Sunday, April 21, 2024

Dr. Todd Butz Sometimes Gives His Sheep Animal Crackers with Their Grain

 You are here for a reason...  

                                                                102-year-old Holistic Physician Gladys McGarey, M.D.

Todd Butz, M.D.
Todd began life in a small rural town on the outskirts of the borough of Marietta in Lancaster County. The girl who would become his wife, Barb (seven years younger than him), lived about a mile away “as the crows fly.” His parents and her parents had purchased land from the same local farmer. And though one of his brothers was best friends with her brother, Todd didn’t meet Barb until he was already practicing medicine. 

This happened in 1994 at a 150th-anniversary banquet for their Catholic church. Todd’s mother had insisted that her four kids (including Todd’s two older brothers and his younger sister) attend, and  Barb was there. She and Todd married three years later.

 Dr. Todd Butz told me that he has been “fortunate, lucky, and blessed” as he had a lot of good people in his life and great parents. His father (in the family sign business) was of quiet, stoic German stock, while his mother (an R.N.) was an animated and passionate Italian.   

He believes that “creativity is what life is about” and early in his training he combined German technical insight and Italian passion with his family’s interest in sports to invent a unique exercise machine. It is worth telling this story in some detail.

You see, Todd was doing a Sports Medicine fellowship with Graduate Hospital in Philadelphia when he had a “crazy idea.”  He imagined a device to exercise “the torso” as he felt swimming did. Something to work the abdominal, hip flexor, and lower back muscles. Something that would allow for a prolonged session at a moderate aerobic intensity.  

He dreamed up a contraption that he called an ABDO-Cycle. You sat in it and it used a weighted flywheel with steady resistance to permit the user to perform repeated abdominal crunches and back extensions for minutes at a time. 

Barb on the ABDO-Cycle
Todd spent years (and a lot of money) on his idea. He tried to do the patent work himself but had to get an attorney (who charged him $10,000 to eventually use many of Todd’s own words). A friend’s father, an entrepreneur, helped him find an engineer to build a prototype. But the investor wanted substantial equity in the (proposed) company and Todd didn’t like that idea. 

Time passed, and after a prototype was finally fabricated, he decided to shop it around himself. A professional and talented graphic designer (it was Barb) produced a finely detailed brochure complete with a model (Barb, again) using the machine. The major fitness companies nibbled but didn’t bite. Dr. Butz said that he learned a lot about life from this experience. More than he learned, he noted, from college. 

(The model--the machine, not the girl–still resides in his attic. The girl is in the house proper.) 

It is not surprising that Todd’s creative drive would result in a piece of exercise equipment since he was part of a sports-oriented family. His dad had played football at the University of Florida and Todd and his brothers were in all the usual team sports from a young age. 

His mother (though not an athlete herself) was a fierce motivator (and a pretty good cook). He said that while she wouldn’t put direct pressure on him to do things, or to perform, she had her way. For example, he can still hear her saying (when he was away in medical school), “We have supper on Sunday and I made a lasagna and two dozen meatballs.” He knew what she really meant, and he could hardly fail to show up.

So after a childhood wrapped up in team sports and with no particular academic direction, Todd decided to go to the University of Delaware for football. While there, he first toyed with the idea of being an athletic trainer or a physical therapist. But when he watched the team doctor on the sidelines he decided to aim higher. 

University of Delaware football field (credit: University of Delaware)
So he quietly squeezed in the needed premed courses. He didn’t tell anyone about his lofty goal until he was accepted to Hahneman and was on the wait list at Thomas Jefferson Medical College, both in downtown Philadelphia. 

Where should he go? He took advice from his knowledgeable football coach (who became a cardiologist). Todd waited a bit, got in to Jeff, and joined the coach, Joseph Bering, who was already there, two years ahead of him. 

He initially loved it in Philadelphia. But after two years of studying the basic sciences in the middle of a busy noisy city, he missed the peaceful countryside. So when he took a few clinical rotations at Geisinger Hospital in Danville in rural Northeast Pennsylvania, he was comforted by the calm environment, where he could see “cornfields and sunsets” again.

Sunset and cornfield (Credit: SimonSkafar)

During medical school, Todd’s evolving interests in sports, exercise, and preventive medicine led him to take an enlightening rotation with the famed Dr. Kenneth Cooper (who coined the term “aerobics” in 1968) at his clinic in Dallas. Dr. Cooper (who still works out five times a week at 93) was onto something that resonated with Todd.

Dr. Maddrey
Back in Philly, looking for a career path, Todd methodically crossed off one specialty after another (“Not this, not this…”). He finally settled on internal medicine, maybe cardiology. When it was time to look for a residency the Chairman of Medicine at Jefferson, the illustrious liver specialist Dr. Willis Maddrey, urged him to stay there for a life in academics. But Todd didn’t want that, he wanted to move back home.

In 1990, Lancaster (quite close to home) only had Family Medicine programs, so he ventured a bit farther away and looked at York Hospital’s Internal Medicine residency, York would be okay, still less than an hour’s drive from his home. 

As soon as he visited, he was impressed. He loved the congeniality as the doctors and nurses talked to one another face-to-face instead of communicating coldly on the patient’s chart, as they did in Philly.

Instantly comfortable in this atmosphere he thought, “This is where I want to be."

Todd had a happy experience as a resident. He believed he had outstanding training with a long list of wonderful physicians as he took specialty and general internal medicine rotations. (This was when almost all the attendings taught on a volunteer basis and gave freely of their time despite busy private practices.) 

After three years in York, Todd’s interests led him to the one-year Sports Medicine fellowship with a Graduate Hospital affiliate on the Main Line near Villanova. The staff at the large center served as the team doctors and therapists for the Phillies, Eagles, Flyers, and 76ers as well as Villanova athletes. They also did executive physicals, stress testing, and cancer screening. 

At the end of that year, Dr. Butz was again offered the option of staying in the Philadelphia area but chose to return home instead. (By the way, he had not yet met Barb.)  

