fbpx
Wikipedia

Barry Kerzin

Barry Michael Kerzin (born November 1, 1947) is an American physician and Buddhist monk. He has lived in Dharamshala, India since 1988 and serves as a personal physician to the 14th Dalai Lama, along with treating people in the local community. Following his ordination as a monk by the Dalai Lama in January 2003, he has travelled, teaching and offering workshops in which he blends Buddhist teaching and his medical training. He has served as a research participant in neuroscience research into the effects of meditation on the brain.

Barry Kerzin
Born
Barry Michael Kerzin

(1947-11-01) November 1, 1947 (age 75)
Education
Occupations
  • Teacher
  • physician
  • Buddhist monk
Known forMedical doctor to Dalai Lama and teacher at the interface of Buddhism and medicine
Medical career
Institutions

Kerzin is an adjunct professor (2021–22) at the University of Hong Kong (HKU), an adjunct professor (from 7/2020) at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine , and a former Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Washington. He is founder and president of the Altruism in Medicine Institute (AIMI) and founder and chairman of the Human Values Institute (HVI) in Japan.

Early life and education Edit

Kerzin was born in Hollywood, California in the Good Samaritan Hospital on All Saints day, November 1, 1947.[1][2] He says, "It's all been downhill from there!" When he was fourteen, two books mysteriously came to him. One by D.T. Suzuki, An Introduction to Zen Buddhism, and The Way of Zen, by Alan Watts.[3] Although he didn’t understand much, both books shifted something inside him. Starting at around six, he was plagued by questions of who he was and why he was here; they led him to join a philosophy club in high school and to switch to studying philosophy in college; he had started as a pre-med student.[4] He had wanted to become a doctor and did choose to continue on to medical school, because at the age of eleven he had a brain abscess that caused him to have seizures and fall into comas; it was eventually treated by a neurosurgeon with four brain surgeries over several years; the experience inspired him to become a doctor so that he could help other people.[3]

Kerzin received BA in Philosophy from the University of California at Berkeley and in 1976 he received an MD degree from the University of Southern California.[5][6]

Career Edit

Kerzin did his residency at Ventura County Medical Center and practiced family medicine in Ojai, California for seven years.[1] His mother had died when he was 27, and just after he started working in Ojai, his wife was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. She died in 1983 and they had no children.[1]

He travelled in India, Sri Lanka, and Nepal for nearly a year, visiting several monasteries.[7]

He then obtained an appointment as an Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine from late 1985 to early 1989.[1][8]

In the mid-1980s, B. Alan Wallace and the Dharma Friendship Foundation coaxed a lama from Dharamsala, Gen Lamrimpa, to come to Seattle for two years, and Kerzin served as his driver.[9] In 1988 Gen Lamrimpa returned to India and Kerzin accompanied him, intending to take a six-month leave of absence from the University of Washington.[10] He stayed in Dharamsala when his leave ended, and began providing free medical care to the local community, Dalai Lama and other Tibetan lamas.[1][5][6] He also began studying Buddhism and meditation intensively, and 19 years after he moved there (in the early-2000s), he was ordained in Feb. 2003 as a Bikkshu (Buddhist monk) by Dalai Lama, and now cares for him as his doctor.[1][6] Throughout his career, Kerzin has maintained his board certification with the American Board of Family Medicine.[6]

 
Kerzin meditating with EEG for neuroscience research

In the mid-2000s, he served as a research subject in neuroscience research into the effects of meditation on the brain led by Richard J Davidson at the University of Wisconsin, as well as at Princeton University.[11]

Kerzin founded the Human Values Institute in Japan in 2010 since teaching there regularly starting in 2007; he serves as chairman of the organization.[12] The institute publishes books and instructional movies, gives lectures, leads workshops and meditation retreats, holds an annual symposium in Tokyo, and leads pilgrimages on the island of Shikoku; the education focuses on healthy physical and emotional living and handling death compassionately.[12] He taught about the Heart Sutra at the Gokokuji Temple in Tokyo shortly after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[13]

In 2014, Kerzin founded the Altruism in Medicine Institute (AIMI) in the US.[14] One of the articles written on him is The Dalai Lama's Doctor has a Message for Pittsburgh, and during his November 2019 visit, Holiday Thoughts From The Dalai Lama's Physician. In 2019, Kerzin led the 2-day program Developing Altruistic Algorithms Based on Buddhist Philosophy for Artificial Intelligence, held at DeepMind (an Alphabet Group company) in London, UK. In 2020, he published the comment Beyond Empathy to Compassion in response to an article by George Gubernikoff, entitled Empathy Revisited (JAMA).

