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Medical Scientist Training Program News March 2008
Once again, this year's graduates of our MD/PhD Training Program have distinguished themselves in their residency matches.
James Bennett will work in Pediatrics at the University of Washington, Seattle. The University of Washington will also be the home for Marie Davis, who has taken a position in Neurology there. Abby Deans will do a one-year internship at St Mary's Medical Center in San Francisco and then continue in Diagnostic Radiology at the University of California, San Francisco. Owen Debowy will begin his residency in Medicine/Pediatrics at the University of Maryland Medical Center. Ethan Goldberg has elected Childrens Hospital, Philadelphia, for his Pediatrics residency and Thormika Keo will move to Stanford University for Internal Medicine.
We would like to congratulate them all for their stellar achievements and extend our best and heart-felt wishes for their future careers!
Welcome to the MD/PhD Training Program
Dear Future Physician-Scientists:
You are fortunate to be starting your professional training during an extraordinary period in biomedical research. Elias Zerhouni, MD, the Director of the NIH, tells a revealing story: over several conferences, he asked a number of biotech leaders and Nobel laureates the question, “How much biology do we truly understand? How much do we need to know to be effective as scientists, as healers, as physicians? Ninety percent?... Fifty?... Thirty percent?” No one would raise their hands until the figure came to “below ten percent.” Combine this agreement with the equally respectable notion that half of what we think we know will turn out to be wrong, and it appears that at least 95% of what there is to discover remains ahead of us.
Medical science is a true 21st century terra incognita. It is the challenge of MSTP programs to teach you how to navigate this boundless (and boundary-less) terrain, and this is a rigorous discipline on its own. Not only are scientists increasingly called on to view their work in the context of the organismal biology, but physicians are facing a sea change of their own: medicine is orienting not just toward prevention but to individual variations in response to treatments and the interactions and participation of specialty teams (not to mention patients themselves). As we enter what I believe will be a golden age for translational research, the need for well-prepared physician-scientists has never been greater.
As the new Director of the NYU Medical Scientist Training Program, let me welcome you to our temporary website. While the MSTP program undergoes exciting changes over the coming months, this site will post new and more detailed information about what we offer and the ways in which we are improving our program. In the meantime, I invite you to explore the new website of my department, Pathology, so you can get a better sense of what’s new at NYU Medical Center.
Anyone seriously considering the pursuit of an MD/PhD combined degree is poised to enter a realm of rare opportunity and challenge. My own training has proven invaluable for many of my career choices, sometimes in surprising ways. I have been an academic researcher, a teacher of medical and graduate students, a mentor, and a Chair, and I have savored all of these roles. I believe our program will provide superior training for as varied and individual a career as you choose to pursue.
David B. Roth, M.D., Ph.D.
Irene Diamond Professor of Immunology,
Helen L. and Martin S. Kimmel Center for Biology and Medicine
at the Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine
Chair, Department of Pathology
Director, Medical Scientist Training Program
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