Dr. Landis
What could he do? Thinking outside the box, he had an idea for a position in York. Over a steak dinner, he and Dr. William “Tex” Landis of the Brockie Internal Medicine group sketched the plan on a napkin. From his experience as a resident, he knew the practice and the physicians well. He proposed (that is, invented, created) a brilliant role for a single guy: he would admit and manage the Brockie patients (including new patients coming through the busy ER) at night. 

This would allow the overworked internists who were running back and forth from the office to the hospital and taking night-call to count on getting regular sleep. The idea was accepted, and Dr. Butz did this full-time for five years. And it was during this nocturnal phase of his career that he met and then married Barb.

But as the night schedule became too stressful to maintain, and thinking ahead, he had other plans. So in 1999, he went half-time with the enlarging WellSpan system and started a preventive medicine clinic across the river near Lancaster. At that time, before the Affordable Care Act changed things, preventive services, he noted, were generally not covered by insurance.

He did stress-testing and calculated VO2max (how much oxygen you can use during exercise) using Dr. Cooper’s data, and other stuff like that. Nearly 25 years ago, Dr. Butz counseled interested people on the importance of a balanced diet and regular exercise. He advised them to stop smoking, to get enough sleep, and to be better at managing life’s inevitable stresses. 

Todd thought that it was “crazy” that “we wait for people to get sick and then pump them with pills.” He knew that prevention of illness was a much saner approach to long-term health. Dr. Peter Attia, writing in his 2023 bestseller Outlive, calls this (not so new) idea “Medicine 3.0.” 

(In his book, Dr. Attia carefully explores the best science and emphasizes the age-old appeal of a personalized nutrition plan to prevent cardiovascular disease and diabetes and the complications thereof. He is especially enthusiastic about the remarkable ability of regular aerobic activity and strength training to delay the onset of a wide variety of diseases and to meaningfully extend our “healthspan,” not simply our lifespan. And he eventually recognizes that achieving emotional health often requires prevention.)  

While Dr. Butz was a resident, he had given a Grand Rounds presentation to the staff entitled (quoting a phrase often attributed to Hippocrates around 2,500 years ago) “Let Food be Your Medicine.” He is still keenly invested in this idea and feels that “we do best on fuels that our remote ancestors ate.”  

As we sat and talked, Todd mentioned the decades-long “Seven Countries Study” spearheaded by Ancel Keys. First published in 1978, the observational study of middle-aged men was started in 1958 near the height of the heart disease epidemic. Serum cholesterol, blood pressure, diabetes, and smoking were clearly seen as risk factors for coronary disease. And it suggested that certain dietary patterns played a role.

Location of cohorts (often in villages) in the 7-Countries Study

The nutritional aspect appeared to be the amount of saturated vs. unsaturated fat in the typical diet. The countries with a lot of saturated fat in the diet (e.g., Finland) tended to have way more heart disease than those with much less (i.e., Japan). Part of the war on heart disease became a war on saturated fat and cholesterol in the diet.

So as we became increasingly health-conscious and weight-conscious, we became fat-conscious. And in the 1980's the American food industry responded. Since saturated fat was “bad” they would use sugar to replace it in prepared foods and snacks to keep them tasty (and to keep us buying). 

We ate less fat. But a lot more sugar. Yes, a lot more sugar. And as we took more of our calories as “added sugar” (most often in surgery drinks) we ingested more calories overall. The prevalence of obesity and type 2 diabetes nearly doubled from 1980 to the early 2000s and has continued to rise. We became fatter and sicker, rather than thinner and healthier.  

The shocking increase in obesity from 1987 to 2021 (Credit: CDC)
What happened? Table sugar (sucrose) is 50% glucose and 50% fructose. Glucose is used immediately as fuel. Fructose is metabolized differently than glucose and if it is excessive it is stored as fat (to survive a cold winter with sparse food supplies). It is put away first in muscles, and then in the liver. Too much eventually leads to insulin resistance, diabetes, an increase in LDL and a decrease in HDL cholesterol (made in the liver), elevated triglycerides, and chronic inflammation.  

Part of the problem for us is that sugar is enticing and rewarding, and, therefore, potentially addicting. It produces momentary pleasure, a desire for more of it, and uncomfortable withdrawal symptoms when it is no longer available.  As Gary Taubes states in (probably rightly) calling sugar a drug of addiction: it makes children happy, at least for the period they’re consuming it…(but the) downside is that they “will come to expect another dose, perhaps to demand it on a regular basis.” (p. 31) We get hooked early.

(A childhood memory: Uncle Sol sold candy. I looked forward to his visits and I can recall the excitement at seeing the long thin red licorice “shoelaces” or “lariates” he brought with him. I twisted, braided, and knotted them in anticipation of their chewy sweet taste. The pleasant sugar high was soon followed by a disheartening letdown; I wanted more. I knew early on that sugar affected me strongly and I gave it up nearly altogether in my teens, in the early 1970’s.)

(Don't they look good?)

Dr. Butz said that the massive decades-long Keys study can be criticized for “cherry-picking” the data (leaving out countries that were initially to be included, 20 countries in total) and ignoring or downplaying the role of high sugar intake in heart disease. 

The truth, said Todd, is that no correlation could have been established between fat consumption and heart disease if the data from all 20 countries were used.  Nevertheless, Keys and his colleagues championed a diet low in saturated fat to combat heart disease (by lowering, it turns out, the all-important serum LDL cholesterol) . The possible role of too much sugar and simple carbohydrates, was ignored.  

Anyway, enough about sugar. Let’s get back to our main subject, Dr. Butz. He ran back and forth to his Lancaster clinic for three years until the commute became too much for his soon-to-be growing family. So, for their protection, he put his preventive medicine practice and the soaring ABDO-Cycle dream away and took a hospital position with good benefits.  

Dr. Van Wyck

As Todd returned to WellSpan full-time in the fall of 2002, he helped Dr. Rita Van Wyck do inpatient medical consults for the psychiatrists (where he learned a lot about mental health). And as the local family practices were one-by-one bought by the system he helped Dr. Douglas Rubelmann admit patients from the different groups. He also did some moonlighting for the Brockie physicians who had been greatly disappointed when he left his night-coverage position with them. 

Recounting this part of his journey, Dr. Butz told me, with a quick laugh, that he “seemed to do the things that other people didn’t want to do.” And he quickly added that he likes new challenges.