He participated in a 2011 weeklong workshop organized by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, exploring the role that compassion training has in changing human behavior and emotions.[15] The workshop led to a documentary film and a multimedia book to which Kerzin contributed two chapters.[16]

He had a visiting professorship at the Central University of Tibetan Studies, Varanasi, India in 2006.[17] At the University of Hong Kong he was appointed 'Visiting Professor of Medicine' for 2014 and 2015 and was made an Honorary Professor at the university's Centre of Buddhist Studies in March 2015.[17] Kerzin is a fellow of the Mind & Life Institute,[18] which was initiated in 1985 to foster a dialogue between Buddhist scholars and Western scientists.[19][20]

On the occasion of the Altruism in Medicine Institute's (AIMI) moving its headquarters to Pittsburgh, PA, Dr. Kerzin received a Proclamation from the Mayor of Pittsburgh, Mr. William Peduto, honouring Dr. Kerzin and AIMI's work as well as declaring Nov 19, 2021 as "Altruism in Medicine Institute Day" in Pittsburgh. AIMI, under the leadership of Dr. Kerzin, has been actively involved in building a strong community engagement focus with the Pittsburgh Police Department, initiated by Mayor William Peduto, since 2018.

Altruism in Medicine Institute, under the auspices of Dr. Kerzin, is currently working on a compassion app for medical professionals.[citation needed]

Works & Activities Edit

  • Publications: Kerzin is the author of No Fear No Death: The Transformative Power of Compassion; Nāgārjuna’s Wisdom: A Practitioner’s Guide to the Middle Way; The Tibetan Buddhist Prescription for Happiness[21] (in Japanese); Mind and Matter: Dialogue between Two Nobel Laureates (in Japanese). Furthermore, Kerzin has written many chapters for books and done many interviews for radio and TV, in the US and abroad.
  • TEDx Talks: He delivered a TEDx talk, on Happiness in 2010,[22] in 2014 on Compassion and Anger Management,[23] and in 2022 at TEDx Pittsburgh 'Time Capsule' on compassion and resilience.
  • Documentaries: Kerzin was featured in the 2006 U.S. Public Broadcasting Service documentary entitled The New Medicine.[24] This TV documentary received a largely negative review in the Wall Street Journal,[25] but a more positive one appeared in the New York Times.[26]
  • Featured in the March 2020 PBS Podcast under-told Stories "The Dalai Lama's Doctor"[27]
  • Mind & Life Talk: 'Mind Matters - No Center, No Edge: Letting Go of a Fixed Identity' in June 2022
  • 2022 - The Wellbeing Summit for Social Change (Bilbao): Inner Work & Wellbeing | Coming Home to Ourselves in June 2022
  • 2022 - Compassion Lecture Series (Pittsburgh - USA), in cooperation with The Forbes Funds
  • 2022 - Interview by the Well Being Project
  • 2023 - Ethics Consultant for DeepMind Google, offering a presentation lecture, Pioneering AI Research with Kindness & Responsibility. Multiple meetings with the scientific teams, ethics teams, support staff, legal teams, and the CEO and Founder, Demis Hassabis. It was the second such ethics consultation. In April 2019 the lecture and discussion focused on embedding altruistic algorithms into general artificial intelligence.
  • 2023 - Participated in the PSIBC - Pāli-Sanskrit Forum #01 on the theme of “Living An Awakened Life – Learning the Buddha’s Teachings from both the Pāli and Sanskrit Buddhist Texts”.
  • 2023 - Keynote Speaker / Panellist for Panel Discussion on "Spiritual Consciousness and Contemplative Practices for Elevating Healthcare" at the AIIMS Conference in New Delhi.

