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Margaret
E. Mohrmann, MD, PhD
Harrison Medical Teaching |
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| Dr. Mohrmann is a graduate of the
College of Charleston (BS, 1969) and the Medical University of South Carolina
(MD, 1973). After completing her residency in pediatrics at the Johns
Hopkins Hospitals, she returned to MUSC, where she was director of the
residency program in pediatrics, medical director of the pediatric intensive
care unit, and taught ethics and clinical reasoning to first- and second-year
medical students. In 1987, Dr. Mohrmann came to the University of Virginia
as a doctoral student in religious ethics (and a part-time teacher and
practitioner of primary care pediatrics), receiving her PhD in 1995. She currently holds joint appointments at UVA in the School of Medicine (Program of Humanities in Medicine) and the College of Arts & Sciences (Department of Religious Studies). In the School of Medicine, Dr. Mohrmann is an affiliated faculty member of the Center for Biomedical Ethics, director of the Spirituality and Medicine Curriculum, coordinator of the Clinical Reflection program for third-year medical students, and a member of the medical school admissions committee. In the Department of Religious Studies, she teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in the history of Christian ethics and in feminist thought, among other subjects, and directs the undergraduate bioethics internship seminar. Dr. Mohrmann has received numerous teaching awards from medical students and residents, both at MUSC and at UVA, including the 1999 UVA School of Medicine Dean's Award for Excellence in Teaching. She is a member of Alpha Omega Alpha, the Raven Society (the oldest honorary service organization at UVA), and Omicron Delta Kappa. In 1988, the College of Charleston bestowed upon her the degree of Doctor of Letters, honoris causa . Based on her interdisciplinary scholarship at the intersection of ethics, religion, and medicine, Dr. Mohrmann is in demand nationally as a speaker to a variety of audiences, including physicians, medical students, nurses, theologians, chaplains, and lay persons. She is the author of Medicine As Ministry: Reflections on Suffering, Ethics, and Hope (Pilgrim Press, 1995) and co-editor of Pain Seeking Understanding: Suffering, Medicine, and Faith (Pilgrim Press, 1999). She is also the narrator of a video, "The Way We Die: Listening to the Terminally Ill," used widely by hospice and AIDS support groups and in college courses on cultural understandings of death. Her third book, Attending Children: A Doctor's Education , published by Georgetown University Press, will appear in April 2005. Dr. Mohrmann's current research interests include the early and medieval history of Christian ethics and ethically appropriate content and methods for medical education in matters of spirituality. |
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