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A
prescription for hugs, humor and hip hop
Charles A. Brown, D.O. ('09) pursues compassionate
side of medicine
By
Colleen
Kiphart
June 1, 2009
The Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM) doesn’t
typically refer to its accomplished
graduates as “clowns,” but in this case,
it technically applies. Charles A.
Brown, D.O. ('09), who received his
Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.)
degree from OU-HCOM
June 6,
did some “clowning” as part of his 2008
John M. Stang Medical Student Elective
at the Patch Adams’ Gesundheit!
Institute in West Virginia.
At Gesundheit! Brown was part of a team
of medical students who dressed as
clowns and offered free hugs to the
public.
“In medicine, we are in a profession
that is based on humanism, but different
factors—like the business side of
practice and the hierarchy in the
system—can distract from the purpose of
medicine: to help all in need without
discrimination,” Brown says. “I came
back from the rotation refreshed.”
The rotation, entitled “Humanistic
Medicine: Constructing Your Humanism,”
brought together eleven participants
from four continents to find ways of
incorporating humanism into their chosen
health care careers. Gesundheit! is a
project of Hunter
“Patch” Adams, M.D. It began in 1972 as
a free hospital located outside of
Hillsboro in rural West Virginia. The
institute is dedicated to bringing more
compassion to medicine and examining how
greed and competition compromise health
care delivery. The 1998 movie Patch
Adams, starring Robin Williams, was
based on the Gesundheit!
“When we did those hugs I thought about
how we are in a society removed from
contact. If I was dressed normally and
offered someone a hug, they would look
at me like I was weird.” Brown says.
The value he places on connecting with
patients led Brown to his chosen
specialty, psychiatry. He says his
desire to become a doctor stems, like
Adams’, from a genuine need to help and
connect with people.
Lewis Humble, M.D., Brown’s preceptor
during his third- and fourth-year
clinical rotations, admires Brown’s
“great professional rapport” with
colleagues and patients. “He quickly
earns their full confidence and builds a
level of trust,” says Humble, clinical
assistant professor of internal medicine
at Affinity Medical Center in Massillon,
Ohio.
Gregarious from an early age, Brown
briefly considered stand-up comedy
before realizing his passion lay in the
sciences.
“It may sound cliché, but honestly, it
was a family experience that led me to
discover medicine.” Brown tells about
when he was in eighth grade and his
father suffered a stroke. “One
neurologist assisting in his treatment
was African-American, and I realized
that he was the first black doctor I had
seen outside of Bill Cosby on TV. Being
a doctor was something I hadn’t
considered, but seeing someone who
looked like me in that position—it
opened a door in my mind that I didn’t
know was there.”
He has taken measures to open those
doors for other minority students in his
home state of Indiana and across the
country. Brown has been involved with
the Student National Medical Association
since his premed days, and now he speaks
at high schools, middle schools and
statewide conferences to encourage
students to take up the white coat.
“It’s my job to show them that we’re not
stuffy (in medicine),” Brown says, “to
show that you can be grounded and have
fun.”
Brown is a perfect example of that,
especially when he breaks out his
anatomy rap. This self-described
audiophile used hip hop to keep straight
the vast volumes of information he
encountered in medical school. He even
recorded his rhymes and sent them to
fellow medical students to assist their
studies. It wasn’t unusual to see the
medical student studying with earphones
in.
“During exams I would be running through
a verse in my head. I might look at an
answer and be like, ‘No that line isn’t
right because it doesn’t rhyme with the
question.’”
Despite his unconventional methods,
Brown is a diligent clinician. Humble
says, “I see a lot of medical students,
but Charlie stuck out. He would seek out
more training, even if it wasn’t in his
rotation. He would come in early and
stay late and put in so much effort.”
So what motivates Brown, who has been
voted both “Best all-Around Classmate”
and “Class Advocate” by his peers?
“I want to do well. And I want to show
those who have invested in my doing well
that it was not for naught. My
graduating shows how thankful I am
to those who helped me. I take
comfort (in knowing) that I made them
proud.”
Brown will begin his psychiatry
residency this summer at Akron General
Medical Center. |