A Man of Implacable Wisdom: Professor Dr. Faisal Masud (1954-2019) - Part 1
A Man of Implacable Wisdom:
Professor Dr. Faisal Masud (1954-2019)
By
Ali
Madeeh Hashmi
"For
Leon Daudet, Charcot was a diagnostician and observer of genius, a man of vast
erudition and 'implacable wisdom', whose case summaries were as concentrated as
an Ingres drawing; he was without leniency towards humanity (though full of
pity for animals), found the illness more interesting than the patient, and
'observed the malfunctioning of the human machine as an astronomer observes the
movement of the stars'.
Alphonse Daudet- “In The Land of Pain”
My
first two years in medical college were, by turns, excruciatingly boring and intensely
terrifying. In the first two years of medical college, students, most of whom
are bright, inquisitive, motivated people, are subjected to a martial regimen
of lectures and tests. This is both a reflection of the authoritarian mind-set
of the people who teach ‘basic sciences’ (the disciplines which form the
foundation of medical knowledge like human anatomy, physiology and the most
dreaded, biochemistry) as well as a valiant attempt to impart an enormous
amount of factual knowledge to students who have no prior familiarity with it.
The
medical college which I joined in December 1985, King Edward Medical College
(now King Edward Medical University) had honed these twin duties to perfection.
We were subjected to lecture after lecture, class after class; in most of which
we sat clueless and bored. This was followed by test after test after test, one
after another until we were exhausted and came home tired and scared.
I vividly
remember my initial experiences of carving up dead bodies in the Anatomy
‘dissection hall’ which reeked of formalin and exuded a menacing air with human
corpses laying on dissection tables covered by sheets. The first few weeks of
medical college, I would wake up startled at night certain that the people who
we had been ‘dissecting’ had come into my room at night and were standing
around me. It did not help that many of our teachers in these sciences were, to
be charitable, less than enthusiastic about their jobs.
This
went on for two years and finally, after passing our ‘first professional’
exams, we were in the third year of medical college where the general
atmosphere in classes was more relaxed and we finally got to go to the hospital
where we felt like ‘real’ doctors.
It
was also in third year that we got to see Dr. Faisal Masud in action.
Generally, classes of medical students are taken by senior faculty, usually a
professor. If the professor is not available, then the next most senior person
is assigned to take the class. Dr. Faisal Masud made an immediate impression on
all of us (not an easy thing to accomplish with 200+ potentially rowdy medical
students).
Credits: Humans of KEMU |
To
this day, I cannot remember what he taught us (more a reflection of my general
disinterest in lectures combined with my day-dreaminess). And to this day, I
can still picture him in my mind: unruly salt and pepper hair which often fell
like a mop over his forehead, piercing eyes darting around from behind
horn-rimmed glasses, impeccably dressed in elegant suits (in the winter) and
safari suits or a shirt and tie in the summer, holding a mike in one hand with
the thick black wire training behind him, a chalk in the other hand with which
he would write or draw a figure on the board and a complete, encyclopedic
mastery of his subject. He was a mesmerizing figure.
Even back then, when he
walked into the classroom, an immediate hush fell on the room. He had (we knew)
come back after completing his post graduate medical training in England. That
alone, like many of his peers made him stand out. We could tell, even back then
as relatively novice medical students, that those of our teachers who had
studied abroad had a far more comprehensive grasp of their subject than those
who had not. In addition, they appeared more polished, more humane, more inspiring,
and just more fun; or at least that’s how it appeared to me.
And
Faisal sahib (the moniker we all adopted for him) was in a class of his own. He
would hold forth on the topic at hand, prowling the front of the classroom,
speaking into the mike with the wire trailing behind him. Occasionally he would
saunter over to the blackboard and write some notes or make a figure on the
board and then go back to speaking, his fierce gaze darting around the lecture
hall.
