Harmon is equally impressed with her student mentees. She really cares about the next generation of doctors and how they’re educated.”
“She’s the ideal LEAP teacher,” LaScalea says. She receives care from across campus, allows students to be present at her appointments and shares her experiences with them, he says. Harmon is an effective patient-mentor for several reasons, says LaScalea, who directs LEAP. Though doctors are monitoring her blood pressure and she is due for a second hip replacement this fall, Harmon describes her health as “excellent.” She’ll return to the stage this summer in a production of “Outside Mullingar” at the Dorset Theatre Festival in Vermont.
“Since the stroke, things are harder for me sometimes to grasp the first time around. “The doctors at Weill Cornell … are very good at imparting information to help me understand – they take the time to help me understand,” Harmon says. She views them – and ideally, all doctors – as her partners in care. David Serur, associate professor of clinical medicine and medicine in clinical surgery, have additional qualities that promote her well-being: compassion, empathy and the ability to listen. Halina White, assistant professor of neurology, for making eye contact with her while they take notes on their computers. But Harmon praises LaScalea and her neurologist, Dr. (Newer students are paired with those further along in their studies, who provide peer mentorship.) She once had to ask a doctor at another institution to talk with her from her hospital bedside, rather than from the door to the room. Harmon brings memories of positive and negative interactions with physicians to her work with students Peter Chamberlin ’18, Christopher Reisig ’17, Sam Woodworth ’16 and Justin Granstein ’15. “What does it mean to really listen to you, to really see you?” “Being a patient, I was thrilled with the idea of a medical school going back and looking at what happens when a doctor and a patient go into a room together and the door is shut,” says Harmon, 71, who has battled breast cancer, chronic swelling known as lymphedema, a hip replacement and immune suppression from a kidney transplant. You need to develop every aspect of your humanity to be a good doctor. “I consider it a huge compliment to be invited to join,” says Harmon, a New York actress who has worked in theater for decades. The program became a mandatory part of the medical school curriculum last fall to expose students to patient care over time, their psychosocial support and to barriers to their health. Keith LaScalea, associate professor of clinical medicine, asked her to mentor students as part of the Longitudinal Educational Experience Advancing Patient Partnerships (LEAP) program.
DOCTORS IN TRAINING 2015 STROKE SERIES
Harmon, the subject of Episode 3 of the online video series Inside Medicine at Weill Cornell, was flattered when her internist, Dr. But Jennifer Harmon knew that her experience in the health care system had provided her with equally important wisdom – that of a patient – and she’s now sharing it with the medical college’s doctors in training. She calls them her “miracle men and women,” the Weill Cornell doctors who saved her after a stroke and managed her recovery as she grappled with other, longstanding health issues. As part of Weill Cornell's LEAP program, she's teaching the next generation of physicians the importance of compassion and empathy in patient care. Jennifer Harmon is a Shakespearean actress, Weill Cornell patient and mentor to three medical students.