But over the years, the easy fellowship at the hospital that so impressed him began to erode. The expanding health systems became more corporate, industrialized, and impersonal. Todd said that doctors are, by nature, independent. So they were easy isolated targets, sitting ducks, as the art of medicine was lost to a business with multiple layers of managers setting and enforcing policy. Physicians gradually became “disengaged.”

Morale declined, so that simply walking through the hospital corridors became a gloomy experience. Dr. Butz recalled one of the corporate solutions: the 5/10 rule, a take on the “Ritz-Carlton 5/10 Way” designed to improve customer satisfaction. 

The idea is simple. If you are ten feet from someone in the hospital you make eye contact and greet them with a smile. If you are within five feet you smile and say hello. Mandated civility to improve the bottom line, sort of like a high-end hotel.

So Dr. Butz took on a new challenge in 2014 after Dr. Jonathan Whitney asked him to help with so-called case management as a physician advisor. In the late 1990s Medicare and private insurance companies, to reduce spending on healthcare overall, labeled some in-hospital services as “outpatient status.” They could reimburse the hospital much less for this than the same service deemed as “inpatient.” There had to be a clear justification for “inpatient status” or such additional payments would be denied. 

According to a 2016 Report on Medicare Compliance newsletter:

To comply with the two-midnight rule (for a justified admission), Todd Butz, physician adviser at WellSpan Health in York, Pa., is trying to get physicians on the same page, free of considerations that are beside the point. That means placing patients in observation or admitting them as inpatients because that’s the appropriate level of care, regardless of the impact on copays or skilled nursing facility admissions, or the hospital’s worries about revenue, patient-satisfaction scores or readmission penalties.

Dr. Whitney and Todd sometimes had to call out insurance companies when it was felt that their decisions about payment were wrong. Dr. Butz reviewed pediatric, obstetric, and surgical cases as well as internal medicine encounters, so he had to broaden his medical knowledge significantly, and he liked that challenge.

He did this for more than four years for WellSpan and then decided to work as a self-employed consultant for a hospital in Maine that sought his specialized expertise. Todd did this for another five years until Optum came to Maine and his services were no longer needed.  

So in May of last year (2023) as he felt “out of balance” he chose to take a break from the grind of working seven days a week. He needed to “unwind.”  At age 60, as “the next chapter has yet to be written,” Dr. Butz has been spending more effort on his farmette a few miles south of his home. He and his wife and their two teenage children can “unplug” in the peaceful environment that is like a “time machine.”

There is an 1850s house with enough steeply banked ground to need a few sheep to keep the grass and weeds down. He stops by to feed the two ewes daily; they like Animal Crackers (this English delicacy was first made in the US at Stauffer’s in York in 1871, where they still turn out a million daily) along with their grain. 

The Butz's quiet rural retreat

He also has a good-sized and varied organic vegetable garden and ten young fruit trees (already bearing fruit). He is paying careful attention to nutrition as he tries to adhere to a version of a low (starchy-) carbohydrate diet that includes beef from pasture-raised cattle and “lots of eggs” (scrambled, and always with onion) laid by happy free-range hens. He makes his own butter and yogurt, and he enjoys snacking on olives and tree nuts instead of chips (despite the fact that York County is the unofficial potato chip capital of the world).  

Returning to a regular exercise regimen, to routine physical activity, he often starts his day with a long meditative swim at the York JCC, where we sometimes cross paths and chat. 

What have we learned from Dr. Butz? Prevention of illness makes more sense than waiting to treat entrenched disease. We can start improving our food choices by cutting back on starchy carbohydrates, sugar, and calories. The Mediterranean diet is a good model, and buying fresh local produce or even growing some of our own vegetables is preferred to mindlessly consuming highly processed packaged food. Regular exercise is essential for good health; we need to keep moving and stay strong. So it might be time to brush off the old ABDO-Cycle, stationary bike, or treadmill collecting dust in the attic.  And we should, following Todd, not be afraid to take chances, to be creative, to try something new. And it is good to feel connected to the land.

Dr. Todd Butz and his family



Readings and References:

1. Anon. "Guided by Pocket Card, Doctors Are Coaxed To Keep it Simple With Two-Midnight Rule." Report on Medicare Compliance, Volume 25, Number 34, September 19, 2016. (Explaining Todd's foray from direct patient care.)

2. Attia, Peter, M.D. with Gifford, Bill. Outlive: The Science & Art of Longevity. Harmony Books, New York, 1993. (Synthesis of a lot of fascinating deep technical information, but quite readable and recommended highly.)    

3. McGarey, Gladys, M.D. The Well-Lived Life: A 102-year-old Doctor's Six Secrets to Health and Happiness at Every Age. Atria Books. New York, 2023. (The "mother" of holistic medicine in 1978 addressing the health of the brain, body, and spirit. You can watch her YouTube interview.) 

3. Nozowitz, Dan. "Why are So Dang Many Potato Chip Brands from Pennsylvania?" Atlas Obscura. October 24, 2017. (Is it the climate? The soil? The German ancestry?)

4. Taubes, Gary. The Case Against Sugar. Alfred A. Knopf. New York, 2016. (A strong argument that we need to pay attention to.)


By Anita Cherry  (04/21/24)

Soaring Bird in Flight (Photo by SC)





Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Dr. Razvan Vaida Advises: Be Present and Feel Your Emotions

Human beings may be induced to sacrifice everything they hold dear and true including their sense of self for the sake of being loved and approved by someone in power and position of authority.         George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four

Dr. Vaida
Dr. Razvan Vaida is a psychiatrist in York. He was born in 1970 in socialist Romania. His parents separated when he was two or three and divorced when he was four. After that, he, his mother, and his older brother moved from Bucharest to an apartment in the periphery of the city. He saw his father (an engineer) once a month on a Sunday (the single day of the Soviet communist weekend). They would go out to eat or watch a movie. Sometimes he spent the night.

A few years after the move, two of his maternal cousins, eight and ten years older than Razvan, came to live with him and his mother.  She was also an engineer and taught high school engineering and electronics. The cousins became father figures. 

