FSU College of Medicine 2018 annual report 2018 Annual Report - FSU College of Medicine | Page 51

2 0 1 8 A N N U A L R E P O R T 49 ‘INCREDIBLY PROUD’: THE CHAPMAN REPORT The name Chapman has come to represent the ideal of humanism in medicine. Each year, thanks to continuous gifts from the Jules B. Chapman, M.D. and Annie Lou Chapman Private Foundation, there are new stories to tell about humanism on display at the College of Medicine. In , for example, Hartwell Cronin Leonard Carbono Laryea Cudjoe Mason Dennison Inkel Adams more students received Chapman Humanism Scholarships. The latest recipients are Nick Adams two-time recipient , Jordan Carbono, Conor Cronin, Efe Cudjoe and Casey Mason all Class of and Elizabeth Dennison, Shelby Hartwell, Maurice Inkel, Richmond Laryea and Joey Leonard all Class of . I m incredibly proud of this, said Professor Robert Watson, trustee of the foundation. To the best of my I ve had so many senior students tell me it was the best knowledge, it is a uni ue scholarship. Five first-year educational experience they had in medical school, Watson said. students and five second-year students, chosen solely for the humanistic ualities that they ve exhibited such as Those programs are just the tip of the Chapman iceberg. In addition, there s a , Chapman Humanism age would-be physicians and for med students who travel there for multicultural experiences. Watson can t wait to see where the students humanism ideas lead them next. compassion and empathy. And the second uni ue thing Fund endowment, ready to bring new community-serving The Chapman Foundation has given me incredible is they re chosen primarily by the standardized patients projects to life. There s a separate new Humanities & Arts mentors that showed the true meaning of compassion, those whose role is to portray medical symptoms, to help in Medicine Program, which hopes to have a Chapman kindness and empathy in medicine, said Mason, formerly students sharpen their skills in patient care. Memorial Garden in place by the end of executive director of the Chapman Community Health Another Chapman project that continues to bear fruit is the Chapman Community Health Program, through which students have formed a partnership with residents of the and which will continue to support HEAL, the longtime journal that Program. It has given me friendships with community celebrates Humanism Evolving through Arts and Literature. members and classmates alike that continue to teach me Money from the foundation also pays for the white coats perseverance and generosity. Every day in clinic, I wear my Maryland Oaks Crossing community. Past successes include that first-year med students receive, to introduce them to Chapman Community Health Program pin as a badge of honor monthly health screenings, smoking-cessation workshops, a the healing profession. And it helps support learning in the on my white coat, and as a continual reminder to practice these community garden and food pantry, and regular social activities. migrant-rich community of Immokalee, both for high-school- humanistic values with every person I encounter.