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Eric J. Cassell, MD, M.A.C.P.![]() Clinical Professor of Public Health,
Educational and professional experience:I retired from the active practice of internal medicine in 1998 after thirty-seven years. I received by BA from Queens College in 1950, my MA from Columbia University also in 1950 and my M.D. from New York University College of Medicine in 1954. I did my post graduate training in Internal Medicine on the 3rd Medical Division of Bellevue Hospital in New York City. I was a U.S. Public Health Service Fellow in Infectious disease in the Department of Public Health of Cornell University Medical College Serving under Dr. Walsh McDermott and Dr. Rene Dubos. I was a captain in the Medical Corp of the U.S. Army from 1956 to 1958 in France (how delightful). I remained in the Department of Public Health at Cornell where, in 1961, I started doing research and writing extensively on the health effects of air pollution which continued for several years. I have been on the faculty of New York University School of Medicine and Mount Sinai School of Medicine. I am a member of the Institute of Medicine of the national Academy of Science and a Master of the American College of Physicians. I was a member from 1997 to 2001 of the President’s National Bioethics Advisory Commission.Current teaching and research interests:I have written a lot about moral problems in medicine, the care of the dying and the nature of suffering. I am the author of The Healer’s Art, The Place of the Humanities in Medicine, Changing Values in Medicine, two volumes on doctor patient communication entitled talking with Patients, Doctoring: The Nature of Primary Care Medicine, and The Nature of Suffering, now in its second edition (2004 – please read the new chapters about mind/body and meaning). A new book, A Primer on Healing, is in the works. Since retiring, and with the blessing of enough sleep and not so much worry, I continue actively to teach, lecture widely, and write (and write). My major interest is the theory of clinical medicine and the development of new ideas to guide medicine’s practice and teaching. One of my tests for every idea continues to be whether it works in end-of-life care.If you have additional questions, please contact us via e-mail at: pallcare@partners.org . |
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