
Photos by: Susan Urmy
Physicians of Tomorrow, Meet the Leaders of Today
How can you connect your medical training to your personal calling? What are the newest and next frontiers in medicine? And what does it mean to be a truly exceptional physician?
To answer these pressing questions, the Deans' Lecture Series brings you into conversation with physicians who are pushing the boundaries of their medical calling.
Have you ever wondered about…
- Uncovering a public health crisis? We brought in Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, who helped unearth the Flint water crisis and lead recovery efforts.
- Doing medicine aboard a space shuttle? Dr. Drew Gaffney came to campus to speak about his experience as a former Senior Flight Surgeon-Astronaut.
- Dedicating your career to underserved populations? Dr. Kimberly Manning, aka “The Grady Doctor,” shared the lessons she’s learned from everyday teaching experiences at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta.
- Applying stand-up comedy to your specialty? Dr. William Flanary, aka “Dr. Glaucomflecken,” blended his characteristic humor and education to deliver a talk on his career as a joke-telling ophthalmologist.
From renowned epidemiologists to MD TikTok sensations, the medical superstars that come to campus through DLS will do more than share life-lessons. They’ll challenge you to think critically about your own medical calling and future.
Many Lectures, Hundreds of Campus-Wide Ripples
With a new speakers during the academic year, DLS inspires powerful waves of conversation across VUSM’s campus.
- Gather with the medical student community each month for a lunch and lecture with the speaker.
- Join a small group for informal dinner conversation with the speaker at a classic Nashville eatery.
- Explore the talk’s pressing questions further with the students and faculty in your learning communities and colleges.
- Submit your own proposal for a student lecture.
Each year, medical students apply to deliver a half-hour talk during the spring semester, and the entire community comes out to support the two chosen speakers.
A Student-Energized Tradition
With roots stretching back to an unscheduled Deans’ Hour in the early 2000s, this open block in the curriculum morphed into a formal lecture opportunity under the direction of Bonnie Miller, MD, who was in her role as Associate Dean for Medical Student Affairs at the time.
Now, a student team cultivates the vision for the series each year, brainstorming speakers, soliciting feedback from the student body, and hosting the lectures in collaboration with the Office of Medical Student Affairs. Interested in joining the team? Applications to serve a three-year term on the committee go out each spring semester.
2025-2026 Lecture Series
Thursday, Nov. 20
Light Hall 208
12-1 p.m.
Simpson Lecture: Ms. Corey Reese and Meg Rush, MD, MMMHC, President, Monroe Carrell Jr. Children's Hospital
“Dr. Mildred Stahlman: A Global Visionary in Neonatology from Vanderbilt”
Corey Nason Reese is a writer and editor with experience in healthcare and education. She graduated from the William Allen White School of Journalism at the University of Kansas. With over 30 years of freelance work, Corey has held writing and editing roles for professional organizations, journals and newspapers. She was also the Communications Director for an education association for 20 years.
Corey serves as the biographer for Dr. Mildred Stahlman, recognized worldwide for her pioneering contributions to neonatology.

Dr. Margaret “Meg” Rush arrived at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in 1984 as a motivated resident passionate about helping children but with a special interest in critically ill infants. Subsequently, in 1987, she began fellowship training in the Division of Neonatology, and later joined the faculty at Vanderbilt in 1990.
Since joining Vanderbilt, she has been a research investigator as well as a leader in education and clinical care. She led Vanderbilt’s Neonatal Fellowship Program from 2001 - 2011. She emerged as a senior administrative leader in 2007 when she was named chief of staff for the Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt. She also served as acting chair of the Department of Pediatrics in June, 2011, an appointment she held through August 2012. In February 2020, she was appointed the President of Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt.
Dr. Rush’s basic science research interests were focused on the role of Vitamin A in lung development as well as lung injury and repair. She also has interest in health policy as it relates to children which serves her well as a leader in both the Children’s Hospital Association and Children’s Hospital Alliance of Tennessee. She played a key role with the Institutional Review Board, helping restructure the institution's policies and direction in human subjects research, with an emphasis on children.
Dr. Rush earned her Doctor of Medicine from the University of Cincinnati – College of Medicine in 1984. She received her Bachelor of Arts in 1980 from DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana.
She earned her Masters of Management in Healthcare degree from the Owen Graduate School of Management at Vanderbilt, September 2014.
She has earned notable honors, including the title of "Woman to Watch in Medicine" by Nashville Medical News in 2008. She was selected by Nashville Lifestyles Magazine in 2015 as the keynote speaker for the Women in Business Luncheon and in 2019, she received the Distinguished Alumni Award from her alma mater, the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. Most recently the Nashville Business Journal awarded her the 2022 Women of Influence Award as an Executive Leader and the Junior League of Nashville awarded her the Paragon Award for 2023 Outstanding Community Service of the Year.