Razvan felt shame and embarrassment growing up without a father, and divorce in Romania carried a heavy social stigma with it. It was painful, and whenever his father’s name came up in conversation Razvan would be vague. The young boy learned early on to disguise, to hide, his emotions. 

Dr. Vaida told me that this struggle was “one of the big reasons” he ended up studying and practicing psychiatry. He feels that “most people (working) in mental health have some kind of problem they want to master or questions they want answers to.” Of course, he hasn’t yet found all the answers, but he has no second thoughts about his career choice. 

Communism Under Ceaușescu

Communism itself was bad, but life in Romania under Nicolae CeauČ™escu became especially harsh in the early 1980s. There was strict rationing of food (to the edge of near-starvation), gas, heating, electricity, and other necessities to quickly repay massive loans from Western nations. The loss of political freedom, with severe restrictions on acceptable speech, led to a “suffocating environment,” recalled Dr. Vaida. 

Long breadline in Romania in the 1980s 
(photo from mcgarmott.medium.com)

The “doublespeak” of Orwell’s chilling novel of totalitarianism and brainwashing, Nineteen Eighty-Four  (published in 1947), was very real to him. The truth in Romania could only be spoken quietly and only in small safe circles to avoid the secret police, the Securitate, and their many willing neighborhood informants.

(Romanians developed dark humor to cope. One saying went like this, said Razvan: "We pretend we're working. And they pretend they're paying us."

His mother did private tutoring after her day of teaching and she often didn’t come home until nine o’clock. His cousins picked young Razvan up from pre-school, and by the second grade, he was already a “latch-key kid” who took two or three buses for the hour-long trips to school and back home. He remembers answering the phone and taking messages in the evening for his mother while she was away. There wasn't a lot of money. 

Frigid Bucharest street scene
with an overcrowded bus in the 1970s
(photo by Andre Pandele)

By the time Razvan was ten, his cousins left for college and he had to fend for himself. He learned to be independent. And he sensed, even at this age, that he would live and die under oppressive communist rule. This was simply the way his life would be.

Razvan's MGF
Dr. Vaida said that if you have not lived within communism it is impossible to fully understand what it meant. For example, his mother’s family was given only two hours to leave their comfortable home in Bucharest. The home that was built by her father. He had been a high-ranking commander in the Air Force during World War II (and a two-time four-man Olympic bobsledder) and he sometimes piloted a plane for the popular King Michael I before he was forced to abdicate in 1947. 

Since Razvan’s mother’s family was comparatively well-off she was forced to spend a year washing dishes before she was allowed to go to college. His dad was luckier; he came from a simple background, as they had a small farm, and there were no punitive measures. 

Human Biology Clicked and The Fall of Communism

When Razvan was  11 or 12 he became intensely interested in human biology. It “clicked,” and he knew from then that he wanted to be a doctor.  There was fierce competition for the six-year medical degree programs so he, like everybody else with the same lofty goal, “memorized” the 11th-grade biology text in anatomy and physiology. Yes, he committed the entire book to memory.

He was accepted to the prestigious Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy. But he had to serve nine months in the army first. 

Intense studying at Carol Davila (photo from The Global Research)
But in 1989, when Razvan was 19, something completely unexpected happened; the fall of communism in Eastern Europe. 

Crowds of Germans began dismantling the Berlin Wall on November 9th. The uprising in Romania began in December in TimiĹźoara. And the regime of the dictatorial cult of personality finally ended on December 22nd after two days of violence during which about 1,000 protestors were killed. Three days later CeauČ™escu and his wife Elena were court-martailed, convicted, and executed by firing squad. This was a “tense” but “interesting” time said Dr. Vaida, with irony.     

Military crackdown on December 17, 1989 in TimiĹźoara, Romania,
(photo from Fortpan)

Dr. Vaida didn’t have much to say about his medical school experience other than that he enjoyed it (and that he had a thousand classmates). But when he took his rotation in psychiatry in his sixth and final year something, again, ”clicked.”  He said to himself, “That’s what I want to do.”

His Interest in Psychiatry

The hospitalized patients he saw with severe psychiatric illnesses were fascinating (but they were also shocking). He thought that studying them would give him the opportunity to “know what makes the mind tick.” And that he might find answers to nagging questions about himself; about his emotional difficulties, including his reaction to the divorce of his parents, and his lifelong introversion. He could know himself. He decided to finish medical school with a thesis on anxiety.

While things in Romania would change after the revolution Razvan knew that such change would be slow. Looking to escape, he received a nudge from one of his brother’s classmates who had gone to his medical school. And since his brother had already traveled abroad and eventually moved to the U.S., Razvan could follow his example.

He flew to Budapest for the first step of the USMLE, the exam required of foreign medical school graduates who hope to practice in the States. He passed and applied for a psychiatry residency. He sent applications to "a few dozen" programs and waited. No replies. Without a scheduled interview for a residency, without a job offer, he could not get a visa. He had to stay put for a while.

His girlfriend at the time was a psychiatrist teaching at one of Bucharest's state-run hospitals, where individuals with severe mental illness were often hidden away and forgotten. Razvan spent a lot of time with her over the next year. He said that this was “kind of an (unpaid) internship.” He said it was also “nice to have time off to relax" after the rigors of medical school.

Lonely forgotten patient in a Romanian psychiatric asylum in 2004
(photo from darrinjamesphotography.com) 
The next year, not wanting to take a chance on missing out again, he filled out applications for every single program in the U.S., all 200. It was a lot of paperwork, he said, and he gave the box of applications to his brother’s friend to mail when she got to the States for her psychiatry residency in Texas (it would have cost way too much to send them from Romania).

Residency in Philadelphia

This time he got several replies. It was October 1997 and he was ready. The interview at Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia (on Old York Road) went well and the program director offered him a position on the spot. He could start in July. But there was a problem: his required English exam had expired. He had to return to Romania for the exam given in June and he missed the orientation sessions for the new residents.

The transition to a new country with an unfamiliar culture was “rough.” First of all, he had no Social Security card and no place to live. A colleague took him in for a few months and the commute to the hospital by bus and subway took an hour. That first year was stressful and difficult, and he struggled academically. 

