The former dean and “driving force” behind creation of the Kakaako campus for the died Wednesday morning from the rare neurodegenerative disease that cut short his career in Hawaii six years ago.
Dr. Edwin C. Cadman, who left his post as chief of staff at Yale New Haven Hospital in 1999 to lead UH鈥檚 medical school, passed away in Corvallis, Ore., surrounded by family, the university announced in a statement released Thursday. He was 70.
Cadman arrived in Honolulu 16 years ago with a commitment to securing a new campus for the medical school and building a strong research program. He found a strong ally for those ideas in then-Gov. Ben Cayetano, who identified the Kakaako location where the medical school now stands.
鈥淚 took Dr. Cadman up to the tenth floor of the Gold Bond Building,鈥 Cayetano said in the UH statement.聽鈥淭hat鈥檚 where the Hawaii Community Development Corporation was.聽And I took him to the window, and I pointed down to the space toward the beach in Kakaako, and I said,聽鈥楧oc鈥 鈥 that鈥檚 what I called him 鈥 鈥楧oc, that鈥檚 where your new medical school will be!鈥櫬燞e was overjoyed.鈥
According to UH, Cadman promised Cayetano that the new campus would be his 鈥渓ife鈥檚 last work,鈥 unaware of how prophetic those words would be.
The medical school opened on the Kakaako campus in 2005 鈥斅爐he same year that Cadman was diagnosed with Primary Progressive Aphasia, a rare condition that progressively takes away patients鈥 ability to speak or articulate their thoughts in writing. It has no cure, and Cadman stepped down as dean that same year, retiring altogether four years later at a ceremony attended by some of the state鈥檚 most prominent elected officials and business and education leaders.
鈥淎s the driving force behind the creation of the new facilities in Kakaako, Dean Cadman envisioned a school that in only five years under his leadership would experience unprecedented growth in biomedical research,鈥 Dr. Jerris Hedges, who succeeded Cadman as dean, said in the university release. 鈥淚 was honored to follow his lead and to build on the contributions to the medical school that were made by him and others who came before him.鈥
Memorial service plans for Cadman haven鈥檛 yet been announced, but the Cadman family asks that those who want to make a donation in his honor do so by contributing to the University of Hawai鈥檌 Foundation鈥檚 .
Those who would like to share rememberances of Cadman are encouraged to do so on a that has been set up for that purpose.
GET IN-DEPTH REPORTING ON HAWAII鈥橲 BIGGEST ISSUES
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.