Judith Vick, MD, MPH, is a geriatrician at Yale School of Medicine with a blossoming research career in addition to her clinical duties. Her path to academic medicine was circuitous and enriched with experiences beyond the confines of basic science and clinical medicine.
Originally from Baltimore, Maryland, Vick is the daughter of an art historian and a computer scientist. She migrated to Manhattan, where she completed her undergraduate degree in comparative literature at Barnard College. She was also interested in science and people, so completing the pre-medical requirements “seemed like a good idea,” she explained. Given her parents’ career paths, combining the humanities with STEM studies was not so foreign.
After college, Vick stayed at Barnard, where she worked full time for the Writing Fellows Program for three years. At this point, she became interested in communication as a field. “I loved my job but felt I needed more,” she said.
She wasn't particularly excited by the idea of medical school yet, so she moved to Boston and worked as a research assistant at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in collaboration with Ariadne Labs at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Called the Serious Illness Care Program, the research project aimed to understand the role of serious illness conversations in clinical decision-making. The trial was ultimately published in JAMA Internal Medicine and helped guide Vick’s career toward clinical medicine, communication, and complex, collaborative decision-making.