Winter/Spring 2022 Blair Bulletin

Page 91

In MEMORIAM

1939

DeWitt C. Baldwin Jr. January 5, 2022 Chicago, Illinois

1954

James J. Farriss III September 21, 2021 Easton, Maryland

1968

Theodore B. Scherf November 18, 2021 Helena, Montana

1944

Richard W. Rowe October 2, 2021 West Melbourne, Florida

1956

Charles R. Wiener January 20, 2022 New York, New York

1972

Pieter H. Woodcock November 6, 2021 Blairstown, New Jersey

1945

Blair M. Davis November 16, 2021 New York, New York

1958

Richard W. Blackmar October 5, 2021 Green Valley, Arizona

1974

Curtis W. Kay June 7, 2020 Newton, New Jersey

Roger P. Hailes May 22, 2021 Richmond, Virginia

1976

Tonya J. Harmon December 12, 2021 Lawrenceville, Georgia

Thomas H. Jones January 18, 2021 Wilmington, North Carolina Vito S. Schiavone February 5, 2022 Allentown, Pennsylvania

1959

P. Jan Anstatt November 7, 2021 Wilmington, North Carolina

1986

Brynn C. Olin December 2021 Deerfield, New Hampshire

1946

Ralph E. Hersey Jr. July 28, 2021 Ormond Beach, Florida

1960

Robert H. Brunner January 13, 2021 Bethel, Connecticut

1989

Joshua J. Arnedt October 2, 2021 Bath, Maine

1949

Raymond V. Morrow Jr. January 28, 2022 Bethlehem, Pennsylvania

1961

James H. Bullock January 31, 2022 Westminster, Maryland

2004

Charles W. Clark September 22, 2021 Dekalb Junction, New York

1951

Robert C. Brower October 29, 2021 Florham Park, New Jersey

1963

Randall A. Greene September 29, 2021 Boulder, Colorado

Former Staff

William R. Timken September 27, 2021 Walnut Creek, California

1967

John E. Blick Jr. February 4, 2022 Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania

1953

Richard Nashner January 8, 2022 Havertown, Pennsylvania

Leslie Kimble November 20, 2021 Blairstown, New Jersey

Emeritus Trustee Martha D. Furey October 20, 2021 Leawood, Kansas

1939 DeWitt C. Baldwin Jr. Known affectionately by his colleagues and friends as “Bud,” Dr. Baldwin dedicated the last 14 years of his career as a senior scholar-in-residence at the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), advocating for and studying the experience of medical residents and fellows in the clinical learning environment. He was highly regarded for his research around medical resident and fellow burnout and well-being, and his emphasis on taking a collaborative approach to treating patients. His expertise and vision helped shape major initiatives in American medical education and led to innovations that improved education 1 0 8 W I N T ER -S P R I NG 2022

and safety in residency and fellowship programs, their sponsoring institutions, and ultimately, in clinical practice. The son of missionary educators who worked alongside medical care teams, Bud lived in Burma (now Myanmar) until age 10. This early experience had a lasting impact on him as he developed into a caring physician and educator. He became a noted champion of humanism in medical education, long advocating for the reform of medical school curricula, and he emphasized the need for mental health support for medical students, residents and fellows, and was a pioneer in the interprofessional teamwork movement. A pediatrician, family physician and psychiatrist, Bud

was educated at Swarthmore College, the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale, Yale Divinity School, Yale Medical School, and the University of Minnesota and Yale graduate schools. He was a diplomate of the National Board of Medical Examiners, the American Board of Pediatrics and the American Board of Family Practice. During his academic career, Bud wrote, lectured and conducted research in the fields of higher education, moral development, interdisciplinary health professions education, medical ethics, rural health, behavioral sciences, humanistic medicine, child development, psychology and dentistry. He published more than 200 articles and several books, and received


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