Medical Ethicist Receives Cura Personalis Medal at Convocation
November 1, 2009
The Medical Center honored Edmund D. Pellegrino, with a medal for his outstanding scientific, medical and educational achievements in the spirit of the Jesuit tradition of cura personalis, or caring for the whole person, during its Sept. 22 convocation.
Pellegrino, the John Carroll Professor Emeritus of Medicine and a senior research scholar at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics, has held many roles while at Georgetown. He has served as the director of the Center for Clinical Bioethics, head of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics and director for the Advanced Study of Ethics.
“In gratitude for his service to the medical community, for his commitment to excellence in scholarship and research … for his leadership in bioethics …, we’re honored to have (Dr. Pellegrino) with us today,” said Georgetown President John J. DeGioia at the Medical Center’s second annual convocation.
DeGioia and Howard J. Federoff, executive vice president for health sciences at Georgetown and executive dean of the School of Medicine, presented the medical scholar with the Cura Personalis Medal during the afternoon convocation.
A prolific author, Pellegrino, 89, has written more than 24 books and 550 published works in medical science, philosophy and ethics, and he is the founding editor of the Journal of Medicine and Philosophy.
“Despite being labeled a bioethicist, I really am not one,” said Pellegrino. “I am a physician who likes to reflect on the moral obligations of being a physician, and I continue to identify myself that way.”
Best known for his discussions on Christian virtue and medical ethics in the treatment of patients, humanism and the physician; and the philosophical basis of medical treatment, Pellegrino focused his remarks on the role of ethics in the health care debate and in particular on the role of physicians.
“It involves all of us as patients, as potential patients. It also involves all of us here in the Medical Center who are teachers,” Pellegrino said. “Basic scientists contribute to the formation of the physician as do we clinicians. The idea that we are celebrating today, the idea of cura personalis, is the idea of the care of the person.”
At 89, Pellegrino returns to Georgetown after completing a four-year term as chairman of the President's Council on Bioethics.
Before about 20 Medical Center faculty members and some students received recognition for their achievements, Federoff moderated a morning colloquium exploring the expanding field of pharmacogenetics. The panel featured Pellegrino along with Kevin FitzGerald, research associate professor of oncology in the division of biochemistry and pharmacology; Mark Smith, department chair in emergency medicine; Elliott Crooke, chairman of the department of biochemistry and molecular and cellular biology; and John Deeken, assistant professor at Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center.
By Rachel Pugh, GUMC Communications, excerpted from the Georgetown website
Submit your news at any time to the GUMC Office of Communications at gumccomm@georgetown.edu.
More Research News
Browse recent items in this category.
-
Great Leap Forward for GUMC Staff
The GUMC Community has 13 new Certified Research Administrators, a prestigious professional designation for research administrators
8/17/2011 -
Georgetown University and Georgetown University Medical Center Researchers Presented More than 100 Scientific Abstracts at Neuroscience 2008
Researchers from Georgetown University and Georgetown University Medical Center’s departments of neuroscience, psychology, physiology and biophysics presented more than 100 research abstracts at the Society for Neuroscience’s 38th annual meeting
12/4/2008 -
Georgetown University Medical Center Hosts Inaugural Baldev R. Bhussry Lecture
Dr. Gerald M. Crabtree of the School of Medicine at Stanford University presented his lecture, “Understanding the Words of Chromatin Remodeling
12/3/2008 -
Georgetown’s Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center Launches ShopforCancerCures.org to Raise Money for Cancer Research
Lombardi Cancer Center and Mall Networks, the leading provider of merchant-funded loyalty shopping solutions, today announced the launch of a new online shopping mall to raise money for cancer research.
11/18/2008 -
Non-White Medical Students Reject Therapies Typically Associated with Their Culture While White Students Embrace CAM
Survey of medical students measures attitude of complementary and alternative medicine during four years of medical training.
11/18/2008 -
“New” Estrogen Receptor Found to be Key Player in Tamoxifen Resistance
Researchers at Georgetown University Medical Center have discovered a novel way in which breast cancer cells become resistant to tamoxifen, the world’s largest-selling breast cancer prevention and treatment drug.
11/18/2008 -
Doo Wop Concert Raises Money for Lombardi Cancer Programs
Marvin McIntyre and Family host D.C.'s first Doo Wop concert to benefit programs at Lombardi
9/29/2008 -
Lombardi's Cancer Survivorship Program Receives Donation from Hyundai Hope on Wheels Tour
Dr. Aziza Shad and her pediatric patients at Lombardi received a generous helping hand last week at the Hyundai Hope on Wheels Handprint Ceremony when Don Reilly, co-owner of Alexandria Hyundai, presented LCCC with a donation of $40,000.
9/29/2008
More Education News
Browse recent items in this category.
-
Match Day Marks Emotional Rite of Passage for Medical Students
Georgetown medical students participated in the annual ritual that takes place around the country on the third Thursday in March—Match Day, the process that helps decide where they will spend their four years of residency.
4/1/2009 -
NHS Honors December Grads
NHS honored 95 students who completed their bachelor’s and master’s degrees in nursing in the fall 2008 semester at a completion ceremony on Dec. 13.
12/19/2008 -
School of Medicine Program Featured in "Academic Physician and Scientist"
Check out the latest issue of Academic Physician and Scientist to read the article about the Mind-Body Skills Program at Georgetown University Medical Center's School of Medicine.
12/10/2008