within the framework of a structured, funded, combined degree program such as ours. If this option did not exist at UTMB, I feel sure I would not be working toward a PhD. I’m looking ahead toward my fifth year in the program now, and I still feel grateful for whatever karma or serendipity led me to that web page so many years ago.

Although I can’t speak for the other students in our department, I feel fairly confident that our collective experience in the GSBS at UTMB differs significantly from that of students in the natural sciences. For one thing, we have our own curriculum and rarely, if ever, take courses outside of our department. Although we operate with a relatively small faculty that can, due to logistics, only offer a few courses each semester, the scope and depth of our coursework more than adequately prepares us for the dissertation process and the issues we may face in the field. The true strength of the graduate program at the IMH, in my opinion, is the individual and collective commitment on the part of the faculty to education. As a student I have consistently received their support and professional courtesy, and have never felt trapped by excessive direction or abandoned to my own devices. Even despite the additional burden of my status as an MD\PhD student with an odd schedule and commitments to other schools, I’ve never experienced anything other than respect and competent, professional smoothing-out of the inevitable administrative tangles.

As I look ahead to comprehensive exams and my dissertation, I’m struck by the extent to which the combined degree program has shaped my academic development both in medicine and the humanities. Having spent a year in graduate classes reading about the history of medicine and clinical ethics, I entered medical school with an eye toward professional and social as well as clinical issues. Now back in graduate school, I recognize that the perspective I gained in medical school, in classes but especially on the wards, has not only shaped my research interests but heightened my awareness of the importance of these issues. Although at times I feel as though I live in two worlds, or even that I’m two different people, I’m also unable to separate my medical and graduate academic development. These two aspects of my intellectual identity have grown and changed together and in reaction to one another.

A significant issue for many MD/PhD students seems to center around the way they plan to split their time between two relatively distinct activities: practice and research. I’ve heard some of my classmates express their conviction that one person can’t possibly do both things well, and that many clinician researchers end up spending most of their time in the lab, regardless of whatever good intentions they had to practice medicine as students. Of course I can’t speak for my colleagues in the natural sciences, but as I begin to imagine my own career more clearly, I see myself actively engaged in medicine and research. I hope to enter the field of adolescent pediatrics, which I believe fits my interests clinically as well as provides a rich context for exploring the ethical and social issues surrounding children, parents, teenagers, and health care. Of course I believe that my graduate degree will make me a better doctor. But that’s far from all it will do. By exploring the issues facing my patient population through theoretical and empirical bioethics research, actively participating in policy debates, and leading premedical and medical students through their own exploration of these issues, I believe I can do more than care for my patients individually. I believe I can advance the field through careful and rigorous scholarship.

University of Texas at Austin
Age 27
Female

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