Mr. Ken Sclioonliagen (left) listens to members of the research team that is under his direction discuss some of the early results of the study they are conducting on the unit administration project at Duke. Involved in the dis cussion are: (from left) Susan Hutchins, a nurse; Mrs. Margaret JIunn, a housekeeping consultant with a background in home economics; Mrs. Mar jorie O’Borke, also a nurse; and Miss Tiphaine R. Burgess, a dietitian and formerly tlie administrative dietitian at Watts Hospital in Durham. Research Team To Study Unit A new research team has be gun operations in the hospital. Two nurses, an administrator, an industrial engineer, a sociolo gist, a dietitian, and a house keeper are studying the unit ad ministration project which be gan operations at Duke in 1964. (See center feature, pages 6, 7.) The team is sponsored by a two-year U.S. Public Health Service grant of $153,796, which was awarded to Mr. C. II. Fren- zel, administrative director; Mr. R. E. Jennings, assistant direc tor; and Dr. J. Goldman, a con sultant and professor of indus trial engineering at North Caro lina State University in Raleigh. While studying the operations of the unit, the team will try to step back and look objectively at what has and has not been ac complished in the two and a half years of the unit project. Trou ble spots will be pin-pointed. They will try to develop a more eifective distribution of activi ties performed (who .should be doing what) and study new methods of accomplishing the desired level of patient care. During their studies, visits will be made to other hospitals to determine how the other in stitutions have attempted to re lieve ward nursing of the “non nursing” details of patient care and to see in what manner they provide assistance in the coor dination of all patient services. In general, the research will include trying to get at the root of such persistent problems as: What tasks must be done to pro vide ideal patient care? Who should do them ? If patient care is not what it should be, why not? AVhat can be done to im prove it on an administrative level ? It is hoped that the results of the in-depth study can be made available to others in the hospi tal field who could benefit from the new concept of unit admin istration. There is a noticeable absence of such a detailed study readily available for general reference, and yet it is estimated that the unit concept may con ceivably be applicable to 15- 25% of the hospitals in the United States today. Hart Honored it ilumni Weekend The highlight of the November two-day medical alumni week end was the dedication by Duke President Douglas M. Knight of the Deryl Hart Pavilion, a sec tion of the medical center which accommodates private beds, the Private Diagnostic Clinics, and the Out-Patient Department. Professor and chairman emeri tus of the Department of Sur gery and a past president of the university. Dr. Hart played a major role in building the medi cal center’s reputation as one of the best in the country. The dedication was witnes.sed by the more than 200 alumni from the classes and housestaff of 1936, 1941, 1946, 1951, 1956, and 1961 who were attending the weekend. (Over half of the class of ’56 returned!) In the course of the dedication program, Dr. Barnes Woodhall, vice provost in cliarge of medical affairs who has known Dr. Hart Dr. Deryl Hart for over twenty years, spoke of the influence Dr. Hart has had on the medical center. Included in his remarks were the follow ing quotes: “Dr. Hart is a surgeon’s sur geon. Since surgery is a rather lonely business, one can define the term only in intuitive and intangible ways with the impor tant additional fact that patients get well when they are treated by a surgeon’s surgeon. The early appointment of a surgeon of this stature ‘set the style,’ as it were, for the medical cen ter. . . . “In a few years it was appar ent to all that Deryl possessed (Continued on next page) PROFESSIONAL NEWS (Continued) a member of the editorial board of the Journal of the Southern Medical Association. • MR. RAY E. BROWN, director of the Graduate Program in Hospital Administration, has been named to a special advisory committee to the U.S. Surgeon General. He was one of eleven national leaders in the fields of medicine, health, edu cation, and civic affairs appointed to the committee. • DR. JAMES WILSON, of the Department of Anatomy, was guest lecturer for several weeks at Rutgers University Medical School, New Bruns wick, New Jersey. This is the fir.st year of operations for the medi cal scliool. • DR. GUY L. ODOM, professor of neurosurgery and chairman of the Division of Neurosurgery, was elected president of the American Academy of Neurological Surgery at tlie academy’s annual meeting, held in San Francisco in October. • DR. EUGENE D. DAY, director of graduate studies in the Department of Microbiology and Immu nology, is the author of a new book, entitled Foun dations of Immunochcmistry. It is a study of the chemical events that take place in immunol ogy. This is Dr. Day’s second book. • DR. Dr. Eugene Day JOSEPH A. C. WADSWORTH, chairman of the Department of Ophthalmology, has been elected chairman of the Committee on Continuing Education of the Association of University Professors of Ophthalmology. — > The new and retiring officers of the Medical Alumni Association are shown during the November medical alumni weekend. They are (left to right) : Dr. George Baylin, professor of radiology at Duke (class of ’37), re-elected treasurer; Dr. Joe Van Hoy of Charlotte (class of ’38), retiring president; Dr. Kverett Sawyer of Elizabeth City (class of ’39), retiring vice president; Dr. Talmage Peele, professor of anatomy at Duke (class of ’34), re-elected secretary; Dr. John Yarl)orough of Maryville, Tennessee (class of ’44), vice president-elect; and Dr. Frank Chunn of Tampa, Plorida (class of ’36), i)resi- dent-elect. INTERCOM - 4