It
would be difficult for the medical students of today, most of whom are girls,
to imagine a classroom full of medical students back then. Girls were restricted
to a ‘quota’ which meant that only the very highest achieving girls were
admitted to our co-education medical college. In our class, there were around
25 girls and upwards of 200 boys. The girls sat on the front two benches while
we sat behind them and filled up the lecture halls with their stair step
seating almost all the way up to the ceiling. The rowdiest boys sat in the back
benches and spent most of their times chatting, joking, throwing chalks or
crumpled papers at each other or sometimes at the teachers if the lecture was
particularly boring.
I
remember a class by a junior lecturer in our 3rd or 4th
year of medical college when we had long ago overcome our fear and awe of being
‘medical students’ and were focused on having as much fun as possible. I think
the subject was pharmacology and the poor man had obviously prepared some notes
which he started reading to the class, no doubt hoping to get through the
session as quickly as possible.
But students are like sharks; they can smell
fear and inexperience. Within a few minutes, the boys at the back started
talking loudly, then joking and cat-calling. The lecturer, now slightly
panicked, continued staring at his notes and reading them but it was no use. He
had lost the attention of the class and while he stood there helplessly reading
notes to which no one was listening, the din in the lecture hall became
deafening. I still remember the expression on his face: a mixture of misery,
helplessness, and fear. I felt slightly sorry for him.
But
Faisal sahib’s lectures were the exact opposite. When he talked, there was pin
drop silence. His complete mastery of what he was teaching, the way he
delivered his lectures, his demeanor, his clothes, his body language, all said
‘I know what I am talking about and you better listen if you know what’s good
for you’. And we loved and feared him in equal measure. So much so that
graduating medical students fought over the privilege to work with him in the
hospital in their ‘house job’: the one year practical experience that all new
medical graduates are required to have before they can obtain a license to
practice medicine.
My
first personal interaction with him, though, was a little painful. We were in
our 4th year of medical college and had been assigned to ‘North
Medical Ward’ for our medicine rotation. Mayo Hospital, the main teaching
hospital of our college, built in 1871 is named after Richard Bourke, the 6th
Earl of Mayo (a county in West Ireland) who had also incidentally, served as a
Viceroy of India. It is the largest teaching hospital in Pakistan with 3000
beds and a multitude of departments and specialties.
On a
typical workday, being inside Mayo (those of us who have studied or worked
there refer to it, affectionately, as just ‘Mayo’) is like being inside a
beehive; people jostling for space on sidewalks and inside corridors; cars,
motorcycles and rickshaws zipping back and forth narrowly missing pedestrians
and each other; nurses and doctors scurrying around gazing at their cell phones
while dodging traffic; patients and their families wandering around looking
slightly forlorn and, during the summer, the relentless Lahore sun beating down
mercilessly on everyone.
Mayo has a large department of Medicine with four
‘Units’; individual hospital wards with male and female sections capable of
housing upwards of 100 patients each. For medical students, Medicine is a
‘core’ specialty (along with Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology and
Pediatrics). Every graduating medical student at King Edward/Mayo is expected
to master the basics of these four specialties before they graduate since they
form the heart of medical practice (the list does not include Psychiatry but
more on that later).
When I was a medical student, we were all assigned to a month-long
rotation in Medicine in each of our 3rd, 4th and final
year of medical college. This is supposed to be a ‘compulsory’ rotation which
means you attend classes and see patients in the Medicine ‘ward’ (this includes
the large common area where patients are admitted and reside along with at
least one, sometimes more family members as well as doctor’s offices, class
rooms and administrative offices). At the end of the month-long rotation, we
all had to sit for a ‘Ward test’ which you have to pass in order to complete
the rotation. Technically, you cannot sit for your final exam for that year
unless you have passed the test for a major specialty.
On
the day in question, I and my classmates arrived in North Medical Ward to find
that our class was to be taken by Faisal sahib. We were delighted and
apprehensive in equal measure: what better than to be taught by the Master
himself? I can’t speak for the rest of my class fellows, perhaps 7-8 in all,
but I for one was afraid that I would get picked on and be unable to answer a
question that Faisal sahib had.
