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SPOTLIGHT: DAN COOPER, '79
Tending to the Student Body
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CARDINAL CARE: Cooper tries to build a relationship
with each patient.
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Rod Searcy
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THERE'S A COMMON JOKE about Cowell Student
Health Service: no matter whats wrong with you, the doctor gives
you two Advil and sends you home.
Maybe theres a reason.
Most of the 25 to 35 patients Dan Cooper sees each day are suffering from
minor ailmentscolds, sports injuries, acne. Ninety-nine percent
of the time it is the worried well or benign illness, says the Cowell
physician. My job is sifting through that for the real stuff.
To ferret out insidious problems, such as addictions, HIV and eating disorders,
Cooper tries to build a relationship with each patient. When a Chinese
graduate student comes in complaining about a sore in his mouth, for example,
Cooper asks about his dissertation as he gets a swab from the patients
cheek. And as he hands the young man a prescription, Cooper acknowledges
that Western medicine is often viewed with suspicion in China, and reassures
him that the medication should help.
Cooper has a great rapport with students, says his boss, Cowell
director Ira Friedman. He understands them and appreciates them.
Still, Cooper says, it can be difficult to diagnose major illnesses in
headstrong Stanford students who dont have time to be sick. He remembers
a student who came into the clinic gasping for breath. The young man was
on his way to teach a karate class and just wanted some medication to
make it all better. Cooper ordered a chest X-rayand discovered that
the patient had pericardial effusion, which can result in heart failure.
As an undergraduate, Cooper majored in biological sciences and worked
as an orderly at Stanford Hospital. Shaving the bodies of heart-donor
cadaversand realizing that one persons death could save anothers
lifetied things in to what I was studying, he says.
It put a human face to it.
Cooper has never strayed far from his Farm roots. At a conference he attended
while a medical student at the University of Colorado, Cooper met John
Steward, the longtime dean of student affairs at Stanford Medical School,
who died in 2000. Steward, 48, MD 55, became Coopers
mentor, and in 1998 convinced him to leave his job as a family practitioner
on the central California coast to take the Cowell post.
Although he spends most of his time treating sniffles and sprains, Cooper
is glad to be back on campus. Students are at such an interesting
time in their lives, just beginning to flower in their intellectual pursuits,
he says. They have so much idealism, creativity and energy.
Even if they use some of it to make fun of him.
Christine
Foster
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