In the News
As published in The Hartford Courant, June 3, 2006.
Posthumous Gifts Teach Life
Survivors Celebrate Lives Of Body Donors
By Kira Goldenberg
FARMINGTON -- Since the fall, a dead woman has taught first-year
medical student Katie Gravel almost everything one can learn about a
human body.
Gravel knows her muscles, nervous system, veins and even what her
heart feels like.
"Her hand was really well manicured," Gravel said of her group's
cadaver. "We could tell that someone was taking really good care of this
woman."
But Gravel doesn't know the name of the woman, who before death
decided to donate her cadaver to the University of Connecticut medical
school.
Still, the lack of that information doesn't stop the students from
being grateful to those people who leave their bodies to the school's
anatomical donation program.
The cadavers were the center of attention Friday as more than 300
relatives of the deceased filed into the UConn Health Center's Cafeteria
to attend "A Celebration of Life." The annual event by first-year
medical and dental students commemorates the deceased whose donated
bodies are dissected throughout the year by groups of four students in
school laboratories.
The ceremony included poetry readings, instrumental serenades, and
repeated professions of gratitude by the students for the opportunity to
dissect attendees' loved ones.
"They became teachers for us," dental student Raquel Capote said of
the cadavers.
Though the students don't know the identities of the cadavers on the
lab tables, they said that they end up knowing the deceased more
intimately than the individuals even knew themselves.
"We don't know their past, we don't know their families, but
everything is there," Capote said.
At the end of the program, family members streamed toward the front
to address and even sing to the crowd and thank the students for
allowing their loved ones a chance to continue making valuable
contributions after death.
Tara Hills' late husband, Harold, who died last September at age 61,
was one of the deceased being commemorated.
"Hal's gift to you provides you with invaluable hands-on experience,
whether you will mend a broken tooth, or a broken heart," she told the
crowd.
Other folks got up, talked a bit of their late loved ones and in one
case, burst into song.
"Skinnamarinkydinkydink, skinnamarkinkydoo. I love you," two women
and a man sang after reminiscing about the women's mother - and the
man's mother-in-law - who died last year.
Their eyes brimmed with tears as they sang the bouncy song, the theme
of "The Elephant Show," a children's TV program.
James Casso, the school's embalmer and prosector who collects the
cadavers, said all the deceased are memorialized, even those whose
bodies are used not by students but by physicians for practice.
After the bodies are used, UConn pays for cremation and returns the
remains to the families.
Students talked before the ceremony of the little they did learn
about their dissection subjects, to whom they were introduced in the
fall by second-year students.
Student Glen Blomstrom smiled and said that he was told that his
group's body had been "very excited about becoming a cadaver." |