The mission is to specifically target the early recognition symptoms
of a heart attack (prodromal) to bring about prevention.......interrupting
the heart attack in its beginning stage. In essence it represents
an anti-missile aimed at the heart attack missile.......nipping
it at the bud stage....... twice as much benefit occurs when care
is given early (bis dot qui cito dot). Funding is needed to spread
this simple message widely in an effort to reduce the time to Victory!
The game plan is to involve others interested in furthering the
effort the take this Public Health Enemy out of first place where
it has been since the turn of the Century.
PAUL DUDLEY WHITE, M.D.- June 6, 1886
- October 31, 1973
The Paul Dudley White Coronary Care System at
St. Agnes Hospital has been
Named in Honor of the "Father of Modern Cardiology"
Funding made payable to
THE PAUL DUDLEY WHITE CORONARY CARE SYSTEM
EARLY HEART ATTACK CARE (EHAC AWARENESS)
FOUNDATION
C/O RAYMOND D. BAHR, MD
ST. AGNES HEALTHCARE
A. WHO WAS PAUL DUDLEY WHITE, MD?
Recently
while on Coronary Care Rounds, a baby-faced youngster (medical
student) excused himself for being part of the generation gap
and wanted to know "who was this person, Dr. Paul Dudley White,
that the Coronary Care System at St. Agnes was named after in
1973?"
It was then and there that I experienced my first
"anginal Attack" (jokingly) as I was stunned as in electrified,
hurt as in mortified, and anguished as in mystified as to how
a man so profoundly respected a decade ago became lost in our
memories so fast.
Dr. Paul Dudley White was no ordinary man. He
was the essence of humanism and reflected it daily throughout
his life. These features included creativeness, insatiable curiosity,
intelligence in the form of wisdom, but displayed in gentleness
on an international scene. In a day when international flights
were just starting, he became our "roving ambassador of medicine"
and so catapulted cardiac research and understanding that his
fever excited all of mankind. He was received and welcomed in
so many countries that friends of mine from across the world
still talk of his personally visiting each and every one of
their countries. Yet he always seemed to make time to come home
and have an active practice that he continued for clinical observations.
He used this workbench to create new ideas and new discoveries.
He once said that the heart was created so well that it could
easily go on for one hundred years and that it was our lifestyles,
our cigarette smoking, our drinking, our stresses, and our inactivity
that contributed to the early demise of this wonderful pump.
On the day he visited St. Agnes Hospital, he was
in his late 80s and had traveled from Boston alone. His plane
could not land at Baltimore Washington Airport, but had to go
to a Washington, D.C. airport and he was more than one hour
late. No one knew where he was, but no one left the St. Agnes
Auditorium (DePaul Building). The entire Hospital was invited
to this event and it was packed not only with physicians and
their wives, but also with laboratory people, cleaning people,
and a variety of people who knew only about "the man" Dr. Paul
Dudley White,through his numerous travels in the papers and
his personal touch on the lives of many. Dr. Paul Dudley White
arrived one hour late in a taxi cab, apologized for his tardiness
and he literally ran right for the stage. His presentation on
atherosclerosis was very well received and he answered questions
from everyone. Later that day, he made his rounds in the Coronary
Care Unit and cutthe EKG ribbon acknowledging the Unit that was
to be named in his honor. Enclosed please find a letter from
Dr. White just after he returned to Boston. It reflects the
person he was--simple, very observant, very appreciative of
life. Even though he died some six months after visiting us
at the age of 87, his spirit remains with us, in a never ending
fashion. His dedication remains as a pillar of strength in our
efforts to have the one and only Paul Dudley White Coronary
Care System in this country as well as in the
world. He was a living legend in the field of Cardiology. He
was considered the "father of cardiology" in the United States
as well as the "world's foremost ambassador of cardiovascular
medicine." His memory lingers on in the minds of those who respect
the past and derive from it the energies needed for future cardiac
progress.
In 1986, Dr. Paul Dudley White would have been
100 years old. Our Coronary Care Unit, now called "System" because
of its community direction of early intervention care, will
be 8 years old and will be entering into a most exciting era
of cardiac medicine (and for that matter, medicine in general),
namely, early intervention of the number one killer of the adult
population in the United States.
