Administration Dean's Office

The Dean's Newsletter:
January 14, 2008

Table of Contents

v Memorial Celebration of Dr. Arthur Kornberg
v Some Challenges for 2008
v Leadership Changes in the Clinical Laboratory
v Science and Medical Education for High School Students
v Update on the Department of Otolaryngology -- Head & Neck Surgery
v Announcements from the Office of Programs and Services
v Upcoming Events
 
v 31st Katherine D. McCormick Distinguished Lecture - January 30
v Science Education in the 21st Century: Are Science and Religion Compatible? -- March 9th
v Awards and Honors
 
v Bigwei Lu
v Philip Beachy
v Hugh O'Brodovich
v Abby King
v Scott Delp
v David Gaba
v Appointments and Promotions

Memorial Celebration of Dr. Arthur Kornberg

On Friday January 25th the School of Medicine will host a memorial celebration to honor the life and remarkable contributions of Arthur Kornberg who died on October 26, 2007. The Celebration will begin at 3 pm in the Dinkelspiel Auditorium and will be followed by a Reception at the Faculty Club. All are invited to attend. Details »

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Some Challenges for 2008

As the New Year begins we can look forward to the continuation of many wonderful accomplishments and successes by our faculty, students and staff. But to foster and enrich opportunities for the future, it is important that we be cognizant of looming challenges that arise from both internal and external forces and events. Some of these are controllable, whereas others present obstacles that may be more difficult or even impossible to surmount. When I was planning my arrival as Dean in January 2001, I felt strongly that the best way to respond to change was to take charge of it and plan accordingly. That view led to the development of our initial strategic plan, entitled "Translating Discoveries," and has accounted for many of our advances in our integrated missions of education, research and patient care during the past nearly seven years. Integrated planning has also guided our approaches to long-term facility and finance planning, the development of our professoriate, the role of information technology and related resources, our approach to communications and public affairs and our efforts in fundraising and medical development.

We have continuously renewed and revised our institutional strategic planning efforts and have revisited them in the aggregate each January at our Annual Strategic Planning Retreat. The theme for this year's retreat is "Quality and Balance," which we will explore across the dimensions and domain of the medical school, medical center and university. We are a small research-intensive school of medicine aligned with two major teaching hospitals and co-located on the campus of an outstanding university. In this context it is imperative that we establish choices and priorities that optimize our uniqueness and permit our greatest future success despite constraints, limitations or challenges which inevitably arise -- whether they emerge from within Stanford or from forces and events that occur locally, regionally, nationally or globally. 

For example, a continuing challenge for us is sustaining and enhancing quality in a medical school that, compared to its peers, is comparatively small in size and constrained in space.  In addition, we, like other academic centers, face reductions in research funding and a national climate that has increasingly tended to pit religion against science in the political arena.  I have highlighted and discussed many of these issues in prior Newsletters and will more briefly highlight here some of the concerns that are high on my list for the next year. In doing so I am fully cognizant that they might easily be superceded by unanticipated events or by ones that are now viewed as less immediate. But I also believe that unless we anticipate issues and plan around them we run the risk of being reactive rather than proactive, letting events shape us rather than our shaping our institution and its future. The listing below is not prioritized and is hardly complete. But it does present a reasoned sampling of issues.

Challenges arising within Stanford

Challenges coming from our local, regional, national and global communities

Of course this is just a sampling of some of the issues and challenges I envision for 2008 and beyond. As I stated above, I am certain that others will arise as well and of course there are numerous topics I am already aware of that I haven't listed. That does not mean they are unimportant or that we won't address them. I simply wanted to highlight some that I felt would be of general interest. We will do our best to help address them -- and I am counting on your support as well. Happy New Year!

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Leadership Changes in the Clinical Laboratory

Dr. Steve Galli, Chair of the Department of Pathology and the Mary Hewitt Loveless Professor, along with Mike Peterson, Chief Operating Officer at Stanford Hospital & Clinics (SHC) and Sue Flanagan, Chief Operating Officer at the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital (LPCH), asked that I provide you this update on leadership changes in the SHC Clinical Laboratory.  The SHC Clinical Laboratory serves patients and physicians at SHC and LPCH as well as those who utilize the laboratory's outreach testing program.  One of the leadership changes involves Dr. Richard Sibley, Professor of Pathology, who served as the Medical Director during the past four- and-a-half years and who has decided to step down from this position.

