Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Olson A Doctor Without Borders

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Olson A Doctor Without Borders

    OLSON A DOCTOR WITHOUT BORDERS
    By Peggy Peck

    CNN
    March 15 2006

    Doctor's practice is war, epidemics, disasters
    MedPage Today Managing Editor

    Editor's note: CNN.com has a business partnership with
    MedPageToday.com, which provides custom health content. A medical
    profile from MedPage Today appears each Tuesday.

    (MedPage Today) -- Dr. David Olson has had patients in a remote
    region between Armenia and Azerbaijan. He has treated people in the
    breakaway Georgian republic of Abkhazia near the Black Sea and in a
    gulag prison hospital in Siberia. He has had patients in a northwest
    Uganda town called Arua.

    He has lived or worked as a doctor in London, England; Paris, France;
    Chicago, Illinois; and Brooklyn, New York. He bummed around Berkeley,
    California, before medical school.

    Olson, 46, has been around.

    So it should come as no surprise that when the Texas native graduated
    from Oberlin College in Ohio, his first goal was to "do a bit of
    traveling."

    These days he rides his mountain bike over the Brooklyn Bridge to work
    in New York. There he serves as medical adviser to Doctors Without
    Borders, the U.S. affiliate of Medecins Sans Frontières.

    MSF is the Nobel Prize-winning international independent medical
    humanitarian organization that delivers emergency aid to people
    affected by armed conflict, epidemics, natural or manmade disasters,
    or exclusion from health care in more than 70 countries.

    Following in Dad's footsteps Olson, whose father was a general
    internist in Fort Worth, Texas, says he decided on a career in medicine
    while he was still in his teens.

    "I used to go to the hospital with my father and go to his office with
    him," he recalled. "I even worked for him for one summer doing ECGs
    (electrocardiograms)."

    After Oberlin, a small liberal arts college, he hit the road in a
    Volkswagen convertible. He drove to Maine, then eastern Canada, and
    then headed west, landing in Berkeley, where he worked at a variety
    of jobs, including pizza delivery.

    After a year, he started medical school at the University of Texas
    Medical Branch in Galveston. From there he went to the University of
    Chicago, where he did residency training in internal medicine followed
    by fellowship training in pulmonary and critical care medicine.

    A non-traditional career choice In the last year in Chicago, he
    rejected the two obvious options for the future of a young doctor,
    academic medicine or private practice.

    "Neither felt right for me," he said.

    He learned about a free clinic that some medical students had started
    in a church that housed a shelter for battered women. They needed a
    full-fledged doctor to oversee their work, and he did that while he
    was still in fellowship training.

    "At about that same time I read a book, "Not All of Us Are Saints,"
    by a doctor living and working in inner-city Washington. It described
    what he did and he wasn't a perfect person. That humanized this type
    of work and made it accessible and attractive to me."

    When he finished his fellowship, he got a job working at a free
    clinic that had a federal grant to treat tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS,
    which was a good fit for a newly minted pulmonologist and critical
    care specialist.

    Medicine knows no borders Olson worked at the clinic for two-and-a-half
    years and then went to the London School of Tropical Medicine for a
    special three-month postgraduate course. When his training in London
    was complete, he headed to Paris.

    "I got an apartment there and figured that I would spend a year
    learning to speak French, because I thought you had to speak French
    to join Medecins Sans Frontières," which had become his goal.

    After a year of eating through his savings, he had not only mastered
    French but also roller-blading. He also spent some time traveling to
    Ireland, England, and Iceland.

    Finally, at age 40, he signed on with MSF, and -- after a week of
    intensive training -- was sent on his first mission, to the area
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan called Nagorno-Karabakh, which was a
    hotbed of drug-resistant tuberculosis. Most such missions are limited
    to 18 months, but Olson stayed for 24 months, so that he could be sure
    the TB treatment plan he had introduced to local physicians worked.

    At the gulag During his time there he also worked briefly in Abkhazia
    in western Georgia near the Black Sea and made a two-week trip to a
    gulag prison hospital in Siberia. Both areas had a number of patients
    with drug-resistant TB, but his trip to Siberia was particularly
    moving.

    "It was interesting, and a bit shocking. One building for
    drug-resistant TB had 30 to 35 people sleeping in triple bunks. We
    had to step over a frozen body that was lying in the entrance. I
    don't speak Russian, so communication was difficult, but you can
    imagine the looks that these people gave us. They were in prison
    with a fatal disease and they give you a look that is a mixture of
    hope and hopelessness and anger. This really stands out in my mind
    because there are times when we just don't have the resources to help."

    After his first mission, he went to a northwest Uganda town called
    Arua. He arrived there in 2001, five days after 9/11. "My mission
    was to start an HIV treatment program with the idea of introducing
    antiretroviral therapy in a rural part of an African country."

    Ugandan mission He was in Arua for a year, during which time he helped
    build a new clinic just for HIV. He returned there in January and
    "it was great.

    You see people that you started on antiretroviral therapy and they're
    still around. That is very satisfying."

    Less satisfying but nonetheless exciting was a short-term mission in
    June 2003 that took him to the capital of Burundi in the final days
    of the Hutu-Tutsi civil war.

    He said he became inured to the sound of gunfire and mortars "so
    that when you eat your dinner on a terrace you realize that when the
    gunfire stops, you can hear the birds singing."

    Olson and his wife, Cecile, a French nurse who he met on his first
    mission, fill the few empty corners of their lives with recreational
    biking, such as a trip to Tucson and the Grand Canyon they have
    planned for this spring.

    And Olson continues to travel with a guitar, an instrument he has
    been playing for 25 years.

    http://www.cnn.com/2006/HEALTH/03/14/profi le.olson/

    --Boundary_(ID_7ue8dZfik441K7CnFic52Q)- -
Working...
X