Ionic columns in front of Jefferson-Einstein Medical Center 
(photo from Jefferson Health) 
Things were much better by the second year, especially after he was fixed up with the young woman who would become his wife. They were brought together by an Indian attending who guessed that a Chinese woman from Louisville, Kentucky would be just perfect for a lonely introverted resident from Bucharest. Why, of course, she would! 

After Residency, On to Kentucky and Marriage

When Razvan finished the residency in 2002 on a J-Visa he could either return to Romania for two years or work in an underserved area here for three. He chose the latter and was assigned to a medically barren small town in eastern Kentucky, Hazard, in Perry County. Mary said she would not join him “without a future.” So they got engaged.  And they would need to have two weddings: one here and one back home. His mother would be happy to organize the affair in Romania.

Kentucky was “very stressful.” Dr. Vaida was sometimes the only psychiatrist for four counties and he was “always overworked.” He didn’t like the job, but he enjoyed the warm welcoming people of Appalachia. 

Downtown Hazard, Kentucky (photo from VOA by Ashley Westerman)
Razvan and Mary got married in Philadelphia In May of 2003. His mother came in for the wedding but his father (long since remarried and with two daughters, making things awkward) didn’t attend. Afterward, Dr. Vaida and his wife took his mother to see their home in Kentucky. 

At the time, his mother taught and practiced the “hands-on” stress reduction and relaxation technique of Reiki. She was also involved with various spiritual groups from around the world. While here for the wedding, she decided to head to a healing-energy meeting in Boulder. 

Sadness

Several mornings later, as Dr. Vaida and his new bride were at home, somebody knocked at their front door. It was a police officer. He told Razvan to call a phone number in Colorado. The number was to the coroner. Razvan’s mother was struck by a car the night before and she had passed away. (A visibly saddened son retelling this story became very quiet, and he took several slow deep breaths as he again felt the shocking trauma of that awful day.) 

Razvan flew to Boulder to see his mother at the mortuary and he and his brother (a statistician at the Harvard School of Public Health) made arrangements to return her body to Romania. The airline tickets that had been purchased for the planned second wedding in August were used, instead, for his mother’s funeral.

Peaceful Romanian countryside (photo from Eye View)
Following the three years in Kentucky, Razvan looked around for a position close to his wife’s mother and brother in Downingtown just outside of Philly. WellSpan’s offer in York was the best and he took an outpatient position.

Practice

When I asked him about professional influences, Dr. Vaida could not recall having a mentor to guide him on his medical journey. You see, without a father, he had been forced to rely on himself. He admitted to me that he “may have some issues with authority, with authority figures.” He said he never learned how to “negotiate” such uneven relationships.

In his adult psychiatry practice, he typically treats patients with major depression, bipolar disorder, chronic anxiety, panic disorder, social anxiety, and borderline personality disorder. He occasionally sees individuals with substance abuse disorder and he sees a good number with the painful and disorienting effects of remote trauma, patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In this disabling condition, in the wise words of addiction specialist Gabor MatĂ©, “the past becomes the present” and rational thinking goes offline. 

In a 2014 interview with our local TV station, Dr. Vaida said that a study had shown that specific RNA markers found in blood could reliably distinguish people with major depressive disorder from those without it. He hoped this would lead to earlier and more biologically based diagnoses and personalized precision therapies, even prevention. 

Still image from the 2014 video interview
 about a possible blood test for depression (from Fox 43)
Ten years later, that hasn’t happened, and the psychiatrist's bible, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (the DSM) remains purely descriptive. But researchers are getting steadily closer to understanding the complex biology of major depression and several other disabling psychiatric conditions including bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, anxiety disorders, and borderline personality disorder.  

Dr. Vaida manages most of his patients with medication, but he also stresses the need for lifestyle modification including a focus on a healthy diet, regular exercise, and relaxation techniques (such as yoga or tai chi) along with psychotherapy.  He said that he spends about 10% of his practice doing talk therapy but that he would like, someday, to be able to do more. 

The Effects of Trauma

Razvan and four other psychiatrists from his training program have weekly online meetings to “discuss different things.” Trauma, he noted, is the “thread that goes throughout” the stories their patients tell. 

Some of the most challenging patients he treats are those with what has been (somewhat poorly) called borderline personality disorder. These people have often suffered repeated abuse as children. They have low self-esteem, experience very poor relationships with others, and have difficulty regulating their emotions. There is likely a strong genetic predisposition to develop this condition after experiencing early-life trauma, and there are gender differences in how it shows up. 

The sufferers may experience chronic anxiety, depression, and full-blown PTSD, and they may engage in self-harm (including cutting and multiple suicide attempts) and substance abuse. Medication (treating the symptoms) is not very effective unless the remote trauma (the crucial underlying problem) is fully addressed. 

These misunderstood individuals utilize a lot of medical and psychiatric services and are often poorly served by the health system. Dr. Vaida feels that he connects well with them and he said that it “does wonders if you are able to be there and listen.” Many difficult patients can do quite well following comprehensive treatment.

(One of his friends in New York has adopted the NeuroAffective Relational Model (NARM) to treat “attachment, developmental, and relational trauma.” This compassionate labor-intensive approach uses body-mind mindfulness to promote self-regulation of the body and nervous system. Dr. Vaida is intrigued by this idea explored in depth by Dr. Bessel van der Kolk in his best-selling book The Body Keeps The Score.)

For the past two years, Dr. Vaida has been cutting back his hours as he found that more of his time was “spent on things that are not related to patient care.”  He notes that this time-waster is due to “pressure from insurance companies.” The stress of checking lots of little boxes in the electronic record and writing extensive treatment plans that nobody reads is, he is certain, affecting his health negatively. 

After Hours

He likes to read but he unwinds by watching movies, most of which deal with emotions.  He said that viewing 1984's dark vision of the future "brought back memories." He exercises regularly and he likes to swim. In fact, I first encountered Razvan at the York JCC pool during the second year of the pandemic while doing early morning laps (he does smooth flip turns).  