Dr. Sibley assumed the role of Medical Director at a time when the Clinical Laboratories were undergoing significant changes, both in terms of an expansion of the Outreach Program and the relocation of many of the laboratory services from the main hospital to an offsite location on Hillview Avenue in Palo Alto.  On behalf of the Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, SHC and LPCH, and all those who work in and are served by the SHC Clinical Laboratory, we thank Dr. Sibley for his dedicated leadership and significant accomplishments during his time as Medical Director. He played an extremely important service and will now redirect his efforts to his work in surgical pathology, pathology trainee and medical student education, and research.

Dr. Daniel Arber, the current Director of the SHC Hematology Laboratories, has been named as the interim Medical Director of the SHC Clinical Laboratories.  Dr. Arber will be working closely with Dr. Richard Sibley during this transition period, and will serve in the role of interim Medical Director until the appointment of the next Medical Director of the SHC Clinical Laboratories. A national search is currently underway to identify the permanent director. Dr. Arber will also continue in his role as Director of the SHC Hematology Laboratories. 

On behalf of the School of Medicine, SHC and LPCH, we thank Dr. Arber for generously agreeing to serve as interim Medical Director of the SHC Clinical Laboratories. We also thank Dr. Sharon Geaghan, Co-Medical Director of the SHC Clinical Laboratory for Pediatrics and Dr. Daniel Barrio, Administrative Director of the SHC Clinical Laboratory, for their continued service and leadership as part of the Laboratory Executive Group.

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Science and Medical Education for High School Students

At the December 21st Executive Committee meeting, Dr. P.J. Utz, Associate Professor of Medicine, gave a presentation on some of the exciting high school outreach programs in the School of Medicine. Three programs in the School of Medicine recently won support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI): the Stanford Medical Youth Sciences Program (SMYSP) which is now in its 20th year of successful operation and which was founded and is directed by Dr. Marilyn Winkleby, Professor of Medicine; Stanford at the Tech, directed by Dr. Barry Starr, Department of Genetics; and the Center for Clinical Immunology at Stanford (CCIS), founded and directed by Dr. Utz (see http://ccis.stanford.edu/intern_program.html). In addition, the School of Medicine also provides a summer program for disadvantaged college students who are interested in careers in science and medicine.

Dr. Utz focused his presentation on the program which he initiated in the summer of 2000 with 10 students; by 2007 it had grown to 22 students each year for high school students interested in careers in science and medicine. It has become a well - established program that includes, in addition to laboratory research, a summer lecture program with a remarkably detailed syllabus. The program also provides teaching opportunities for graduate students and postdoctoral fellows, who serve as Teaching Assistants (TAs}. At the conclusion of the program, a poster session is held at which all students present data generated in their research. The quality of the students accepted into the program is exceedingly high and has included three valedictorians and 10 who are #1 in their high school classes. 

Based on the success of the immunology program, Dr. Utz and his colleagues are beginning to replicate it in the other Stanford Institutes of Medicine. Plans call for the establishment of an overall structure across all the institutes that would include an administrative core and separate education and research programs within each institute. The goals for this broader set of programs include: interesting students in careers in biomedical science and in interdisciplinary research; improving the teaching of graduate students and postdoctoral fellows; and encouraging interactions between faculty. The Executive Committee was enthusiastic about these goals and appreciative of the efforts of Dr. Utz and his colleagues to establish these programs and make them successful. I am particularly grateful for Dr. Utz' inspirational leadership and his dedication and commitment in inspiring high school students to contemplate careers in science and medicine.

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Update on the Department of Otolaryngology -- Head & Neck Surgery

At the January 4th Executive Committee Dr. Rob Jackler, Edward C and Amy H Sewall Professor, gave an update on the progress he has made since becoming Chair of the Department of Otolaryngology -- Head & Neck Surgery (OHNS) that was established just over four years ago. Since then the department has grown to become a premier program with strengths in clinical specialties, education and research.

