In Jennifer Caprio’s office at Yale School of Medicine (YSM), there is a chair beside her desk known as the “therapy chair.” Faculty, staff, and colleagues stop by to talk through challenges, ask questions, or simply decompress. Even Naftali Kaminski, MD, chief of the Section of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine (Yale-PCCSM), has jokingly claimed a seat. For Caprio, a senior administrative assistant in Yale-PCCSM, those conversations reflect something larger about working at Yale: No role exists in isolation.
That philosophy inspired “Connecting the Dots,” an initiative Caprio launched within the section to help administrative staff better understand the clinical, research, and educational work happening across the school. The idea emerged during an aspiring managers course, when Caprio drafted a mission statement centered on a simple principle: “Every small piece to the big puzzle matters.”
The initiative began with immersive experiences designed to bring staff into spaces they might not otherwise encounter in their day-to-day work. During one early session at the Yale Center for Healthcare Simulation, administrative staff participated in “A Day in the Life of a MICU Doctor,” practicing inserting central lines and ventilating mannequins alongside faculty members. Other events have included “Making a Brainiac’s Dreams Come True” at the Cushing Center, “Uncovering Fossils and Fresh Ideas” at the Yale Peabody Museum, and “Snooze & Schmooze” at the Yale Sleep Medicine Center.