Personal Data
Current Mailing
Address
David Good
Dept of Neurology
Penn State Milton S
Hershey Med Center
Email Address: dgood@psu.edu
Present
Activity Status: Working
Family Status: Grandchildren
Professional
Experience
What path has
your career taken since your residency? Include military service, private
practice, academic career, teaching and research accomplishments.
Following my
residency, which ended in 1978, 1 completed a stroke fellowship at
Residency
Recollections
We are
interested in anecdotes and experiences from your residency years.
Include interactions among fellow residents and teaching staff.
Our class was large (8 residents), but close knit. We had a lot of clinical
autonomy, especially at the county hospitals and the VA. I vividly recall
doing my own cerebral arteriograms through direct
carotid puncture in the middle of the night at
Looking back,
would you do it again? What would you change?
Of course, a major
recollection is Dr. Abe Baker. Who could forget rounds with Margaret Clipper,
galvanic stimulation and Margane? Saturday morning
teaching sessions were a source of high anxiety for junior residents, Dr. Baker
holding court and asking them questions, often
regarding neurological minutia. He often would turn around and identify the
poor junior resident, who would struggle in embarrassment. However, by the time
one was a senior resident, one realized that the questions were the same every
year, and most of the answers were in Bing and 1-Taymaker.
Faculty were good teachers, supportive mentors for the
residents and many became friends (or life. Sim Zeese annual party was always an event, mostly because the
food was great, but also to let us know we were appreciated. Our residency
class was mostly married, some with children, and we socialized increasingly as
the years progressed. Chi-Wan Lai hosted several elaborate dinners at Chinese
restaurants.
Additional Thoughts
Share your
thoughts regarding the changes in medicine since your residency. In your
opinion, is Neurology positioned well for the future?
Probably the most revolutionary change that has occurred during my career has
been the tremendous advances in neuroimaging
technology. I remember when EMI scans (the
The other important change during my
career has been the explosion in treatments for neurological disorders. We now
take for granted the treatment of disorders that we could only observe the
history and hope for a good outcome early in my career.