Frame from 1984: Winston (John Hurt) writes in his forbidden
diary while carefully avoiding the watchful eye of Big Brother
(from FilmScene)
His family? Razvan’s son is 17; he loves math and physics and wants to go to MIT. His daughter is 15 and her career path is still wide open. Both kids love music. His wife worked as a therapist when they were dating but since Kentucky, she has taken care of the household and family stuff. 

After 20 years in psychiatry, Razvan remains, he said, “fascinated by human emotions, human behavior, what makes people do what they do...and feel what they feel.” He believes in “the goodness of people” and that “good prevails over evil.” His unexpected freedom from communism, from tyranny, and from the sometimes oddly seductive lure of Big Brother “was a miracle,” and that makes him optimistic. 

Dr. Razvan Vaida, the hopeful psychiatrist, said that “the solution is to be present and to live every moment and every feeling that you have without having to escape.” That may take some practice.


References and Suggested Readings

1. Orwell, George. Nineteen Eighty-Four. Plume/Harcourt Brace and Company, London, England, 1983. (Original copyright 1949.) (We seem to be headed in that alarming direction.)

2. Roseberry, K., Levey, D. F., Bhagar, R., Soe, K., Rogers, J., Palkowitz, S., Pina, N., Anastasiadis, W. A., Gill, S. S., Kurian, S. M., Shekhar, A., & Niculescu, A. B. (2023). "Towards precision medicine for anxiety disorders: Objective assessment, risk prediction, pharmacogenomics, and repurposed drugs." Molecular Psychiatry, 28(7), 2894-2912. (Dr. Niculescu had done similar work on major depression in 2021; he emigrated from Romania.)

3 Stroescu, Vlad. "My Three Lessons as a Psychiatrist in Romania." Psychiatric Times, October 3, 2019. (If Razvan had stayed in Romania...)

4. Van der Kolk, Bessel. The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. Viking. New York, New York, 2014. (Essential work on understanding and treating PTSD.)


By Anita Cherry (2/13/24)


An Orange Tulip (photo by SC)




Monday, December 25, 2023

Dr. Earl Bernstine, Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist: Coming Home

 

Dr. Bernstine 
Being raised in a physician’s family in a small semi-rural Pennsylvania town In the late 1950s seemed idyllic. The doctors worked together. Their families socialized together and traveled together. And their children went to school together. The two hospitals in town were quietly run by practicing physicians and surgeons (with just a few administrators). And the doctors could live comfortably within a few blocks of the hospital.  

There was no worry about access to medical care. No worry about doctor or hospital bills. It was good. But the subject of this story sorely missed having time with his father. You see, his father, Dr. Earl L. Bernstine, a general surgeon, worked “twenty-hour days.” He “covered everything” from the emergency room, to trauma, to orthopedics, to whatever came along.  The surgeon’s son, Dr. Earl W. Bernstine (one of a long line of Earls--no Dukes, as far as I can tell), is a recently retired child and adolescent psychiatrist. He was kind enough to stop by to tell me his winding tale.  

Earl L. (the surgeon) was, himself, the son of another Earl, Earl H. (a pharmacist).  After he served in the Navy in Word War II, he did dental school for a year before transferring to Thomas Jefferson Medical College for a medical degree. He did his internship year in Williamsport, where his family lived, and where his son, Earl W., the future psychiatrist, was born. 

He then moved the family to York (wisely equidistant from his wife’s family in Philadelphia and his own) for a surgical residency at the York Hospital. The busy practice that followed left him very little time to spend with his young son.

Earl W. (from here on referred to as simply “Dr. Bernstine”) decided early on that he didn’t want a medical career like his dad. Having “missed” his father terribly, he wanted to make sure he had time to be with his own children. Though some of his high school classmates whose parents were doctors went into medicine (and even returned to York to practice) he purposely steered away from the health field and his hometown.

On to the University of Denver

After struggling in high school, he went to the University of Denver to do political science or practice law. Dr. Bernstine, as a visual learner, had trouble memorizing facts and had to read things over and over; his dyslexia had not yet been diagnosed. On the other hand, he was quite good with numbers. His calculus professor and statistics expert George Bardwell told him that his math notes were “very elegant,” and encouraged him to further his math studies. 

View of The University of Denver (from the university)

Dr. Bernstine told me that he “could see numbers in shapes and colors” and “squeeze them through an equation” in his mind (whatever that could mean!) to get the right answer. Realizing his gift, he thought briefly of becoming a theoretical mathematician.

While in Denver, using his skills with numbers, he worked on several local Republican political campaigns (though he was a Democrat, they didn’t mind). He had success and considered doing this as a business.

Return to Pennsylvania

But after two years in Colorado, he decided to return to Pennsylvania. He went to Dickinson College to finish a degree in political science. As a student, he stayed in the family cabin in nearby Pinchot, taught alpine skiing, and “had a motorcycle.” 

Entrance to Dickinson College campus (from The Edvocate)

He wanted to support himself financially and he started helping out in his father’s office. As he talked with patients scheduled for minor surgery he saw that what he was doing quickly relaxed them. He realized that this simple act of communicating had an immediate positive effect.

Some of Dr. Bernstine’s skiing buddies were, he said, “male nurses” (an unusual job for men at a time when gender stereotypes were strong and there was widespread homophobia in York). Nursing could be a reasonable career option, he thought.

And in 1979, in the close medical community, York psychiatrist Dr. Kirk Pandelidis offered Dr. Bernstine a test job as a nurse’s aide on the locked psychiatric unit at the hospital. On his first day there, contact with the struggling patients (including one man who asked him if he had brought a screwdriver with him since everyone there had a loose screw) showed him that “we’re all people.” We all hurt; we all cry. He said to himself, “I can do this!”

Through this brief experience, Earl felt, he said, that “the mind is so fascinating.” 

Now to Upstate New York, Way Upstate

Anyway, he left York again, this time for nursing school in upstate New York, just twenty miles from the Canadian border.  He was one of only three male students. During the summer off he worked on the psychiatry ward in York. He was put on third shift, a time when the visitors and the attending doctors were gone and the nurses took care of most things. 

