Monday, May 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-American Physician To Receive US National Humanities Medal

IANS, 15 Sep, 2016 10:52 AM
    Indian-American physician-author Abraham Verghese, whose work has emphasised empathy in medicine, has been selected for the prestigious 2015 National Humanities Medal, the White House has announced.
     
    US President Barack Obama would confer the honour upon Mr Verghese, along with 11 others, and the recipients of 2015 National Medal of Arts at ceremony on September 21.
     
    Currently a professor of medicine at the Stanford School of Medicine, Mr Verghese, 61, has authored several acclaimed books, including "My Own Country" and "Cutting for Stone".
     
    In a statement, the White House Wednesday said Mr Verghese has been given the award for reminding "us" that the patient is the centre of the medical enterprise.
     
    "His range of proficiency embodies the diversity of the humanities, from his efforts to emphasise empathy in medicine, to his imaginative renderings of the human drama," the White House said.
     
    "Abraham Verghese is not only an exemplary clinician, he is an exemplary humanist," said Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne.
     
    "Every day in the classroom, he teaches his students that professions such as medicine benefit from an understanding of the human condition. We are so proud that his breadth of scholarship has been recognised with this honour," Mr Tessier-Lavigne said.
     
     
    Inaugurated in 1997, the National Humanities Medal honours individuals or groups whose work has deepened the nation's understanding of the human experience, broadened citizens' engagement with history, literature, languages, philosophy, and other humanities subjects, according to the National Endowment for the Humanities website.
     
    Up to 12 medals are awarded each year.
     
    "I am humbled and excited by this honour," Mr Verghese said in a statement issued by the Stanford University. He completed his education at the Madras Medical College.
     
    "The names of previous recipients include writers I most admire. It is a wonderful affirmation of a path that in the early years I wasn't sure was the right path, even though it was one I felt compelled to follow," Mr Verghese, who is also the Linda R Meier and Joan F Lane Provostial Professor, said.
     
    Mr Verghese is known for his emphasis on empathy for patients in an era in which technology often overwhelms the human side of medicine, the university said in a statement.
     
    "I felt strongly then and now that what I was writing about, and my interest in the human experience of being ill or caring for the ill, was as much a part of medicine as knowledge of the function of the pancreas, for example," said Mr Verghese, who is also a vice chair of Stanford's Department of Medicine.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    U.K.-Canada WestJet Plane Declares Emergency, Lands In Iceland

    The pilots aboard the Boeing 767 declared an in-flight emergency about two hours after taking off from Gatwick Airport.

    U.K.-Canada WestJet Plane Declares Emergency, Lands In Iceland

    'Epitome of Evil Stepmother' Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison for Starving, Beating Step-Daughter

    'Epitome of Evil Stepmother' Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison for Starving, Beating Step-Daughter
    Sheetal Ranot, 35, of Queens, was convicted by a jury in July this year of first-degree assault and endangering the welfare of a child.

    'Epitome of Evil Stepmother' Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison for Starving, Beating Step-Daughter

    Pakistani Army Repeating Horrors Of 1971 In Balochistan: Baloch Activist

    Pakistani Army Repeating Horrors Of 1971 In Balochistan: Baloch Activist
    In the last two days, the home of a Baloch activist with women and children has been under siege by Pakistani paramilitary forces. Prior to this, they kidnapped more than 40 women with children from the Bolan area of Balochistan

    Pakistani Army Repeating Horrors Of 1971 In Balochistan: Baloch Activist

    Site C project not in keeping with constitution or UN declaration: Bellegarde

    Site C project not in keeping with constitution or UN declaration: Bellegarde
    The multi-billion dollar project — a proposed dam and hydroelectric generating station on B.C.'s Peace River — would create an 83-kilometre reservoir and flood farm land along with traditional First Nations territory.

    Site C project not in keeping with constitution or UN declaration: Bellegarde

    Indian-American Dharun Ravi's Convictions Thrown Out In Rutgers Webcam Case

    Indian-American Dharun Ravi's Convictions Thrown Out In Rutgers Webcam Case
    In a 61-page ruling issued yesterday, the Appellate Division of the Superior Court of New Jersey in Newark said the jury had found Ravi guilty of bias intimidation under a law that was later deemed "constitutionally defunct."

    Indian-American Dharun Ravi's Convictions Thrown Out In Rutgers Webcam Case

    How 2 Indian-American Children Impressed Michelle Obama

    How 2 Indian-American Children Impressed Michelle Obama
    Among the audience were the First Lady, Michelle Obama, who felicitated Maya Eashwaran and four others including another Indian-American Gopal Raman with the prestigious National Students Poet in recognition of their poetry skills.

    How 2 Indian-American Children Impressed Michelle Obama