The White Coat Ceremony at the ÃÈÃÃÉçÇø-Kansas City also prominently includes blue, green, red, gold and purple.
This rite of passage for Year 3 students in UMKC’s innovative six-year B.A./M.D. program recognizes the transition from an emphasis on classroom work to bedside care. Faculty physician mentors — called docents — gave white coats to 109 students at a ceremony Saturday at Swinney Recreation Center.
The newly white-coated students will spend the next four years in small docent-led learning groups. Five blue, green, red, gold and purple banners at the ceremony represented the five docent units.
The white coat is one of the most recognizable symbols of the medical profession. In the late 1800s, physicians wore short-sleeved white coats in the operating room to prevent contamination to both the physician and the patients. The color white also culturally represents values such as purity, cleanliness and life.
“Today, the white coat signifies the formal relationship that exists between physicians and patients,” said Brenda Rogers, M.D., associate dean for student affairs at the School of Medicine. “It serves as a reminder of the obligation we have to practice medicine with clinical competence and compassion.”
Reviewed 2015-08-27