is known as “The Father of Personalized Medicine.” He used to oversee the selection of medical students at Duke University in his role as chancellor for health affairs at Duke University and Dean of the Duke School of Medicine. He focused on admitting students who showed a clear desire for empathy and to serve the needs of others.
But he realized compassionate care is difficult to achieve in the current health system in the United States because of a variety of factors. Synderman now directs the Duke Center for . His mission is to create more personalized and compassionate ways of delivering medicine. Earlier this year he published he had with the 14th Dalai Lama about how to foster that change. The revelations from that conversation became a manuscript entitled "" recenlty published in the medical journal "Academic Medicine."
Host Frank Stasio talks to Snyderman about the importance of empathy in medicine, what the Dalai Lama had to say on the subject and what changes he hopes to see in medical care.