Henri Ford is dean of the Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami. The Haitian paediatric surgeon is聽also president of聽the 90,000-member American College of聽Surgeons, chair of聽the Council of聽Deans of the Association of聽American Medical Colleges, and a聽podcast host.
Where were you born?
I was born in Port-au-Prince, the sixth of nine children of a dynamic preacher, Guillaume Ford, and a prayer warrior named Jeanne Jean-Louis. At聽an early age, they taught us the importance of聽faith in God, the value of education and service to聽others.
I understand that you have great admiration for them, especially given their decision to leave Haiti after your father鈥檚 outspokenness against the Duvalier government.
My dad was a proud individual. It鈥檚 a聽story I聽don鈥檛 share often, but he聽recognised at some point 鈥 as he was becoming a聽young adult, around聽21 鈥 that his father had signed his birth certificate as a witness. And he went and confronted him, asking what鈥檚 going on. Basically, his father, my grandfather, had another family. As a result, my father changed his last name and took his mother鈥檚 name. It聽embodies a聽lot of聽what he ended up inculcating in us as children, about being a principled individual 鈥 he was always about excellence.
How were things different in the US?
Coming from Port-au-Prince and ending up in Brooklyn, not really speaking English and trying to assimilate, was a little bit traumatic initially, being somewhat ostracised and bullied in high school. I聽remember as a ninth grader 鈥 I聽had just gotten to the States that September 鈥 that every person had to read a paragraph of a book. And every time they got to me, the whole class started cracking up, because they knew I聽was about to butcher the English language. And one of my teachers, Mr聽Stewart, he always told me, 鈥淛ust ignore them, and just keep trying.鈥 I鈥檇 never trade these experiences for anything; they helped mould me into the person that I聽became. The resilience and endurance that I聽acquired from those early years convinced me that I聽can do just about anything if I聽stick with聽it.
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Some people might say that鈥檚 proof that we don鈥檛 need affirmative action.
Let鈥檚 be clear: I benefited from affirmative action, without question. At聽Miami, that鈥檚 reflected in our medical school stressing 鈥渋nclusive excellence鈥 in聽its applicant evaluations. There are many individuals who are very talented, who have demonstrated their ability to overcome, and these individuals just need to be able to have a聽chance.
What else do you do to boost your school鈥檚 attractiveness?
An important element is community service. About two-thirds of our students participate in events such as monthly health fairs in under-served communities, where the students provide free care under faculty supervision. And while they may not all stick with it, more than half of our under-represented minority students will tell you that they aim to serve under-served communities when they finish.
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What one event most changed you?
In 2015, I聽led a team that performed the first successful separation of conjoined twins in聽Haiti. It聽was a聽gruelling seven-hour procedure, the culmination of nine months of meticulous preparation. It聽was gratifying to work in my native country alongside Haitian health professionals.
Is artificial intelligence likely to make a major impact in healthcare and medical training?
AI is going to revolutionise our approach to medical education, healthcare and so much more. It鈥檚 a powerful tool, and it has to be incorporated into just about everything we can do. It can help students master the voluminous amount of information that鈥檚 being thrown at them, it can help them diagnose problems, come up with treatments and, hopefully, advance novel cures.
What are you seeing already?
At Miami, we鈥檇 used the century-old Flexner approach to medical education 鈥 two years of basic science instruction and two years of clinical work. And we introduced what we felt was a radical departure from Flexner,聽getting聽our students into the clinical part pretty much immediately. As chair of the AAMC鈥檚 Council of Deans, I聽brought a Microsoft expert to our recent conference, who challenged us to get those students immediately familiar with using AI聽tools. We already see that applying generative聽AI in the patient setting is allowing the physician to not turn their back on the patient as they鈥檙e trying to input data, but to maintain face-to-face contact, improving the feeling of personal attention. We鈥檙e all excited about it 鈥 we just have to make sure we have the guardrails, because every single iteration is smarter and more powerful.
Are academic medicine and its funders putting too much emphasis on inventing new drugs and devices, as compared with prevention?
This is evolving, as people recognise that if I聽take a patient with asthma, or a patient with diabetes and hypertension, who lives in a food desert, and I聽fix that person鈥檚 problem, that person may go back [home] and buy a sugary drink because there is no fresh fruit being sold [in the area] or they can鈥檛 afford it. And that person is going to be back in your emergency room.
But can a doctor fix a food desert or the polluting highway running past the patient鈥檚 house?
Rudolf Virchow was a German pathologist and social activist who said that the physician has to be the attorney for the poor, and that part of our social responsibility is to address this.
What would that look like 鈥 the creation of activist physicians?
As president of the American College of Surgeons, my responsibility is to meet with legislators and make them understand how we can make sure that surgeons are equipped with the tools necessary to heal all of our patients with skill and trust. Health policy has to play a critical role in this whole thing.
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What keeps you awake at night?
Inequities in the medical profession, patient care and community health 鈥 which we are working hard to remedy.
paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com
CV
1976-80鈥侭A in public and international affairs, Princeton University
1980-84鈥侻顿, Harvard University
1984-91鈥俿urgical internship and residency, Cornell Medical College
1987-2005鈥俧ellowship and professorships, University of Pittsburgh
2005-18鈥俻rofessor聽of surgery, University of Southern California
2006-09鈥俶aster鈥檚 degree in health administration, USC
2018-present鈥俤ean, Miller SChool of Medicine, University of Miami
2022-present鈥俢hair, Council of Deans, the Association of American Medical Colleges
2023-present鈥俻resident, American College of Surgeons
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Appointments
Phil Taylor will be the next vice-chancellor of the University of Bath, replacing Ian White, who is stepping down in July. An electrical engineer, Professor Taylor joins from the University of Bristol, where he has been pro vice-chancellor for research and enterprise, having previously served as head of the School of Engineering at Newcastle University. Pamela Chesters, Bath鈥檚 chair of council, said Professor Taylor鈥檚 鈥渆xceptional academic record and strong experience in industry and commerce鈥 would help the university 鈥渂uild on its positive trajectory and achievements to聽date鈥.
Peter Todd has been appointed dean of Imperial College Business School, moving from his current post as director general of HEC Paris in September. He succeeds Franklin Allen, who has served as interim dean at the business school since September. Professor Todd was previously dean of the Desautels Faculty of Management at McGill University. He said he was 鈥渢hrilled鈥 to be joining an 鈥渆xceptional global institution with an unsurpassed reputation for research excellence and a unique entrepreneurial spirit鈥.
Ian Bruce is joining Queen鈥檚 University Belfast as pro vice-chancellor for the Faculty of聽Medicine, Health and Life Sciences. He is currently vice-dean for health and care partnerships at the University of Manchester.
Louise Dixon is joining Glasgow Caledonian University as pro vice-chancellor for education. She was previously dean of the Faculty of Science at Victoria University of Wellington. Glasgow Caledonian has also appointed Caroline Bysh pro vice-chancellor for engagement, and Joanna Lumsden dean of the School of Computing, Engineering and Built Environment.
Barbara Casu will be the next deputy dean for faculty and research at Bayes Business School, part of City, University of London. She has been head of the Faculty of Finance since 2021.
Erik Hurst has been promoted to become director of the Becker Friedman Institute for Economics at the University of Chicago, having served as deputy director since 2017.
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