2022 Holiday Message
1:59
Жыл бұрын
2022 White Coat Ceremony - Class of 2026
1:07:57
2021 White Coat Ceremony  - Class of 2024
1:19:50
2021 White Coat Ceremony - Class of 2025
1:15:59
Interview with Christine Peterson, MD
11:22
2021 UVA BIMS Graduation Ceremony
41:56
Interview with John Kattwinkel, MD
12:50
Interview with John Dent, MD
10:48
4 жыл бұрын
Interview with Carolyn Engelhard, MPA
14:07
Class of 2012 Thank You Message
0:39
Interview with Marcus Martin, MD
14:14
Interview with Jay Gillenwater, MD
12:49
Thank You Message to Alumni 2018
1:15
Interview with Daniel Becker, MD
15:15
Interview with Dick Guerrant, MD '68
15:18
2017 Thank You Message
2:50
6 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@sudartiosutristio1123
@sudartiosutristio1123 Ай бұрын
🎉🎉🎉
@ashleyasashley
@ashleyasashley 6 ай бұрын
Congratulations to Dr. Stambaugh’s daughter Sara Stambaugh 🥼👩🏻‍⚕️ 57:11
@janewangari7139
@janewangari7139 8 ай бұрын
How love doctor for their great work.....may God bless them always
@dennismhall
@dennismhall 2 жыл бұрын
Dr. Carpenter was one of my instructors as a medical student and prompted my interest in cardiology. I initially planned a career in pediatrics cardiology, but later decided to adult cardiology. A Fantastic Mentor.
@BFAIII
@BFAIII 2 жыл бұрын
Great video
@chrisjones7594
@chrisjones7594 4 жыл бұрын
Lies
@chrisjones7594
@chrisjones7594 4 жыл бұрын
Tell me of the town below VOE.
@mashondadunford9539
@mashondadunford9539 5 жыл бұрын
Wonderful doctor and an amazing person. Very thankful to have had her as my doctor. Joey Dunford
@edmcdougall1842
@edmcdougall1842 5 жыл бұрын
Great look at Danny's love of medicine and the humanities. It brings home the fact that health, for us humans, is multifaceted.
@rjcanterbury6079
@rjcanterbury6079 5 жыл бұрын
Awesome!!!!!!
@d.axelson2783
@d.axelson2783 7 жыл бұрын
Dr Carpender was my doctor for 30 yrs. A amazing person.
@hipocampelofantocame
@hipocampelofantocame 8 жыл бұрын
I was in the first year class in 1958, and well remember Dr. John Owen and the colleagues he mentioned in the interview. I particularly remember Dr. Chanutin (Chan), because toward the end of one class, he said, "Mr. MacLeod, would please step into my office after class for a few words?". My friends shook their heads and essentially said, Reddy, you're dead. He had discovered that I was a HI Fi addict, and wanted advice about building a system. I gave it to him. John was correct when he mentioned that medicine has lost a lot of its fun component. That's not true in Europe.
@hipocampelofantocame
@hipocampelofantocame 8 жыл бұрын
Marvelous interview. I'm glad that medical education finances were discussed. I graduated in1962, and at time accumulating student debt was not possible. I cannot imagine starting off owing a ton of money. Developing outside interests early certainly helps after you're retired, because the medical advance avalanche is very hard to keep abreast of, especially in pediatrics.
@hipocampelofantocame
@hipocampelofantocame 8 жыл бұрын
I graduated in 1962 and well remember Slaughter Fitz-Hugh, Claude Coleman, George Minor, Cato Drash, and a number of surgeons whose name I cannot at the moment come up with, although I worked for them for those marvelous NIH summer surgical grants with great pay for research projects as a student.
@jonmsweet
@jonmsweet 8 жыл бұрын
Dr. Pearson, your positive influence on thousands of medical students have been profound. Thank you!
@hipocampelofantocame
@hipocampelofantocame 8 жыл бұрын
It was such a treat to see this interview with someone I got to know in Charlottesville in the early fifties (I'm 82). Fritz and I were in the Glee Club together (2nd bass) and as there were so few students compared to today, got to know each other socially along with Joe Hughes and a bunch of others. I volunteered for the draft in 1955 and was taken immediately. I returned to school (third year) in 1957 and was accepted into med school starting in 1958 (graduated 1962). I was also a pediatrician with the Northern Kaiser-Permanente Medical Group until I retired in 1996. Charlottesville has changed a lot over the years, but I still miss the red clay country. I'm still amazed at the medical facility as it stands today, and remember my days as a scrub nurse (Jim Kavanaugh got me the job) in the old operating rooms in the Barringer Wing. Time does indeed fly.