Snow-covered SUNY Canton Bridge (Photo by McCluskey Photography)

When it was quiet, he could study psychiatric diagnosis or pharmacology (psychiatrists, he noted, would soon become “neuropharmacologists” primarily providing medication management rather than in-depth analysis). The opportunity to observe patients for eight hours, seeing how they responded (or didn’t) to medicines, and what side effects occurred, was far more educational than the books (that Earl, a dyslexic, had trouble with). 

Dr. Bernstine graduated from the two-year SUNY nursing program in Canton in 1981, and he and his girlfriend (with whom he had been living) “parted ways.” Where would he go next? His classmates were recruited to work in Lubbock, Texas. But a few of his friends in Denver lived in Houston, and he thought that city would be “more fun.”  

Though he had no particular interest in treating kids, he landed a job as a staff nurse on one of the first long-term inpatient adolescent psychiatric units in the country. He said that he learned a lot, and as he progressed from staff nurse, to charge nurse, and then to nursing supervisor he gained much confidence. 

Nurse-Bernstine soon concluded that as the on-call attending psychiatrists at night would sometimes rely on his observations and suggestions to determine the patient’s acute treatment, he might as well become doctor-Bernstine and do this himself (and get paid for it). Yes, he was ready for medical school.

Now on to Houston, and Medical School

So, at 25, he applied to several programs in Texas. He was accepted to The Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine (TCOM),  where they were looking for students with
good interpersonal skills. The “campus was beautiful” and the work was “challenging.” 

Dr. Bernstine told me that he was taught that osteopaths have a “different way” of looking at things compared to allopathic (M.D.) doctors (like his father). He said they view all things in the body as parts of a complex system, not in isolation. And that “everything is connected,” he said.  He feels that this broad perspective is especially needed in understanding disorders of the mind.

TCOM (Photo from TCOM)
After five years at TCOM (you see, he and a few classmates had taken an additional year of school beyond the required four), it was time for an internship and residency. 

Back to Pennsylvania Again; Internship and Residency

Feeling the pull to return again to Pennsylvania, he did a rotating internship year (1990-1991) at the small York Memorial Osteopathic Hospital (where his intimate knowledge of the importance of being “nice to the nurses” came in handy).

Following this, he started a psychiatry residency at Hershey Medical Center under sleep researcher Dr. Anthony Kales. But Hershey didn’t fully accept his D.O. year and he had to do another six months of internal medicine first, including taking nightcall. 

That being done, Dr. Bernstine did three years of psychiatric training at Hershey. This included work in psychotherapy and six months at the Harrisburg State Hospital, formerly called the Pennsylvania State Lunatic Hospital. The sprawling facility housing (yes, simply housing) incurables not capable of living in society closed in 2006 as patients across the country had been slowly “deinstitutionalized” after the very first-ever effective psychiatric medicines were developed in the 1950s and after President Kennedy signed the Community Mental Health Centers Act in 1963.

Dr Bernstine wanted to do general psychiatry, but there was more politicking. You see, Hershey needed to fill their adolescent fellowship slots. And since Dr. Bernstine had insight and skill with kids they “strong-armed” him into taking one of the positions. It turned out that this was a surprisingly nice fit. 

Now to York for Practice

Dr. Stevens
Following his two years of subspecialty training, he once more returned to York. This time to practice.  By then, the child and adolescent psychiatry unit at the York Hospital (on 6 South), conceived and developed by the late multi-talented Dr. Bryan Stevens, was, according to Dr. Bernstine, “phenomenal.” It was the best he had ever seen. He and his two “great” partners and the capable support staff provided the troubled kids with the full range of treatments including family, recreational, and group therapies. Sometimes for many months.

But as they required more staff to meet the growing demand for services the costs mounted. Insurance reimbursements (traditionally poor for mental health anyway) did not keep up. Management began cutting. And cutting more. Eventually, the understaffing compromised care too much, and the unit had to be closed.  (It was reconstituted later on the 2nd floor of the hospital, but it wasn’t the same.)

Over the years, Dr. Bernstine and his partners treated the full range of child and adolescent psychiatric problems. They “covered everything,“ doing both inpatient and outpatient work, unlike in the current system, where you generally do one or the other. He was a WellSpan outpatient psychiatrist from 1996 until his retirement in 2023 and he spent 13 years as a staff psychiatrist at a facility for long-term treatment of adjudicated adolescent male substance abusers. 

Autism and Asperger's Syndrome

I asked him if there was a type of patient that he especially liked to take care of. Without hesitation, he said he enjoyed and was good at connecting with the so-called “Aspies,” the kids with what used to be called Asperger’s syndrome, but is now viewed as the mild end of the broad complex autism spectrum (or, better yet, wheel). We will spend some time with this.

The case study report of four young boys meticulously described by Dr. Hans Asperger in 1944 in Vienna out of more than 200 “difficult children” that he had studied over ten years at the University Paediatric Clinic was his post-doctoral thesis. 

Hans Asperger (on the left) working with a student in the early 1930s
(photo from Pictorial Press)
The boys appeared to be locked up in their own worlds. They were cut off from the environment and, especially, their social surroundings. While non-verbal and verbal communication were impaired, spontaneous language itself could sometimes be precocious (but disconnected). Odd stereotyped repetitive movements were seen and the boys were often awkward and clumsy. 

But special exceptional talents, such as the ability to manipulate large numbers or remarkable feats of memory might emerge. And (writing in Austria during the German leader’s failed effort to eliminate all undesirables from society) Asperger stated that if these individuals had “normal intelligence” and were treated by an “absolutely dedicated and loving educator”  they could find suitable work and “have their place in the organism of the social community,” (Draaisma, p. 313).

(An aside: Well-known Aspergerish autistics likely include Sir Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, Emily Dickinson, James Joyce, Ludwig Beethoven, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Thomas Jefferson, Stanley Kubrick, Anthony Hopkins, and Jerry Seinfeld, among many others who have created our world.)     

The autistic’s deficits in social interaction, behavior, and communication may be profound but can sometimes be so subtle that they are viewed simply as personality oddities. In addition to the core features, the kids may have sleep problems, gastrointestinal and eating disorders, seizures, anxiety or depression, immune system disorders, and cognitive impairment (apart from that tied to language). And all of these problems may exist to various degrees, as on the proposed autism wheel.