External links Edit

  • Altruism in Medicine
  • Human Values Institute

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Kim Lamb Gregory (March 6, 2014). "Doctor/Tibetan monk returns to Ventura County to speak on mind, body". Ventura County Star. Ventura County, California. Article says he is 66 years old. His birth year must be 1947 as he was born in November
  2. ^ Altruism in Medicine. Video: Month and day of birth and location at 3:29-3:35.
  3. ^ a b Yaya Huang. . Hong Kong: HKU Medical Faculty 'Caduceus' magazine 2014. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  4. ^ Altruism in Medicine. Video: 4:30-8:20.
  5. ^ a b . USCTrojan Family. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 30, 2015.
  6. ^ a b c d Altruism in Medicine Institute About Dr. Barry Kerzin August 10, 2015, at the Wayback Machine Page accessed August 9, 2015
  7. ^ Altruism in Medicine. Video: 8:40 - 9:35
  8. ^ Barry Kerzin's LinkedIn Profile[permanent dead link] Page accessed August 9, 2015. Source used for dates.
  9. ^ Altruism in Medicine. Video: 9:30 - 10:15
  10. ^ Altruism in Medicine. Video: 15:25 - 17:00
  11. ^ CNN. HOUSE CALL WITH DR. SANJAY GUPTA House Call with Dr. Sanjay Gupta. Encore Presentation: Happiness Cure Aired December 16, 2006
  12. ^ a b Human Values Institute. HVI Purpose & Methods August 16, 2015, at the Wayback Machine Page accessed August 9, 2015
  13. ^ Tibet Post International March 32, 2011. Tibetans and Japanese Hold Prayers for Victims of Tsunami. Page 1 and 6
  14. ^ Altruism in Medicine Institute in the Open Corporates Database Page accessed August 9, 2015]
  15. ^ Workshop "How to Train Compassion" 20.-23. July 2011, Studio Olafur, Berlin
  16. ^ Chapters 4 and 6 April 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ a b HKU Centre of Buddhist Studies Staff listing. Page accessed August 9, 2015. Kerzin CV at HKU Last updated March 2015. Page accessed August 9, 2015
  18. ^ Mind & Life Institute. List of Fellows 2015-09-05 at the Wayback Machine Page accessed August 9, 2015
  19. ^ Gay Watson, Beyond happiness: deepening the dialogue between Buddhism, psychotherapy and the mind sciences, Karnac Books, 2008, ISBN 1-85575-404-5, ISBN 978-1-85575-404-1, p. 169
  20. ^ Barinaga M. Buddhism and neuroscience. Studying the well-trained mind. Science. 2003 Oct 3;302(5642):44-6. PMID 14526055
  21. ^ "Tibetan Buddhist Prescription for Happiness". Human Values Institute, Tokyo. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  22. ^ Barry Kerzin (July 2010). "Happiness" (Video). TEDx Phoenixville Salon.
  23. ^ "Barry Kerzin at TEDx Taipei 2014" (Video). Taipei, Taiwan: TEDx Taipei. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  24. ^ "The New Medicine" (Radio programme). PBS. March 29, 2006.
  25. ^ Dorothy Rabinowitz (March 24, 2006). "The New Medicine". Wall Street Journal.
  26. ^ Charles McGrath (March 29, 2006). "'The New Medicine' on PBS: Doctors Turn to the Mind for Healing". New York Times.
  27. ^ "PODCAST: The Dalai Lama's Doctor – Under-Told Stories Project".

