Longtime Houstonian Dr. Don W. Chapman died last Thursday at the age of 90 (a Chronicle article is here). With Don’s passing, Houston has lost one of the extraordinary group of doctors who catapulted Houston’s Texas Medical Center into one of the premier medical centers in the world. I had the privilege of getting to know Dr. Chapman and his loving wife of 60 years (!), Mary Lou, through my father and mother, who were lifelong friends of the Chapmans.
As with my father, Don was a member of the groundbreaking generation of post-World War II doctors who embraced the optimistic view of therapeutic intervention in the practice of medicine, which was a fundamental change from the sense of therapeutic powerlessness that was widely taught to doctors prior to the post-WWII medical professors such as Don Chapman and Walter Kirkendall. We all take therapeutic intervention in medicine so much for granted these days that it is easy to overlook just how revolutionary this change was in the way medicine had been dispensed for decades and even centuries before Don and Walter’s special generation of teachers and researchers.
Don and my father completed their medical residencies together at the University of Iowa Medical School just in time for WWII. Don served in the war with great distinction as a Major in the Medical Corps of the U. S. Army and as the primary Cardiac Consultant for the European Theater while stationed at the 5th General Hospital and later the 98th General Hospital. Upon returning from the war, Don went on the faculty of Baylor College of Medicine and was one of the original ten Baylor faculty members who moved to Houston when Baylor moved to the Texas Medical Center location in 1944. Don and and the other Baylor faculty members at the time began operating in a fledging medical center that consisted of the new medical school and one 234-bed hospital.
Within two years of arriving in Houston, Don introduced cardiac catheterization to the Medical Center, which allowed Baylor faculty members and Methodist Hospital physicians to offer precise cardiovascular diagnosis and groundbreaking heart disease intervention for the first time. Under Don’s leadership, the Medical Center quickly became a pioneer in cardiovascular diagnostics and surgery as Don pioneered the use of a mechanical pump to circulate blood during open heart surgery, participated in one of the first coronary bypass operations in a Houston hospital and was a member of the team that researched and developed the initial mechanical heart implants. For good measure, Don in 1955 was one of the founding partners in Houston Cardiovascular Associates, which grew into one of the best cadiology private practices in Houston.
As director of Baylor’s Section of International Medicine, Don also became a leader in promoting cardiology education around the world by starting a program at Baylor that sends students to teaching centers around the world. Don served as a visiting professor and conducted seminars in numerous countries, including China, Columbia, Germany, South Africa, Guatemala, Switzerland, and Turkey. Not coincidentally, Texas Medical Center institutions now serve over 10,000 international patients annually.
Don was also a prolific researcher, authoring and contributing to more than 100 publications of medical literature. He received many professional honors, but the ones that he treasured the most were the ones he received for teaching, such as the Baylor Distinguished Faculty Award in 1978, 1981 and 1993 and the Outstanding Teacher Awards that he received from Baylor students in 1958 and 1962. In 1992, the Cain Foundation honored Don with the endowment of the Don W. Chapman, M.D. Chair of Cardiology at Baylor and, in 1993, the University of Iowa honored Don with that institution’s Distinguished Alumni Award.
Don’s contributions to Houston and the Medical Center were enormous. Today, 63 years after Don’s arrival in Houston, the Texas Medical Center is comprised of over 45 institutions (including 11 educational institutions and 15 hospitals and specialized patient care centers) that contain 6,500 patient beds and employ 75,000 people. Not only is the Medical Center now the largest employment center in Houston, Baylor College of Medicine is now widely acknowledged to be one of the best medical schools in the country.
How’s that for a professional legacy?
But Don’s remarkable professional accomplishments don’t provide the full measure of this man, who was a genuinely kind and warm human being. When my father at the age of 55 decided with my mother to move our large family (10 children!) to Houston from Iowa City at the beginning of 1972, Don and Mary Lou Chapman graciously welcomed us to Houston and took an active interest in the unwieldly Kirkendall clan. Don took a particular interest in me while I was a wayward undergraduate student in the early 1970’s and kept up with me as I worked my way through law school and became a part of the Houston legal community. I will never forget the wonderful impression that this successful man made on me in taking the time to express his genuine interest in what I was doing in my career. I was particularly touched by his phone call to me after my father’s sudden death in 1992 in which he told me how the eulogy that I delivered at the funeral had moved him to tears and how much he was going to miss his lifelong friend and colleague.
The memorial service for Don will be at 2:00 p.m. today in the sanctuary of the First Presbyterian Church, 5300 Main Street, in Houston’s Museum District just north of the Texas Medical Center. Immediately following the service, the family will receive friends during a reception in the church’s Fellowship Hall. In lieu of usual remembrances, contributions in memory of Don may be directed to the Memorial Garden, First Presbyterian Church, 5300 Main St., Houston, TX, 77004 or to Methodist Hospital Foundation Cardiology Department Research, 6565 Fannin St., Houston, TX, 77030.
Daily Archives: May 8, 2007
The Clemens deal
Well, as Kuff noted, it was probably meltdown yesterday on the local sports talk radio programs as local hero Roger Clemens decided to reject the home team Stros and go back to New York for another round with the Yankees. Although it’s fun to watch even a fading Clemens pitch for another several months during the autumn of his Hall of Fame career, the reality is that the Stros are better off that Clemens took the Yankees offer over that of the Stros.
