Health & Fitness Honing Physicians Jewish values help drive founding dean of OU/Beaumont medical school. Ilene Wolff Special to the Jewish News D r. Robert Folberg, through an act of chesed by the parents of a 19- year-old woman who died in an auto accident, received a cornea transplant when he was 19 years old. He had lost vision in his left eye to progressive corneal degeneration. The incident was life-changing for him in more ways than one. "That kind of clinched it, that I wanted to be a physician',' he says. "There are times that I am conscious of the gift that I received and I reflect on the fact that I can see the world through another's eyes quite literally" Folberg — founding dean of the Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine — tries to incorporate Jewish val- ues into his professional life as an educator, researcher and practicing physician. Folberg splits his time between an office at OU and one on the third floor of Beaumont's administration building on its Royal Oak campus. He spends his days tending to the details of opening a medical school that anticipates enrolling its first class of 50 students after receiving provi- sional accreditation. "This is an opportunity of a lifetime he says. "No one wants to create a medical school that's ordinary:' Folberg was chosen after a stringent vetting process. He had the right vision, academic background and administra- tive experience, says Jeffrey Maisels, M.D., chairman of pediatrics at Beaumont. "There's no formula for being a dean, so it's a question whether you think the per- son has the basic capabilities and the lead- ership qualities to move a place forward:' says Maisels. "We found those attributes in Bob Folberg." Folberg envisions a curriculum that threads the basic sciences throughout all four years of the medical student's educa- Name: Robert Folberg, M.D. Titles: Dean, Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine; professor of biomedical sciences, pathology and ophthalmology, OU; chief academic officer, Beaumont Hospitals. Dr. Robert Folberg, at podium, addresses the crowd during a press conference in July to announce his appointment as dean of the Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine. Also pictured are, from left: Kenneth Matzick, president and CEO of Beaumont Hospitals; L. Brooks Patterson, Oakland County executive; Gary Russi, president, Oakland University; and Virinder K. Moudgil, senior vice president for academic affairs and provost, Oakland University. tion. A unique program — the medical learning community — will find a student reviewing basic concepts alongside the Beaumont doctor who is the student's clinical mentor in the latter years of medi- cal school. "That will give medical students a bet- ter understanding of the basic sciences and how to apply what they've learned when treating patients:' says Jim Grant, M.D., chairman of Beaumont's anesthesi- ology department. Folberg obviously enjoys telling stories and talking about his vision for the school. His eyes really light up when he describes a conversation at a dinner with Beaumont leaders that elicited a question that "wow'ed" him. Beaumont cardiologist David Forst, M.D., asked: "How do you teach a medical student to be kind?" Folberg says: "So one of the things you Age: 58 Home: Birmingham Family: wife Amy, a Ph.D. in mathematics; daughter Abigail, 23, who is in a master's program studying operatic vocal performance at Roosevelt University in Chicago; and son Ephraim, 20, a junior studying international relations at Michigan State University. The Folbergs have to teach is how to be a mentsh, and that's actually part of the curriculum we're developing." A visual reminder of that thought will be a wall plaque, a gift from a former col- league in Chicago. The plaque will be the first thing students and visitors see when they step into the dean's office. Its inscription embodies Folberg's vision: "Kindness is the most important lesson taught here." Reaching To Israel Folberg's research on eye cancer has received funding from the National Institutes of Health for 20 years. He is recog- nized for his work in ophthalmic pathology, administration, education and research, both nationally and internationally. His many endeavors include teaching Beaumont ophthalmology residents (doc- tors-in-training) in a long-distance learn- celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary in November. Synagogue: Adat Shalom, Farmington Hills Education/Certification: M.D., Temple University School of Medicine; B.A. in biology, LaSalle College (now LaSalle University), both in Philadelphia. Dual certifications in ophthalmology and pathology. ing program for the past seven years. In addition to Beaumont, Folberg has a longtime relationship with Hadassah- Hebrew University Medical School in Israel. He has written more than 30 research publications with Hadassah fac- ulty members during the last 17 years, and has taught there on multiple occasions. His collaboration with Jacob Pe'er, chairman of ophthalmology and associa- tion dean at Haddasah, made it possible for the new OU medical school to borrow from the Hadassah curriculum — Adam v'Refuah — Man and Medicine, to form the core of its new medical humanities curriculum. The first publication to originate from the new medical school was a paper that he co-authored with Pe'er that appeared in the November issue of Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. Welcome To Michigan Folberg and his wife, Amy, moved from Chicago to a 1941 Cape Cod home in Birmingham after he was appointed dean in July. He had been Frances B. Geever pro- fessor of pathology; head of the pathology department; and professor of ophthalmol- ogy and visual science at the University of Illinois at Chicago. The Folbergs are steadily getting to know the Detroit area. They're interested in the West Bloomfield-based Jewish Ensemble Theatre, the Detroit Symphony and the Detroit Opera Theatre where they hope to see Carmen this spring. They had been supporters of the Chicago Opera Theater and the Chicago Lyric Opera. The couple find the Detroit area wel- coming. "People are very friendly, open and out- going:' says Amy Folberg, who is a busi- ness analyst with Beaumont Hospitals. El Ilene Wolff is a member of the media relations staff at Beaumont Hospitals, Royal Oak. Former positions: Most recently Frances B. Geever professor of pathology; head, department of pathology; and professor of ophthalmology and visual science, University of Illinois at Chicago. Previous faculty appointments at University of Iowa; Thomas Jefferson University (Philadelphia). February 12 • 2009 B11