You could say teaching is in Forman’s blood. Both his parents were teachers, a sister teaches, and another sister is certified to teach. He has the utmost respect for the venerable teaching arts. Forman scrupulously prepares for each lecture and he always wears a tie and sports jacket when he is in front of a class (just like his dad).
Besides being a professor of public health (health policy) at the Yale School of Public Health, Forman holds joint appointments as a professor of economics, management, radiology and biomedical imaging.
Forman’s lectures still resonate with former students, who say they were integral in helping them prepare for careers in health care.
Misaki Kiguchi, MD, MBA ’08, assistant professor of surgery at Georgetown University and a vascular surgeon with the MedStar Heart and Vascular Institute, called Forman a mentor and role model.
“Although his knowledge of health care management and leadership is often what he is known for, what I, and I am sure most students, admire most is his passion for making change, to question the status quo, and to challenge complacency,” Kiguchi said. “He constantly seeks to improve himself by taking on professional opportunities that are demanding. He never rests. He not only teaches us this rigor he expects this of us. He holds us to a high standard because he holds himself to one as well.”
Benjamin Elkins, BA,’08, MPH, ’09, said Forman is one of two Yale professors with whom he still stays in touch.
“Howie epitomizes what I looked for in my professors at Yale: a subject matter expert and a skillful teacher with both
high expectations and a kind, caring spirit,” said Elkins, director of quality improvement at Stanford Children’s Health/Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital. “Over the 10 years since I graduated, Howie has never hesitated to answer my calls for advice. What makes Howie incredible is that he does the same thing for countless others.”
Other former students include Vivek Murthy, the 19th Surgeon General of the United States; Kate Goodrich, chief medical officer for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Michael Sherling, co-founder of Modernizing Medicine, and Mary-Ann Etibet, CEO of Merck for Mothers. Thomas Balcezak, chief medical officer at Yale New Haven Hospital, is a former student. Forman still has Balcezak’s 2001 final exam. He shows it to students who ask about where a health care career might take them.
Forman’s contributions at Yale go well beyond his 22 years of teaching. He founded Yale’s MD/MBA program and currently directs both the Yale School of Public Health’s Health Care Management program and the Yale School of Management’s Executive MBA program (health care track). He’s also an active researcher and has served on the editorial boards of several major radiology and health care management journals. He took a break from teaching in 2001-02 to serve as a legislative aide in the U.S. Senate on Medicare legislation.
Forman also has extensive experience in business management. Since coming to Yale in 1996, he has consistently been involved in the financial management of the Radiology Department’s clinical practice, which currently operates on an $80 million budget.
“I think I bring a perspective that few others on this campus can bring,” said Forman. “I know what it is like to run an $80 million business. I know what it’s like to deliver health care and I have more than a working understanding of the U.S. health care system, its various parts and how the regulatory apparatus intersects with it. When you take all of those things together, I think that makes me a pretty good teacher of this content.”
Despite his extensive credentials, Forman is quick to point out that any success his students have enjoyed is due to a broader team instructional effort over time combined with those students’ own outstanding commitment, drive and capabilities.
A Tweeting Machine
As Monday’s lecture ends, Forman speaks with students for a few moments before heading off to another class, another meeting, another research call.
There are few openings in Forman’s otherwise loaded daily calendar and he takes full advantage of every untethered second. Just as quickly as he exits the lecture hall, Forman is on his cellphone answering email (he’s known for his prompt responses), checking the day’s latest news, and–soon enough–logging into Twitter.