barry, kerzin, barry, michael, kerzin, born, november, 1947, american, physician, buddhist, monk, lived, dharamshala, india, since, 1988, serves, personal, physician, 14th, dalai, lama, along, with, treating, people, local, community, following, ordination, mo. Barry Michael Kerzin born November 1 1947 is an American physician and Buddhist monk He has lived in Dharamshala India since 1988 and serves as a personal physician to the 14th Dalai Lama along with treating people in the local community Following his ordination as a monk by the Dalai Lama in January 2003 he has travelled teaching and offering workshops in which he blends Buddhist teaching and his medical training He has served as a research participant in neuroscience research into the effects of meditation on the brain Barry KerzinBornBarry Michael Kerzin 1947 11 01 November 1 1947 age 75 Hollywood California U S EducationUniversity of California Berkeley BA Philosophy University of Southern California MD OccupationsTeacher physician Buddhist monkKnown forMedical doctor to Dalai Lama and teacher at the interface of Buddhism and medicineMedical careerInstitutionsUniversity of Washington School of Medicine assistant professor University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine adjunct professor Department of PsychiatryHuman Values Institute Japan Altruism in Medicine Institute US Kerzin is an adjunct professor 2021 22 at the University of Hong Kong HKU an adjunct professor from 7 2020 at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and a former Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Washington He is founder and president of the Altruism in Medicine Institute AIMI and founder and chairman of the Human Values Institute HVI in Japan Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Works amp Activities 4 External links 5 ReferencesEarly life and education EditKerzin was born in Hollywood California in the Good Samaritan Hospital on All Saints day November 1 1947 1 2 He says It s all been downhill from there When he was fourteen two books mysteriously came to him One by D T Suzuki An Introduction to Zen Buddhism and The Way of Zen by Alan Watts 3 Although he didn t understand much both books shifted something inside him Starting at around six he was plagued by questions of who he was and why he was here they led him to join a philosophy club in high school and to switch to studying philosophy in college he had started as a pre med student 4 He had wanted to become a doctor and did choose to continue on to medical school because at the age of eleven he had a brain abscess that caused him to have seizures and fall into comas it was eventually treated by a neurosurgeon with four brain surgeries over several years the experience inspired him to become a doctor so that he could help other people 3 Kerzin received BA in Philosophy from the University of California at Berkeley and in 1976 he received an MD degree from the University of Southern California 5 6 Career EditKerzin did his residency at Ventura County Medical Center and practiced family medicine in Ojai California for seven years 1 His mother had died when he was 27 and just after he started working in Ojai his wife was diagnosed with ovarian cancer She died in 1983 and they had no children 1 He travelled in India Sri Lanka and Nepal for nearly a year visiting several monasteries 7 He then obtained an appointment as an Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine from late 1985 to early 1989 1 8 In the mid 1980s B Alan Wallace and the Dharma Friendship Foundation coaxed a lama from Dharamsala Gen Lamrimpa to come to Seattle for two years and Kerzin served as his driver 9 In 1988 Gen Lamrimpa returned to India and Kerzin accompanied him intending to take a six month leave of absence from the University of Washington 10 He stayed in Dharamsala when his leave ended and began providing free medical care to the local community Dalai Lama and other Tibetan lamas 1 5 6 He also began studying Buddhism and meditation intensively and 19 years after he moved there in the early 2000s he was ordained in Feb 2003 as a Bikkshu Buddhist monk by Dalai Lama and now cares for him as his doctor 1 6 Throughout his career Kerzin has maintained his board certification with the American Board of Family Medicine 6 nbsp Kerzin meditating with EEG for neuroscience researchIn the mid 2000s he served as a research subject in neuroscience research into the effects of meditation on the brain led by Richard J Davidson at the University of Wisconsin as well as at Princeton University 11 Kerzin founded the Human Values Institute in Japan in 2010 since teaching there regularly starting in 2007 he serves as chairman of the organization 12 The institute publishes books and instructional movies gives lectures leads workshops and meditation retreats holds an annual symposium in Tokyo and leads pilgrimages on the island of Shikoku the education focuses on healthy physical and emotional living and handling death compassionately 12 He taught about the Heart Sutra at the Gokokuji Temple in Tokyo shortly after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami 13 In 2014 Kerzin founded the Altruism in Medicine Institute AIMI in the US 14 One of the articles written on him is The Dalai Lama s Doctor has a Message for Pittsburgh and during his November 2019 visit Holiday Thoughts From The Dalai Lama s Physician In 2019 Kerzin led the 2 day program Developing Altruistic Algorithms Based on Buddhist Philosophy for Artificial Intelligence held at DeepMind an Alphabet Group company in London UK In 2020 he published the comment Beyond Empathy to Compassion in response to an article by George Gubernikoff entitled Empathy Revisited JAMA He participated in a 2011 weeklong workshop organized by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig exploring the role that compassion training has in changing human behavior and emotions 15 The workshop led to a documentary film and a multimedia book to which Kerzin contributed two chapters 16 He had a visiting professorship at the Central University of Tibetan Studies Varanasi India in 2006 17 