The new nuanced complex autism wheel,
going beyond the simple linear spectrum
(from ablelight.org)

While we can only guess what’s going on in the mind (the inner experience) of the severely autistic child, those with lesser degrees of autism can introspect and can occasionally tell the psychiatrist (and us) something about what they are thinking and feeling. 

(The autistic Temple Grandin said that when she was young she screamed because she couldn't talk. And she thought that it was the tone of the voice, not the words, that carried meaning.)

Dr. Bernstine found that he could connect with the Aspies by showing interest in whatever interested them and that he could thereby gain their trust. He observed and listened carefully and learned to “talk Aspie” (speech that may be monotone, emotionless, robotic, repetitive, arrhythmic, or too loud, etc.).  Once the child trusted him he could address specific remedial problems.

This lifelong and varied disorder of brain development and interconnections is much more common than previously thought. It is dependent on a wide variety of poorly understood genetic, epigenetic, and environmental influences (but not the MMR childhood vaccination).  

But aggressive and sustained loving treatment may eventually allow the “neuroatypical” child to adapt to the outside so-called "neurotypical" world. A world, to them, that is “relentlessly unpredictable and chaotic, perpetually turned up too loud, and full of people who have little respect for personal space,” (Silberman p. 471).    

Dr. Bernstine was careful to absolve the parents (especially the mother) of any blame at all for their child’s condition (the once-popular “cold mother” theory of autism having long since been abandoned). 

Neurologist Dr. Oliver Sacks, champion of neurodiversity before there was such a word, writing movingly about autism and the remarkable animal behaviorist Temple Grandin, said: 

And yet the parents of an autistic child, who find their infant receding from them, becoming remote, inaccessible, unresponsive, may still be tempted to blame themselves. They may find themselves struggling to relate to and love a child who, seemingly, does not love them back. They may make superhuman efforts and to get through, to hold onto a child who inhabits some unimaginable, alien world, and yet all their efforts may seem to be in vain. (Sacks, p. 248-249.)

Connecting compassionately with frightened tired parents and their autistic child requires lots of skill, as the therapies are arduous and progress is painfully slow. But there can never be too much therapy for these vulnerable children, said Dr. Bernstine. 

Elements of Psychiatric Practice

Dr. Bernstine said that timely diagnosis of autism or any of the mental problems that begin in childhood and adolescence is vital. In addition to autism, these problems include major depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders, conduct disorders, learning deficits such as dyslexia, a variety of eating disorders (not just being a picky eater), substance abuse, and gender identity issues, among others. There is plenty to keep the doctor busy.

There are, as yet, no blood tests or imaging studies that can be relied on to confirm most disorders managed by child psychiatrists. So the diagnosis mostly remains a so-called clinical one and may take time to establish with certainty, as the needed DSM-5 criteria gradually emerge. 

As physicians observe the patient and collect information from the parents and other family members, the child’s teachers, psychologists, social workers, and other sources (speech, occupational, and physical therapists, etc.), they must also explore the social and cultural contexts to provide a reasoned diagnosis and a comprehensive treatment plan. And as Dr. Bernstine had advised me, “Everything is connected.” An effective child psychiatrist finds the connections. And he is an able communicator who can reassure parents and work well with a diverse team. 

Dr. Bernstine enjoyed his varied practice over the years within the growing WellSpan Health System. But after he went through therapy himself during the divorce from his first wife he gained insight into “what makes you a good physician.” After that, he decided to change his practice; he limited the number of new patients he would see and set aside time daily for emergencies; he decided to protect himself.

Outside Interests

Toward the end of the interview, I asked him about his interests outside of medicine. He said he likes outdoor activities such as hiking, bike riding, fishing, and skiing. He walks his three dogs regularly, sometimes at a small hilly county park adjacent to his neighborhood close to the hospital (where I first met him on a daily morning walk as he introduced himself). He has a busy family life, with a son ( Earl J.) from his first marriage, and three adult children of his wife's.

Dr. Bernstine and his family

He joined (of all crazy things) a really good York-Lancaster rugby club when he was 52 (the other members, he said, were half his age). He didn’t play much initially, but he went with them to Nationals as a trainer that first year. He was a starter after that; he was a “small” guy, but he was fast and could reach in to steal the ball from the other team. But it was hard for him to master the intricate playbook. 

Through the intense (and dangerous) sport of rugby, Dr. Bernstine lost 60 pounds and kept it off. Despite better nutrition, he had a heart attack three years ago and needed a stent. He is okay now and is looking forward to an active retirement. 

What about less physically demanding pastimes? He said he doesn’t read a lot of books but he thought a minute and then mentioned The Alchemist by Brazilian author Paulo Coelho. This short worldwide bestseller tells a story that is a variation on the ancient folk-tale theme that the treasure you dream of, that you seek far and wide is, in the end, found at home. I like that.


References and Readings

1. Coelho, Paulo, (Translated from Portuguese by Alan R. Clarke). The Alchemist; 25th Anniversary Edition. HarperOne. New York, 1993. (Twists, turns, and trials when traveling from Andalusian Spain across the Sahara desert to the Egyptian pyramids and back home.) 

2. Draaisma, Douwe, (Translated from Dutch by Barbara Fasting). Disturbances of the Mind. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2009. (Detailed background stories of 13 conditions bearing the names of those that first clearly identified and described them...Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, Tourette's, etc.) 

3. Sacks, Oliver. An Anthropologist on Mars; Seven Paradoxical Tales. Alfred A. Knopf. New York, 1995. (Another one of his remarkable explorations into the unending mysteries and strengths of the human brain and spirit.)

4. Silberman, Steven. Neurotribes; The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity. Penguin Random House. New York, 2015. (A lively easily-read "tour de force" history of the condition, its modern understanding, and its immense but often unrecognized societal impact.) 

5. Valentine, Vikki and Hamilton, John. "Exploring Language; Temple Grandin on Autism & Language"  NPR July 9, 2006. (https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5488844)



One of my husband's favorite trees in York's Reservoir Park in the spring
(Photo by SC)



By Anita Cherry 12/25/23