By C.J. Trent-Gurbuz
Paola Mancera, an incoming first-year M.D. student at the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences (SMHS), apologized as she wiped away a tear just before the start of the school’s White Coat and Honor Code ceremony.
“I’m trying not to cry this soon, but it is the most surreal experience,” she said. “Every night that I was not sleeping, every time that I was in the library, now I get to be here, and it has just been so fantastic.”
The Aug. 6 ceremony, an annual event signaling the start of medical students’ education, is a rite of passage for budding health professionals. They formally don their white coats, sign the honor code and pledge their commitment to medicine with family, friends and future colleagues as witnesses.
For Ms. Mancera, the ceremony symbolized the culmination of years of hard work.
“This has been the last eight years of my life, trying to get to this point, and it feels like a dream that I really don’t want to wake up from,” she said.
Her family immigrated to the United States from Bogota, Colombia, and Ms. Mancera, a graduate of the University of South Florida in Tampa, is the first among them to attend medical school. “For everything that my family had to go through, and my parents had to go through, to help me get here, it’s amazing,” she said. “Words can’t describe how fantastic it is.”
While her family waited patiently in Lisner Auditorium for her to slip into her white coat, Ms. Mancera and her classmates learned the deeper meaning behind the clothing identifying them as physicians. As ceremony speaker Kyle Kurland, B.S. ’15, a second-year M.D. student at SMHS, explained, the “crisp and immaculate” coat is more than just a piece of fabric. “The white coat carries with it a great deal of responsibility,” he said. “It serves as a constant reminder of our duty to our education, integrity and patients. It signifies a steadfast commitment to medicine, a humble devotion to our craft and a responsibility to the people who place their trust in us.”
Keynote speaker Nancy Gaba, M.D. ’93, Oscar I. and Mildred S. Dodek and Joan B. and Oscar I. Dodek Jr. Professor and Chair of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at SMHS, recalled that her white coat, at least at first, served as a catchall for all of the things she could possibly need: medical instruments, gloves, surgical tape, books and journal articles, pens and highlighters.
Also tucked into one of the pockets was “the most precious item, the notebook I called my ‘auxiliary brain,’” she said. “I wrote down everything I thought might be important, such as what questions different attendings might ask you in the OR or the differential diagnosis for unusual complaints. Needless to say, my back and my neck hurt all the time.”
What Dr. Gaba found was that the coat was merely emblematic of who she was as a doctor. “I have come to learn that it’s what’s inside your white coat—behaving civilly, treating others with respect and concern—that matters,” she said.
With Dr. Gaba’s and Mr. Kurland’s words in mind, the nearly 200 members of the class of 2020 ascended to the stage. While Rhonda Goldberg, M.A. ’77, associate dean for student affairs at SMHS, and Diane McQuail, associate dean for admissions at SMHS, introduced each student, Jeffrey S. Akman, M.D. ’81, vice president for health affairs, Walter A. Bloedorn Professor of Administrative Medicine, and dean of SMHS, eased them into their white coats.
The coats were donated by GW physicians from across the country as part of the White Coat Initiative, which also provides students with educational resources, including iPads. The support, Dr. Akman said, was “our way of saying welcome.”
After signing the pledge and shaking hands with Dr. Gaba; Lorenzo Norris, assistant dean for student affairs and assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at SMHS; and Lawrence “Bopper” Deyton, M.D. ’85, senior associate dean for clinical public health, students and their family and friends cheered.
“I feel great [about putting on my white coat],” said first-year M.D. student Chloe Harrington. “It’s just so overwhelming, honestly. It feels like I’ve just been waiting for this for so long … and it really is sinking in now that this white coat is so symbolic of our future medical career.”