Medicine
was not my favorite subject to begin with. In fact, like most of my class
fellows, I had sort of drifted into medical college; quite a feat considering
one had to have achieved top academic honors over a long period of time in
school and college to get in. Like most of my peers, I had been good in
studies. I had a voracious appetite for books and a photographic memory. It had
helped me navigate school even though (I now know in retrospect), the education
system in Pakistan had not encouraged or even acknowledged my natural curiosity
and eagerness to learn.
I had, with some difficulty, mastered the rote system
of learning; of memorizing large amounts of factual information and then
regurgitating it onto an exam paper. The subjects where memorization didn’t
work so well like Mathematics and Physics were my weak points. I gravitated
towards Biology and when, after finishing class 10 it came time to choose what
I wanted to study in class 11 and 12 prior to applying for college, my father
gently suggested that I think about becoming a doctor.
In retrospect, his
suggestion seems rational and was the same advice that thousands of parents
gave to their academically high achieving children. The fact that career
choices in Pakistan at that time (and to some extent still today although less
so) were limited to “Doctor” or “Engineer” probably also had something to do
with it. At any rate, I knew Engineering with its heavy emphasis on Mathematics
and Physics was not for me, so I was happy to go along with his suggestion.
Once
I got to King Edward, I realized that a good memory by itself wouldn’t get me
very far since the sheer volume of information that had to be mastered could
easily defeat the best brain. Luckily for me, medical college also included
oral exams where my fluent English (thanks to my English grandmother) and my
acting skills (learned on stage before I got to medical college) came in handy.
But
today was different. Not only did I not know much about Medicine, Faisal
sahib’s chosen subject, I knew that any attempt to worm out of a question by
beating around the bush would be immediately detected. And who knew what Faisal
sahib would do to someone who was found trying to deceive him by pretending to
know something he didn’t? Such was the aura of the man that all of us,
outwardly confident, strapping young men who had already begun to dismiss our
own fathers as ignorant were shaking in our boots.
It
turns out I was worried about the wrong thing. Faisal sahib never asked me a
question; he did something much worse. Since we were still junior medical
students, he began to teach us about ‘Clinical Methods’ or how to take a
‘history’, a systematic account of the patient’s symptoms and ‘physical
examination’ of the patient. In the hands of an astute doctor, these two
components of a medical examination are usually enough to establish an accurate
diagnosis the majority of the time without the need for expensive laboratory
tests which are hard to do in a huge, resource-constrained hospital like Mayo.
While teaching us how to examine the chest and lungs, Faisal sahib decided to
use me as a mock patient; possibly because I was the tallest in my class and
thus more prominent. As he sat behind me and put his hands around my upper
chest to demonstrate to my class fellows how the chest expands when one takes a
breath, he asked me to take in a deep breath. I did and then waited. Nothing
happened. Faisal sahib didn’t say anything, and he still had his hands around
the back of my upper chest. He asked me to take another deep breath and I did
it again. I glanced around furtively to see what he was doing and saw a
displeased expression on his face.
“Usually,
the chest expands as a patient breathes in deeply” he said in his
British-accented English “but he is so obese that his chest is not moving at
all”. I could hear the scorn dripping from his voice. Faisal sahib himself was
thin and angular with broad shoulders and a narrow waist (which would thicken
with age when we became colleagues and friends years later). I found out later
that he had been an avid tennis player in college and was a finicky eater
(although he loved to try out new cooking ideas).
I had struggled with obesity
my entire childhood and continued to try and balance my love of unhealthy
sweets with an obsessive regimen of running to try and work them off. For
someone I idolized, like Faisal sahib, to comment on my weight, and that too in
front of my friends, was a like a dagger to my heart. I don’t remember anything
about the rest of the class, probably because I was too mortified to pay any
attention to what he said subsequently.
To be
continued…
How is KEMC and Mayo hospital these now.
ReplyDeleteKE is great Alhamdulillah
DeleteVery honest account which flows very well.
ReplyDelete