As noted by Dr. Jackler, OHNS has grown from 6 to 20 faculty members during the past 4 years (and is on the way to being 24 faculty over the next 2-3 years). These include six new clinical division chiefs: Dr Peter Koltai (Pediatric OHNS), Dr Michael Kaplan (Head & Neck Oncology), Dr Peter Hwang (Rhinology and Sinus Surgery), Dr Sam Most (Facial Plastic Surgery), Dr Edward Damrose (Laryngology), and Dr Gerald Popelka (Audiology & Hearing Devices). The department is in the midst of recruiting a cadre of young surgeon -- investigators charged with the purpose of building strong ties between the clinical world and our basic science and engineering communities.

During this time the OHNS residency has grown from 3 to 4 residents per year for a total of 20 residents over the five years of training. The department now offers seven post residency fellowship/clinical instructorship programs, more than virtually any OHNS program, including: facial plastic surgery, head & neck surgery, pediatric OHNS, neurotology & skull base surgery, sinus surgery, sleep surgery, and laryngology. These programs not only provide advanced training for promising young academicians, but because most of the trainees are also junior faculty members, they enhance the residency educational experience as well.

The research programs in ONHS have also been highly successful. The priority of the department's laboratory programs is to produce high quality, innovative research in areas of inquiry relevant to human disease. Two central themes are being developed: Regenerative medicine and Bioengineering. Under the leadership of research director Dr Stefan Heller a team of investigators has been assembled to explore the prospect of overcoming deafness through use of stem cells to regenerate the organ of Corti. In collaboration with Drs. Irv Weissman and Mike Clarke, efforts are also underway to identify stem cells in squamous cell carcinoma of the head & neck.  In the area of bioengineering-related research efforts are underway to integration of the human ear and voice with digital devices, study mechanics of sound transmission through the tympano-ossicular systems, and development of surgical simulation models using 3D -- haptic enhanced simulators, microendoscopy of the inner ear, and high speed laryngeal imaging.

Stanford OHNS has come a long way in becoming an independent department just four years ago. Among the major accomplishments are the tripling of the faculty with recruitment of a number of highly talented individuals; abandoning long antiquated facilities for new ones triple their size; sizable expansion of both residency and fellowship programs; and development of dynamic, cutting edge research programs.  It is important to note that Dr. Tom Krummel was instrumental in the future success of OHNS through his willingness to have the division of Otolaryngology, previously part of the department of Surgery, become an independent department. This was an act of institutional generosity that deserves our appreciation.

Of course I also want to commend Dr. Rob Jackler for his visionary leadership. He has forged significant and meaningful collaborations with colleagues in basic and clinical science and has worked diligently with his colleagues -- both those who were part of the original division as well as those who have been recruited to the department -- to lead and develop a terrific clinical department. 

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Announcements from the Office of Programs and Services

I am pleased to relay these announcements, which I received from Jim Rollins, Director of Finance and Administration for the Office of Programs and Services.

First, John Bray has been named Assistant Dean for Graduate Education, Director of Biosciences Admissions and Administration.  Since his arrival in December 2002, John has served in various roles within the School of Medicine's Office of Graduate Education. Over the past three years, he has led and significantly improved the Biosciences graduate-student admissions process while also managing the efforts of several other staff members in the organization. Congratulations to John. 

Second, Elizabeth Porter, Assistant Dean for Medical Education, has left Stanford after 18 years of dedicated service to medical education in the School of Medicine to embark on exciting new ventures, seeking new challenges and opportunities in her personal and professional life. No words can convey the tremendous impact Elizabeth had on the education of Stanford medical students over the years. Her role in helping to develop and shepherd in the new curriculum, her work behind the scenes to for our recent successful LCME accreditation, and her counsel to a number of Senior Associate and Associate Deans are but a few of her contributions over a distinguished career. Best wishes to Elizabeth.

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Upcoming Events

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Awards and Honors

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Appointments and Promotions

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A downloadable Microsoft Word version of the newsletter is available. If clicking on this following link does not initiate a download, right-click (Windows) or click-and-hold (Mac), then use the command most similar to "Download Link To Disk" or "Save This Link As" and save the Word file to your disk.

Microsoft Word version: DeanNews01-14-08.doc

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