Fellowship: Yale School of Medicine
Residency: Yale School of Medicine
PhD: Yale School of Medicine
MD: Loyola-Stritch School of Medicine
BS: University of Notre Dame
What does your promotion/appointment mean to you?
Promotion to professor is recognition from your peers and colleagues that you are making significant contributions to your field of study and to patients. My journey has been assisted at every step by tremendous mentors, whose support and guidance have been the catalyst for any of my accomplishments, as well as amazing colleagues and trainees who inspire and energize me on a daily basis.
What was the first thing you did when you found out you were promoted to/appointed as professor?
Let out a big sigh of relief. (The Professor promotion takes SOOOOO long!) Then I sent my wife a text.
What are you proud of most thus far in your career?
I am most proud of the wonderful teams of trainees, colleagues, and staff we have built here at Yale in cardiovascular medicine education, nuclear cardiology, and infiltrative cardiomyopathy. The research teams catalyze the clinical practice and vice versa and synergize with the educational program. We have been able to develop new programs that have moved our educational programs to greater heights, while findings from our research efforts have improved care for patients. In my career, I have seen the dawn of new eras of diagnostics and therapeutics in cardiac amyloidosis and sarcoidosis. To go from an era when I finished fellowship where these diseases were unable to be diagnosed routinely to fast forward to where there are now life-saving therapeutics is both inspiring and humbling.
What is your favorite part of academia?
I am inspired and invigorated by the incredibly smart, driven, collegial, and creative people that I come in contact with on a daily basis. Whether it is medical students, residents, fellows, junior or senior faculty, the talent and dedication to patient care and science of our Yale community is really world-class. What makes Yale unique is the openness to collaboration and collegiality of all members of the institution.
Tell us a fun fact about you—something people may find surprising.
When I started fellowship, I never imagined I would end up with a career in nuclear cardiology, and neither did my program leaders: Frans Wackers, MD, PhD (one of my mentors and previous director of the Yale Nuclear Cardiology Lab) inscribed a book to me at graduation: “Dear Ed. Congratulations and best of luck in your (apparently) non-nuclear career!"