Tuesday, Jan. 27
Light Hall 202
12-1 p.m.
Satcher Lecture: Kecia Carroll, MD, MPH
Tuesday, Feb. 3
Light Hall 208
12-1 p.m.
Robinson Lecture: Dr. Linda Cendales, Hand Surgeon and Hand Transplant Surgeon
Watch Now
Monday, Feb. 23
Light Hall 202
12-1 p.m.
Felts Lecture: Susan Burton, Host of Retrieval Podcast
Monday, March 9
Light Hall 202
12-1 p.m.
Flexner Student Lecture
VUSM speakers TBD
Monday, April 20
Light Hall 208
12-1 p.m.
Chapman Lecture, in conjunction with the Academy of Excellence in Education: Wendy Dean, MD
Fall 2025 Lecture Series - completed
Tuesday, Sept. 23
Light Hall 202
12-1 p.m.
Michael Dowling, CEO of Northwell Health
"Beyond the Hospital: Redefining Health Through Integration, Community, and Continuity of Care."
No recording available.
Tuesday, Oct. 7
Light Hall 208
12-1 p.m.
Levi Watkins Lecture: André Churchwell, MD
"Levi Watkins, Jr., MD: Through a Personal Lens"
Monday, Oct. 27
Light Hall 208
12-1 p.m.
Flexner Lecture: Dr. Saud Siddiqui, Co-Founder of Sketchy
“How I Built This: The Story of Sketchy and the Future of Medical Education”
Saud Siddiqui, MD, is a board-certified emergency physician and co-founder of Sketchy, a platform that redefined how medical students learn by transforming dense content into memorable visual stories. As a medical student struggling with massive workloads, he developed a narrative-based approach that quickly caught on, helping hundreds of thousands of learners across the globe. Today, he continues to push medical education forward, exploring AI-driven case-based learning tools that let students practice clinical encounters virtually. His guiding principle remains the same: solve real problems with elegant solutions that put learners first.
“Getting to Know Your Neighbors: A Local Approach to Global Health”
“Robots, Jellies, Kids”
With a career spanning multiple sectors—including health systems, local public health departments, community-based organizations, and international non-governmental organizations – Wylie has consistently worked at the intersection of healthcare, community health and community development. Her efforts have been dedicated to elevating the voice of communities and promoting inclusive approaches that cultivate equitable health outcomes.
Dr. Eiman Jahangir was born in Tehran, Iran and moved to Nashville, TN at age four. His childhood fascination with space led him to pursue a career in medicine and space exploration. He attended Martin Luther King Jr. Magnet High School, known for its focus on math and engineering, before earning a Bachelor of Arts at George Washington University and a Medical Doctorate from the University of Tennessee. He completed his medical training at Boston University Medical Center and Vanderbilt University, specializing in Cardiovascular Medicine.
Dr. Stanford is an Associate Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics who practices and teaches at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH)/ Harvard Medical School (HMS) as one of the first fellowship-trained obesity medicine physicians worldwide. She is among the most highly cited obesity medicine physician-scientists, with over 200 peer-reviewed publications. Stanford has conducted 1200 media interviews, including with the New York Times, USA Today, Time, U.S. News & World Report, Glamour, and NPR. In 2023, Stanford appeared on 60 Minutes with Lesley Stahl, stating obesity is a chronic disease and that there is physician bias against those with excess weight. In an interview with Deborah Roberts on addressing weight stigma, Dr. Stanford advocates eliminating bias towards those with higher weights. Oprah Winfrey interviewed Dr. Stanford as an obesity expert for her “The Life You Want Class: The State of the Weight” on Oprah Daily. In this interview, she teaches about the science of obesity as a chronic disease. In an interview with Sanjay Gupta for his CNN Chasing Life podcast, she coined the term “street corner medicine” to refer to the assumption that people judge people based on their size– they assume that heavier people are unhealthy and leaner people are healthy without investigating whether this is factual by evaluating metabolic health parameters such as blood pressure, cholesterol, liver function tests, blood sugar, etc.
“I Do (Not) Belong: Experiences of Black Women and Girls in Mathematics”
March 25, 2024
“Duty, Honor, and the Moral Complexity of Wartime Service”
March 4, 2024
January 22, 2024
November 13, 2023
Oct. 3, 2023
Sept. 11, 2023
Aug. 11, 2023
Jun. 12, 2023
Apr. 24, 2023
Mar. 27, 2023
“Decolonizing Global Health As A Trainee: A Reflection on Historical Contexts, Lessons from Sierra Leone, and Contributing in a Meaningful Way“
Mar. 6, 2023
Feb. 21, 2023
Jan. 27, 2023
Jan. 5, 2023
Nov. 21, 2022
Oct. 25, 2022