Baltimore Sun

Fauci urges UMB grads to continue learning

University holds in-person commenceme­nt ceremony

- By Meredith Cohn

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the infectious disease expert who became the top COVID-19 advisor to two presidents, told University of Maryland, Baltimore graduates during their commenceme­nt ceremony Thursday that they faced uncommon challenges to earn their degrees.

They should train the resilience they learned, he said, on societal ills such as racism and misinforma­tion that were spotlighte­d during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The graduation, UMB’s first in-person commenceme­nt since the pandemic began in 2020, was held for undergradu­ate and graduate students in areas including medicine, nursing, pharmacy, dentistry, social work and law.

Fauci faced a smattering of protesters outside the arena on the University of Maryland, Baltimore County but a standing ovation inside for his address.

The typically mild-mannered doctor became a lighting rod for his recommenda­tions regarding the pandemic in the polarized politics of the United States, but Fauci mostly steered clear of such issues or addressed them obliquely in his remarks.

He and his wife, Christine Grady, a nurse and bioethicis­t at the National Institutes of Health, each received honorary degrees during the morning ceremony that was joyous for the achievemen­t but tinged by the ongoing pandemic that has caused more than a million deaths the United States and fundamenta­lly altered public life.

With the arena filled with many attendees in masks, Dr. Bruce Jarrell, the university’s president, nonetheles­s said it was good to see “your faces” after so many students attended classes virtually.

Fauci is director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and became a familiar face in the past two years, directing the public response to COVID-19.

“The fact that you have successful­ly navigated each hurdle the pandemic has put in your way, just to sit here today is a testimony to your resilience, resolve and strength of character.” — Dr. Anthony Fauci

But he’s also been at the helm of the NIH institute for decades, leading the response to waves of other diseases starting with HIV but also including H1N1 flu, Zika and Ebola.

The coronaviru­s, however, is something exceptiona­l that will leave an “indelible mark on your entire generation,” he said.

“The fact that you have successful­ly navigated each hurdle the pandemic has put in your way, just to sit here today is a testimony to your resilience, resolve and strength of character,” he said.

His message included a plea to keep learning and seizing unanticipa­ted opportunit­ies. That’s what he said he did when, while settled into a research post at NIH, he read a report in 1981 about a handful of cases of an unusual pneumonia among gay men in Los Angeles. Fauci decided to focus his profession­al life on what would become the HIV/ AIDS pandemic.

The coronaviru­s pandemic, he said, has highlighte­d new, pressing challenges that extend beyond the medical and need urgent and continued attention.

He urged the graduates to address “one of the great failings in our society: the lack of health equity.”

The pandemic exposed these inequities that he says undermine the physical, social, economic and emotional health of racial and ethnic minorities. Minority groups are at greater risk of getting COVID-19 because their jobs often prevent them from isolating. They also are at greater risk of hospitaliz­ation and death because of elevated rates of underlying conditions such as hypertensi­on and diabetes.

“Very few of these conditions are racially

determined,” he said. “Almost all relate to social determinan­ts of health experience­d since birth, including the limited availabili­ty of a healthful diet, substandar­d housing, the lack of access to health care, and tragically, the restrictio­ns and pressures experience­d to this day because of the undeniable racism that persists in our society.”

He asked the graduates not to let this “tragic reality” fade as people go about their lives.

Fauci also urged the graduates not to allow “normalizat­ion of untruths.”

He said society is increasing­ly “bombarded with falsehoods and lies that often stand largely unchalleng­ed, and sadly this has led some to accept this insidious normalizat­ion of untruths.”

The dissent has been too “muted and mild.”

“I implore you, apply your abilities to analyze and examine, which you have honed here at the University of Maryland, Baltimore to discern and challenge weak assertions and to reject pronouncem­ents built on untruths,” he said.

“As our future leaders, we are depending on you for this.”

 ?? BARBARA HADDOCK TAYLOR/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Dr. Anthony Fauci waves to graduates of the University of Maryland, Baltimore as he begins the keynote speech at their commenceme­nt Thursday morning at UMBC’s Chesapeake Employers Insurance Arena.
BARBARA HADDOCK TAYLOR/BALTIMORE SUN Dr. Anthony Fauci waves to graduates of the University of Maryland, Baltimore as he begins the keynote speech at their commenceme­nt Thursday morning at UMBC’s Chesapeake Employers Insurance Arena.

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