Weill Cornell Medicine – Qatar (WCM-Q) celebrated the graduation of its Class of 2020 comprising 38 doctors at a virtual ceremony Wednesday.
There are 13 Qataris among the graduates. The batch has 13 different nationalities and 23 females. They are the first class to have completed WCM-Q's six-year medical programme, which combines both pre-medical and medical curricula.
The ceremony was held online to observe physical distancing rules due to the novel coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. The graduates’ friends and family along with faculty and staff from WCM-Q, logged in to watch each of the new doctors receive their degrees virtually from Dr Javaid I Sheikh, dean of the college.
Thanking Qatar Foundation chairperson Her Highness Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, vice chairperson and CEO HE Sheikha Hind bint Hamad al-Thani, and the leadership of Qatar, for their ambition and leadership, Dr Sheikh paid tribute to the graduates and told them their future work will need great self-discipline but will also bring them great fulfilment.
Dr Sheikh said, “Class of 2020, recent events have underlined for all of us and for you what you already knew – that medicine makes more demands on people than almost any other profession – but all of us answer this calling for a reason. Being a doctor takes single-minded discipline and life-long dedication. While it can be extremely challenging at times, it also brings far greater fulfilment than any other profession that I can think of. You are ready now to go out and be the healers for those in need of your help; all of us wish you the very best in this most noble of endeavors.”
With this graduation, WCM-Q has now produced 422 doctors, who are working in hospitals in Qatar and across the world. The latest cohort of doctors will now begin their residencies – the first stage of their careers – in leading hospitals in Qatar and the US.
Student speaker and Class of 2020 graduate, Dr Fawzi Saleem Zghyer said being a doctor took more than academic excellence.
“To attend to those who suffer and in need, you have to be more than a doctor. You have to be a healer. And to be a healer, not only do you have to put on a white coat, but you have to know when to take it off. Listen actively, empathize, reflect, and act. Make your patients your one and only priority and be their advocate. Talk to your intubated ICU patients, they may be able to hear you. Reassure but never give false hope. Be kind, be you,” he noted.
Dr Augustine Choi, dean of Weill Cornell Medicine in New York joined the ceremony online and said that the Covid-19 pandemic highlights the vital role that doctors and other healthcare professionals have in society.
"You are graduating at such an important and unprecedented moment in history. At no other time has there been a disease that has affected so many countries around the world – on such a large scale – while we have the technology to gauge its impact – in real time. But long after this pandemic is over, you have the potential to make a real and lasting impact on medicine and science, especially in the Mena region,” he pointed out.
“You are graduates of Weill Cornell Medicine in Qatar, and it’s in your DNA. You’ve received exceptional training from leading doctors and scientists, and you are poised for success. Now I challenge you to use the talents and abilities you have shown us to shape the “new normal” and to find novel ways to help patients. Be bold and innovative. Think big and find creative ways to be the best doctor that you can be,” he added.