An email from Joe Wishcamper '64, event organizer

Reminder to register for
Dr. Nortin Hadler ’64 on “Health at Our Time of Life”

Thursday, April 27 at 4:00pm EST (1:00pm PST)

Click here to register

April 17, 2023

Classmates and friends:

There is still time to sign up for next week's Zoom event on Thursday, April 27, at 4:00pm EST (1:00pm PST), featuring Dr. Nortin Hadler ’64. Nortin’s topic will be “Health at Our Time of LIfe.” You were informed of this event by my email of February 27 and perhaps you signed up then. If you can't remember whether you signed up, it doesn't hurt to click the registration link. If you're already signed up, it will let you know,.

Register by clicking here.

New registrants will receive a confirmation email with a link to the meeting. That link will be unique to you. On the day of the event you will receive the meeting link again. You will not have to hunt for it.

We ask every registrant to consider submitting a question that is particularly meaningful to our age group. Send your questions to Sam Francis ’64, who will be moderating this event. Sam will preserve anonymity and transmit your questions to Nortin, who will choose those that are likely to have broad interest and will use them as object lessons in the bulk of his presentation.

You can share the above registration link with others, such as your spouse, a relative, or a friend. To share the link, just forward this email with its registration link.

Best wishes,


Joe Wishcamper

Postscript: Here's a description of the event, copied from the February 27 email that you received.

About the Speaker
Our speaker is our classmate Nortin M Hadler MD MACP MACR FACOEM.

After Yale, Nortin went on to Harvard Medical School, graduating in 1968. Next came clinical training at the Massachusetts General Hospital, the National Institutes of Health, and the Clinical Research Centre in London. He was certified a Diplomate of the American Boards of Internal Medicine, Rheumatology, Allergy & Immunology, and Geriatrics. He joined the faculty of the University of North Carolina in 1973, was promoted to Professor of Medicine and Microbiology/Immunology in 1985, and transitioned to Emeritus status in 2015. In recognition of his clinical activities, he was elevated to Mastership in both the American College of Physicians and the American College of Rheumatology.

The immunobiology of peptidoglycans was the focus of his early investigative career. Because of the contributions of his laboratory, he was selected as an Established Investigator of the American Heart Association and elected to membership in the American Society for Clinical Investigation. His focus on basic biology was superseded by an analysis of “the illness of work incapacity.” Over 200 papers and 12 books resulted, along with election to the National Academy of Social Insurance, as well as Fellowship in the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

In the past two decades, he turned his critical razor to much that is considered contemporary medicine at its finest. His assaults on medicalization and overtreatment appear in many commentaries and in seven monographs:

He served on the Governing Committee of the National Courts and Sciences Institute. In 2015 he assumed a leadership role in an initiative to establish the alternative healthcare system described in his latest book.

About This Event
Nortin is a staunch advocate for informed medical decision making and for patient empowerment. The primary role for the physician is in facilitating both. Should the patient still feel overwhelmed, “What would you do, Doc?” is no longer first recourse. In the 21st century, the plaint should be “What would you do if you were me?”, a plaint that calls for mutual understanding of the patient’s preferences, risk tolerance, and much more.

Dr. Hadler will explain the extent and limitations of contemporary clinical science that foster this approach to the patient-doctor dialogue. He will use examples that are familiar to most octogenarians from personal encounters with clinical interventions or from the overwhelming medicalization of our culture. He will rely even more for object lessons from queries offered by registrants attending this Zoom.

Supplementary Viewing and Reading
You may wish to preview this event by watching Nortin’s Commencement address to the graduating class of the medical school of the University of Michigan in 2015. This speech can be viewed on our Class website here. His remarks offer a window into his approach to his practice and his profession. You may also be interested in his essay “Overtreatment: Friend or Foe?”, an invited paper published in 2018 in Gerontology, the premier European geriatrics journal. This essay is particularly relevant to this Zoom event, as it focuses on the medical treatment (and overtreatment) of the elderly. You can read the essay here.