
Dr. Kyla Terhune walks briskly along the corridors of Vanderbilt University Medical Center, dashing between her last surgery of the day in the O.R. and her first afternoon patient in The Vanderbilt Clinic. With long curly hair pulled back in a ponytail, the tall, slender surgeon still wears her surgical scrubs.
鈥淚 like to wear street clothes when I see patients,鈥 she says. Today, however, there鈥檚 been no time to change.
Time is of the essence in this busy physician鈥檚 life.
An assistant professor of surgery and anesthesiology, the mother of two also shepherds 290 first-year students as head of Hank Ingram House on The Martha Rivers Ingram Commons at Vanderbilt. Joining her in this living and learning community is her husband of 12 years, Richard 鈥淩ick鈥 Keuler Jr.; their two children, Tate and Amelia; and their dog, Sackson.
鈥淚t鈥檚 intellectually and emotionally stimulating. I use a part of my brain that I don鈥檛 always use, having conversations I wouldn鈥檛 otherwise have.鈥
鈥擠r. Kyla Terhune
鈥淗ank鈥檚 House,鈥 as it鈥檚 affectionately called, is the largest of the 10 houses on The Ingram Commons. Each is guided by a professor who lives with and mentors the resident students. Frank Wcislo, associate professor of history and European studies and dean of The Ingram Commons, says the living-learning experience helps first-year students successfully transition into life at the university by connecting them with each other and with upperclass undergraduates, graduate students, faculty, staff and administrators.
A beautiful cluster of classic buildings located in the southeastern part of campus adjacent to Peabody College, The Ingram Commons is phase one of Vanderbilt鈥檚 College Halls system. Construction is slated to begin on phase two, College Halls at Kissam, in May 2012 (see the article in this issue). When completed, Kissam鈥檚 two colleges will house about 660 upperclass students in four halls, led by two faculty directors-in-residence and four resident graduate fellows.
Dream Team

Terhune is the first new head of house to be appointed since The Ingram Commons opened in 2008, as well as the first physician to hold that position. Keuler is the first attorney to live there. While Terhune is officially in charge, it鈥檚 very much a team project.
鈥淚 absolutely would not be able to do it without Rick鈥檚 assistance, support and hard work,鈥 she states.
Terhune鈥檚 schedule is challenging. Rising most mornings at 5:30, she walks across campus to the Medical Center to start her 12-hour day there: performing surgery, checking on post-op patients, seeing other patients in the clinic, educating medical students and residents, conducting research, and conferring with other attending physicians. After dinner with her family in The Commons Center dining room, she begins the second shift: meeting with the house advisory council and resident advisers (RAs), attending house events, informally counseling students, and spending time with her own children.
In addition to caring for their children, Keuler has a part-time solo law practice and does pro bono legal work in the community. He plans activities for the undergraduates, sends out many of the house notices, and also attends house meetings.
鈥淲e combine our strengths,鈥 Terhune says. 鈥淩ick does a good job of organizing things, and he鈥檚 good at technology. And he鈥檚 just more fun.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 good with groups,鈥 Keuler says, 鈥渂ut Kyla is better at interpersonal relationships.鈥
鈥淭hey鈥檙e a dream team for us,鈥 says Wcislo. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a good match between their skill sets as a physician and an attorney and those needed to mentor 18-year-olds.鈥
Living the Dream
Born in Fayetteville, Ark., the 37-year-old Terhune came to her career in academic medicine somewhat later than most of her peers. She attended Princeton University, where she met her husband and graduated magna cum laude in 1996 with a degree in molecular biology.
鈥淚 always wanted to be a physician,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I needed to work to make some money in order to attend medical school.鈥

A native of New Jersey, Keuler received a bachelor鈥檚 degree in politics and teacher preparation from Princeton in 1996. From there he went to law school and also taught some classes at an inner-city high school in Washington, D.C. While he studied law at Georgetown University, Terhune taught chemistry and biology and lived in the dormitory at St. Andrew鈥檚, a private boarding school in Middletown, Del. A state-champion tennis player and point guard in high school, Terhune also coached women鈥檚 tennis and basketball at St. Andrew鈥檚.
As soon as Keuler earned his J.D. degree in 1999, the couple married and Terhune began medical studies at the University of Pennsylvania. She gave birth to their son, Tate, in 2003. The next year Terhune earned her M.D. degree and was admitted to Vanderbilt鈥檚 residency program. Keuler has been the children鈥檚 primary caregiver since 2004.
As a general surgeon, Terhune is a minority in her chosen profession. Although the number of women medical-school graduates has nearly doubled since 1979, and number of female surgical residents has almost quadrupled since 1970, women are still underrepresented in the academic surgical sciences. According to the Association of American Medical Colleges, women hold just 18 percent of surgical faculty positions in the U.S. today. At Vanderbilt the percentage is somewhat lower, with 17 women making up 12 percent of the 138 surgical faculty members.
Surgery, however, wasn鈥檛 Terhune鈥檚 initial career choice. 鈥淚 thought I wanted to be a psychiatrist,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut when I really looked at it, surgery seemed a better fit for me. I enjoy working with my hands, and surgeons work on problems they can try to fix mechanically.鈥
She finished surgery and critical-care residencies at Vanderbilt in 2011 and became board-certified in both areas. During her residency, she also spent a year of research with her mentor, Dr. John Tarpley, BA鈥66, MD鈥70, professor of surgery.