The Clemens deal with the Yankees is the biggest in baseball history by average annual value, $28.5 million for the year or about $18.5 million for the 2/3rds of a season that Clemens will play. Add in the luxury tax hit and the Yanks are committing about $26 million in signing Clemens.
The reason that it’s good for the Stros that they didn’t sign Clemens is that — for any other club than the Yankees — it simply does not make sense to pay that kind of scratch for a number 2 starter. Baseball Prospectus projects Clemens this season as saving roughly 28 runs more than a replacement level starter (think Brian Moehler or Wandy Rodriguez, at least so far this season) and generating 3.5 more wins than a replacement level starter. Given Clemens’ age (44), the fact that he has been nagged by leg injuries over the past three seasons and is going from the relatively weak NL Central to the powerhouse AL East, my sense is that that projection is overly optimistic and that Clemens probably is more likely to be worth only a win or two more than whatever other starter that the Stros will trot out there (the Yankees are already downplaying Clemens’ probable impact on the club). But what the heck, we’re talking Clemens here, so he might just be as good as BP projects. But even so, are 3.5 wins worth $18 million?
No way, at least for the Stros. Clemens will pitch limited innings over the rest of this seaon, that 44 year old body is at high risk of giving out, and the probable Stros’ replacements — particularly Juan Gutierrez at AAA Round Rock or Troy Patton at AA Corpus — will likely be better than replacement level, which reduces the impact that Clemens would have on the Stros. Moreover, even a couple of extra wins is not likely to make a difference with this Stros club between making the playoffs or staying home.
The bottom line is that signing Clemens simply does not address the Stros’ main problem, which is a chronic lack of hitting. The Stros invested $100 million in the off-season to sign slugger Carlos Lee and, through 30 games, Lee has been a below-average National League hitter while grounding into a league-leading 8 double plays. Throwing $18 million at the Rocket only constrains the Stros’ flexibility later in the season to make a personnel moves if a good hitter or two becomes available on the trade market.
Is it worth for the Yanks to spend $26 million to sign Clemens? Probably, because if they didn’t, then the Red Sox probably would have. In a tight AL East pennant race, a game or two improvement from Clemens could definitely make a difference.
Kirby & Westheimer — high crime area?
Well, it’s not every day that one receives an email such as the one below from a young female attorney at a prominent Houston law firm. For those unfamilar with Houston, the intersection of Kirby and Westheimer is a popular commercial area between two of the toniest residential neighborhoods inside the loop in Houston, River Oaks to the north and West University to the south:
From: (Name withheld)
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2007 9:14 PM
To: (list suppressed)
Subject: Personal experience you don’t want happening to you – please share with others if you like
Dear friends,
First of all, I am fine … but earlier today I had an experience that I’m sharing with you so that you will be careful.
After going for a run with [deleted] today, I went to get cash at the Sterling Bank ATM near the Taco Milagro on the corner of Kirby and Westheimer (Upper Westheimer District, Houston). It’s a busy area, and it was still daylight. The ATM fronted on Westheimer. There were lots of people out on the patio at Taco Milagro [a popular local restaurant], just 50 yards or so away.
I got out of my car, locked it, and went to the cash machine. As soon as I had put my card into the machine and entered my PIN, a woman came up and stood right next to me on my left, put a gun in my side and told me that she wouldn’t shoot me if I didn’t scream and gave her $800. I had only punched in $200, so she grabbed that and told me to get $800 more.
My bank has a $400 daily limit (I have since learned), so after trying $800, $700, $600 and so on, I was able to withdraw $200 more. During this time she repeatedly told me not to scream or she would shoot me, and asked many times for my PIN code. I didn’t speak to her and didn’t answer her question, and all kinds of things were going through my head – mostly was she going to use the gun, but also would she steal [my boyfriend’s] car (which I was driving), my purse (which I was holding), my rings (which I was wearing), the receipt which showed our bank balance.
After withdrawing the second round of cash, she grabbed the money, told me to stay where I was, and took off. After ten seconds or so, I turned around and realized she had run across the little side street just east of the ATM, jumped into a car that took off just as I looked over that way. I tried to see the license plate, but they were just far enough away that I wasn’t able to make out the numbers, although I did make a mental note of the kind of car and the way they headed out. I had grabbed my receipts as soon as I was sure she (and the gun) were gone, and got back in my car to get home asap.
HPD came to our house and took down the case. I am pretty sure they will be able to see the woman on the videotape from the ATM because she was standing right next to me the whole time, and I had the receipts that showed the exact times of the two transactions.
All I can say is: be careful about ATM’s. The police said that robberies like this are happening all over the city, in broad daylight, in good neighborhoods. They look for easy marks (women by themselves) and they have it down to a science. I am so lucky that I wasn’t hurt – and she didn’t steal the car, my purse and jewelry, etc. Maybe you will be more careful than ever before and this – or worse – won’t happen to you. The entire episode made me realize that every day we are in seemingly harm-free situations that can quickly turn into dangerous situations.
Much love from Ella Lee Lane, NOT Ben Taub Hospital – Be careful!
p.s. If you are reading this, please promise you won’t tell my parents or in-laws about this. They worry enough as it is!