Currently a professor of medicine at the Stanford School of Medicine, Abraham Varghese has authored several acclaimed books including 'My Own Country' and 'Cutting for Stone'.
He was presented with the medal along with several other recipients at a ceremony held at the White House yesterday.
"The 2015 National Humanities Medal to Abraham Verghese for reminding us that the patient is the center of the medical enterprise," the citation of medal read.
"All of today's honorees work in an age where the stories we tell and the technologies that we use to tell them are more diverse than ever before, and as diverse as the country that we love," Obama said on the occasion.
Started in 1997, the National Humanities Medal "honors individuals or groups whose work has deepened the nation's understanding of the human experience, broadened citizens' engagement with history, literature, languages, philosophy, and other humanities subjects".
Verghese is a critically acclaimed, best-selling author and a physician with an international reputation for his emphasis on empathy for patients in an era in which technology often overwhelms the human side of medicine, the Stanford University said in a statement.
"I felt strongly then and now that what I was writing about, and my interest in the human experience of being ill or caring for the ill, was as much a part of medicine as knowledge of the function of the pancreas, for example," Verghese, also a vice chair of Stanford's Department of Medicine, said.
Born in Addis Ababa in 1955, Verghese's parents were recruited by Emperor Haile Selassie to teach in Ethiopia.
He grew up near the capital and began his medical training there. When the emperor was deposed, Verghese briefly joined his parents who had moved to the United States because of the war, working as an orderly in a hospital before completing his medical education in India at Madras Medical College.
After graduation, he left India for a medical residency in the United States and like many other foreign medical graduates, he found only the less popular hospitals and communities open to him, an experience he described in one of his early New Yorker articles, The Cowpath to America.
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