It is exciting because it will help salvage not
only lives, but muscle needed for life existence. We look forward
to continue the relentless energy, curiosity, and gentleness
bestowed on us by Dr. Paul Dudley White, the "Giant in Cardiac
Medicine" who continues to live among us.
B. FATHER OF HEART ATTACK PREVENTION
More
than any other man in medical history, Dr. Paul Dudley White
was influential in bringing to realization our present progressive
era in cardiovascular medicine. Through his indefatigable travels,
his countless lectures , and his voluminous writings, Dr. White
succeeded in focusing national and international attention on
cardiovascular problems and on the vital need for public and
professional support of programs to combat ailments of the heart
and blood vessels. In many of these efforts, he acted as a "catalyst"
in bringing different factions, disciplines, and even countries
together to enable them to work together and improve our understanding
of cardiology.
Dr. White characterized his intern days of 1912
as "The Dark Ages just before the dawn of the Golden Age in
medicine." Few men contributed more in bringing this Golden
Age to full fruition. It was he who introduced the first electrocardiograph
to this country ... who paved the way for the specialty practice
of cardiology ... and who was a leader in establishing the American
Heart Association as a professional voluntary health agency.
He was considered the activating force and leading spokesman
for international cooperation in the cardiovascular field.
As a clinician, Dr. White's primary concern has
always been for his patients. One of his pupils recalls that
when he taught, "He not only listens to the heart, he listens
to you." Gifted with a truly adventurous scientific mind, unbounded
by space or spirit, he will be considered America's and the
world's foremost "Ambassador of Cardiovascular Medicine."
C. THE SCIENCE OF PEACE THE DREAM OF DR.
PAUL DUDLEY WHITE
Dr. White wrote in 1971 (a few years before he
visited St. Agnes Hospital and 2 years before he died). "For
many years, I have treasured the idea...that physicians of all
Nations...might bring together not only their colleagues in
a united crusade against disease, but multitudes of patients,
to promote international friendship and thereby world peace...the
real science of peace is long overdue. It is my profound hope
that I have contributed in some small measure to its coming."
For the first time I saw that Dr. White was trying
to use the power of medicine to promote international fellowship
and friendship and from its very goodness bring about world
peace. The light bulb came on. It was as a result of his efforts
that the 10th World Congress of Cardiology held in
Washington, DC in 1986 was dedicated to world peace. This was
the 100th anniversary of Paul Dudley White's birth.
In an article reprinted from "The Transactions
in the American Clinical and Climatological Association, 1986"
Dr. Henry McIntosh challenged all of us when he stated that
similar opportunities lie out there for other physicians to
grasp and thereby use medicine to foster peace and international
understanding......opportunities that would allow us to pursue
leading to Dr. Paul Dudley White's "science of peace". Or as
Dr. McIntosh so eloquently phrased, "to pay the rent for the
right to live".
The "science of peace" will need to have many
more partners in order to accomplish this mission impossible.
The next step is to connect this in such a way as to fully utilize
our efforts to keep us on course. I know of no finer way to
guide us then to recite the story of James P. Grant the former
executive director of UNICEF who succumbed to cancer in January
of 1995 at age of 72. James Grant approached his mission with
the resolve of a General......every waking moment was spent
fighting for his cause. Colleagues remembered how Grant always
traveled with just one carry on bag, even if he were going away
for a month because he didn't want to waste time waiting for
his luggage. He had a war to win against poverty, disease, and
malnutrition. Shortly before Grant died and undoubtedly knowing
what was to come, he asked to be read the concluding paragraph
of the 1995 "State of the world's children". It contained his
favorite quote from George Bernard Shaw: "This is the true joy
in life...... the being used for a purpose recognized by yourself
as the mighty one. I am of the opinion that my life belongs
to the whole community...... and as long as I live it is my
privilege to do for it whatever I can...... Life is not a brief
candle to me...... It is a sort of splendid torch which I have
got hold of for the moment and I want to make it burn as brightly
as possible before handing it to future generations."
It is with this true spirit that Dr. White passed
the torch to us and we have the obligation to carry it forth
using the power of medicine and heart attack prevention to promote
international friendship and fellowship in bringing about world
peace.