At the University of Hong Kong he was appointed Visiting Professor of Medicine for 2014 and 2015 and was made an Honorary Professor at the university s Centre of Buddhist Studies in March 2015 17 Kerzin is a fellow of the Mind amp Life Institute 18 which was initiated in 1985 to foster a dialogue between Buddhist scholars and Western scientists 19 20 On the occasion of the Altruism in Medicine Institute s AIMI moving its headquarters to Pittsburgh PA Dr Kerzin received a Proclamation from the Mayor of Pittsburgh Mr William Peduto honouring Dr Kerzin and AIMI s work as well as declaring Nov 19 2021 as Altruism in Medicine Institute Day in Pittsburgh AIMI under the leadership of Dr Kerzin has been actively involved in building a strong community engagement focus with the Pittsburgh Police Department initiated by Mayor William Peduto since 2018 Altruism in Medicine Institute under the auspices of Dr Kerzin is currently working on a compassion app for medical professionals citation needed Works amp Activities EditPublications Kerzin is the author of No Fear No Death The Transformative Power of Compassion Nagarjuna s Wisdom A Practitioner s Guide to the Middle Way The Tibetan Buddhist Prescription for Happiness 21 in Japanese Mind and Matter Dialogue between Two Nobel Laureates in Japanese Furthermore Kerzin has written many chapters for books and done many interviews for radio and TV in the US and abroad TEDx Talks He delivered a TEDx talk on Happiness in 2010 22 in 2014 on Compassion and Anger Management 23 and in 2022 at TEDx Pittsburgh Time Capsule on compassion and resilience Documentaries Kerzin was featured in the 2006 U S Public Broadcasting Service documentary entitled The New Medicine 24 This TV documentary received a largely negative review in the Wall Street Journal 25 but a more positive one appeared in the New York Times 26 Featured in the March 2020 PBS Podcast under told Stories The Dalai Lama s Doctor 27 Mind amp Life Talk Mind Matters No Center No Edge Letting Go of a Fixed Identity in June 2022 2022 The Wellbeing Summit for Social Change Bilbao Inner Work amp Wellbeing Coming Home to Ourselves in June 2022 2022 Compassion Lecture Series Pittsburgh USA in cooperation with The Forbes Funds 2022 Interview by the Well Being Project 2023 Ethics Consultant for DeepMind Google offering a presentation lecture Pioneering AI Research with Kindness amp Responsibility Multiple meetings with the scientific teams ethics teams support staff legal teams and the CEO and Founder Demis Hassabis It was the second such ethics consultation In April 2019 the lecture and discussion focused on embedding altruistic algorithms into general artificial intelligence 2023 Participated in the PSIBC Pali Sanskrit Forum 01 on the theme of Living An Awakened Life Learning the Buddha s Teachings from both the Pali and Sanskrit Buddhist Texts 2023 Keynote Speaker Panellist for Panel Discussion on Spiritual Consciousness and Contemplative Practices for Elevating Healthcare at the AIIMS Conference in New Delhi External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Barry Kerzin Altruism in Medicine Human Values InstituteReferences Edit a b c d e f Kim Lamb Gregory March 6 2014 Doctor Tibetan monk returns to Ventura County to speak on mind body Ventura County Star Ventura County California Article says he is 66 years old His birth year must be 1947 as he was born in November Altruism in Medicine Dr Barry Kerzin A Personal Journey Video Month and day of birth and location at 3 29 3 35 a b Yaya Huang Mind the Gap An Interview with Prof Barry Kerzin Hong Kong HKU Medical Faculty Caduceus magazine 2014 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 31 March 2015 Altruism in Medicine Dr Barry Kerzin A Personal Journey Video 4 30 8 20 a b Barry Kerzin MD 76 MED USCTrojan Family Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 30 2015 a b c d Altruism in Medicine Institute About Dr Barry Kerzin Archived August 10 2015 at the Wayback Machine Page accessed August 9 2015 Altruism in Medicine Dr Barry Kerzin A Personal Journey Video 8 40 9 35 Barry Kerzin s LinkedIn Profile permanent dead link Page accessed August 9 2015 Source used for dates Altruism in Medicine Dr Barry Kerzin A Personal Journey Video 9 30 10 15 Altruism in Medicine Dr Barry Kerzin A Personal Journey Video 15 25 17 00 CNN HOUSE CALL WITH DR SANJAY GUPTA House Call with Dr Sanjay Gupta Encore Presentation Happiness Cure Aired December 16 2006 a b Human Values Institute HVI Purpose amp Methods Archived August 16 2015 at the Wayback Machine Page accessed August 9 2015 Tibet Post International March 32 2011 Tibetans and Japanese Hold Prayers for Victims of Tsunami Page 1 and 6 Altruism in Medicine Institute in the Open Corporates Database Page accessed August 9 2015 Workshop How to Train Compassion 20 23 July 2011 Studio Olafur Berlin Chapters 4 and 6 Archived April 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b HKU Centre of Buddhist Studies Staff listing Page accessed August 9 2015 Kerzin CV at HKU Last updated March 2015 Page accessed August 9 2015 Mind amp Life Institute List of Fellows Archived 2015 09 05 at the Wayback Machine Page accessed August 9 2015 Gay Watson Beyond happiness deepening the dialogue between Buddhism psychotherapy and the mind sciences Karnac Books 2008 ISBN 1 85575 404 5 ISBN 978 1 85575 404 1 p 169 Barinaga M Buddhism and neuroscience Studying the well trained mind Science 2003 Oct 3 302 5642 44 6 PMID 14526055 Tibetan Buddhist Prescription for Happiness Human Values Institute Tokyo Retrieved 31 March 2015 Barry Kerzin July 2010 Happiness Video TEDx Phoenixville Salon Barry Kerzin at TEDx Taipei 2014 Video Taipei Taiwan TEDx Taipei Retrieved 31 March 2015 The New Medicine Radio programme PBS March 29 2006 Dorothy Rabinowitz March 24 2006 The New Medicine Wall Street Journal Charles McGrath March 29 2006 The New Medicine on PBS Doctors Turn to the Mind for Healing New York Times PODCAST The Dalai Lama s Doctor Under Told Stories Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Barry Kerzin amp oldid 1177293122, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.