鈥淪he鈥檚 an outstanding clinical surgeon, terrific with patients and their families, careful, and compulsive,鈥 Tarpley says. 鈥淎s a surgical educator you are either a judge or a coach. I call her a 鈥榩laying coach.鈥 She coaches people to improve by breaking down difficult tasks into workable, solvable bits.鈥
Terhune has already won several teaching awards, including the 2010 Hillman Award presented by fourth-year students to the single resident or fellow whom they deem the best teacher. She also received the David C. Leach Award from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education for developing the Intern Bootcamp, a two-day skills session for incoming surgery, anesthesia, medical and emergency medicine interns. In addition, she鈥檚 held skill sessions throughout the year, teaching interns such things as how best to communicate with patients, technical skills like suturing and knot tying, and mock emergency code simulations.
鈥淚 wanted to teach them the kinds of things I wish I鈥檇 been exposed to when I was an intern,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 still remember the gut-wrenching feeling of walking into the [surgical intensive care unit] that first day.鈥
That same desire to prepare students for their chosen professions motivated Terhune to take on head-of-house responsibilities on The Commons. 鈥淚 thought I could make a contribution because many freshmen want to be premed. They see me leaving early in the morning and coming back late at night. I share what I can about my day with them, and we discuss it.鈥
As the first physician in her family, Terhune didn鈥檛 realize how the demands and pressures of a medical career would affect her and her family.
鈥淏eing a physician not only impacts my life but also that of my family,鈥 she says. 鈥淎ny time I鈥檓 on call, my husband is, too, because he鈥檚 the primary caregiver for our children. If students are going to commit to study medicine, they need to be aware of the implications of that decision.鈥
Creative Partnership
鈥淟earning about their lives has been incredible and extremely educational. They鈥檙e a great resource because so many students are premed or prelaw.鈥
鈥擳anner Floyd, Hank Ingram House president
Terhune鈥檚 clinical and educational responsibilities at the Medical Center, her past experience teaching and coaching high school students, plus living in a house system at Princeton and St. Andrew鈥檚, made her an ideal candidate for head of Hank鈥檚 House, says Dean Wcislo. Having a Princeton and Georgetown graduate, former Philadelphia lawyer and stay-at-home father sealed the deal.
Keuler also models an alternative vision of success for the students of Hank鈥檚 House through his role as stay-at-home father and community volunteer. 鈥淜nowing there are other definitions of 鈥榤aking it鈥 besides having a high-powered career helps to ground students when they encounter academic difficulties,鈥 Wcislo says.
鈥淭hey鈥檝e been wonderful to work with,鈥 says house president Tanner Floyd, a freshman from Clarksburg, W.Va. 鈥淟earning about their lives has been incredible and extremely educational. They鈥檙e a great resource because so many students are premed or prelaw.鈥
Although Hank鈥檚 House is the largest house on The Ingram Commons, Terhune and Keuler work hard to create a sense of community and inclusiveness for all residents. Every week they hold Friday Family Night at their apartment, where students enjoy chocolate chip cookies, snacks, soft drinks and games. They also invite faculty colleagues to share their professional and intellectual passions at house dinners. Recent guests have included Dr. Mark Denison, Craig鈥揥eaver Chair in Pediatrics and a professor of pediatric infectious disease, who spoke with the students after they viewed the movie Contagion.
Another night the residents watched a documentary about sustainable agriculture, followed by dinner at Tayst, Nashville鈥檚 first 鈥済reen鈥-certified restaurant. There they had a chance to discuss the future of food with owner and executive chef Jeremy Barlow, BA鈥95.
Hank鈥檚 House residents participate in service-learning activities, such as teaching science to students in neighborhood public schools. And they play hard, too, competing with the other houses in intramural sports and hosting informal mixers, movie nights and dances. Men and women live on different floors, and security is tight, requiring key passes to enter the building and travel between floors.
The couple has been very creative in establishing face-to-face relationships with every student, says Wcislo. He cites as an example how they communicated to the students the importance of civility in the house.
鈥淭hey covered a large whiteboard with a lot of off-color language,鈥 he remembers. 鈥淭hen they added this sentence: 鈥楽he lives here, too鈥欌攁 reference to their 3-year-old daughter, Amelia, who was playing on the floor beneath the whiteboard. Many of the freshmen have younger brothers and sisters, so they got the message.鈥
Family Affair
Both Terhune and Keuler say the Commons living-learning experience is a positive one for the whole family. Their 8-year-old son, Tate, agrees. 鈥淚 have lots of friends at Hank鈥檚 House,鈥 he says proudly. 鈥淚 see them everywhere.鈥
鈥淚n many ways it鈥檚 our preferred way to live,鈥 Terhune says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 intellectually and emotionally stimulating. It鈥檚 great to be able to change my train of thought as I walk back across campus from the hospital: I use a part of my brain that I don鈥檛 always use, having conversations I wouldn鈥檛 otherwise have.鈥
Keuler appreciates the opportunity to make an impact on the students. 鈥淭he transition from high school to college wasn鈥檛 easy for me at times,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 want to be able to help Vanderbilt students who also might be having a difficult time making that transition.鈥
鈥淪urprisingly, the students don鈥檛 interfere with my sleep,鈥 says Terhune. 鈥淥ur apartment is very quiet, and we aren鈥檛 awakened to deal with emergencies, unless they are life-threatening. The RAs take care of health and discipline issues through the dean of students, and the students know my patients come first.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 been really good,鈥 Keuler says of the whole experience. 鈥淭he energy and enthusiasm of the students is exciting鈥攁nd tiring.鈥
If there鈥檚 a downside to living where you work, Keuler says, it鈥檚 the lack of privacy. Another drawback is having little time together as a couple, says Terhune.
鈥淏ut we enjoy so much what we鈥檙e doing at Hank鈥檚 House,鈥 she continues, 鈥渢hat we think of it as our time together.鈥