John W. Traubert White Coat Ceremony

Duration:
White Coat Traditions at the WVU School of Medicine

Ceremony Details

  • Date: Saturday, March 15 2025
  • Time: 1 p.m.
  • Location: WVU Canady Creative Arts Center

Guest speaker: 

Jeffery Cannon, M.D., Class of 2019

Get Involved

Our School of Medicine M.D. alumni and current faculty have a unique opportunity to directly affect and leave a positive lasting impression on a future physician. By sponsoring a white coat you have an opportunity to leave a note of encouragement and impart valuable wisdom that the student can take into the clinic with them as they begin caring for patients.

Ceremony is also sponsored in part by WVUMedicine.

Alumni and faculty can sponsor a student online

You can visit the WVU Foundation site below and fill out your information online. In the "comments" box you're able to write the content of the note you wish to give the student.

Sponsor a student

Questions?

Contact the WVU School of Medicine Alumni Office at (304) 293-5110.

Ceremony history

WVU’s White Coat Ceremony, strategically positioned in the second year of training, is designed to:

  • help students reaffirm their reasons for choosing medicine as their lives’ work
  • allow students to express their commitment to becoming technically excellent and professionally compassionate with patients
  • reinforce the importance of the doctor-patient relationship and the relevance of the white coat as a “cloak of compassion” 

Background

  • August 20, 1993 -- The White Coat Ceremony was developed by the Arnold P. Gold Foundation of New York, and was initiated for the entering class of the College of Physicians & Surgeons of Columbia University. The original concept was to clarify for students, prior to their entrance into the medical community, that a physician’s responsibility is twofold; to take care of patients and to care for patients.
  • January 26, 1996 -- WVU's first ceremony was held, and it deferred from the original concept. It honored second-year students and marked the transition from the basic sciences to clinical sciences, from reading about illness and disease to diagnosing it; from learning about treatments to prescribing them. However, with changes in medical education, that transition point is becoming less defined. Patient contact coming early on in training, meshing with the obvious importance and relevance of the basic sciences, broadens the concept of WVU’s ceremony and more clearly defines its purpose.
  • 1999 -- upon retirement of Dean of Students, John W. Traubert, the ceremony was named in his honor.

Past ceremony coverage

You can view the full wrap up of the 2024 White Coat Ceremony, including video and photo highlights, from the link below.

Visit the 2024 White Coat Recap Page