Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Rehab Pioneer, Energetic Dad

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

  • Rehab Pioneer, Energetic Dad

    REHAB PIONEER, ENERGETIC DAD
    Dana Borcea

    Hamilton Spectator
    March 25 2008
    Canada

    Dr. John Basmajian did a good chunk of his groundbreaking work in
    rehabilitative science from the comfort of his living room couch.

    Working at home gave the father of three a chance to combine his twin
    passions for medicine and his family.

    His daughter Nancy recalled her father's "immense powers of
    concentration" and marvelled at his ability to focus on writing his
    books and lectures within feet of his children banging on the piano.

    "He could work through anything," she said.

    The hard-working father and former head of the Chedoke Rehabilitation
    Centre died last Tuesday after a brief illness.

    He was 86.

    Basmajian was born in present-day Istanbul to Armenian parents and
    raised in Brantford.

    He graduated from medical school at the University of Toronto in
    1945. In the decades that followed, his work as a doctor, researcher
    and professor saw him and his family put down roots in Toronto,
    Kingston, Ont., and Atlanta.

    In 1977, he moved to Hamilton and assumed the role of director of
    the Chedoke Rehabilitation Centre as well as professor of medicine
    and anatomy at McMaster University.

    Basmajian was best known for his pioneering work in electromyography,
    the study of electrical discharge from muscles, and later
    biofeedback. He was honoured for his research in 1995 when he was
    named to the Order of Canada.

    Basmajian spoke about the significance of his work in an interview
    with The Spectator after the announcement.

    "I started working on muscle in the days of polio and afterwards,
    when it was licked, people asked me why I continued. I was able to
    discover some things that became important later on," he said.

    His work on how muscle could be trained to recover translated into
    significant progress in the world of rehabilitative science. He also
    developed new technologies and invented devices, including electrodes
    used to measure electrical discharge from muscle fibres.

    Outside of the labs and clinics, Basmajian kept himself busy with
    writing and was considered a bestseller in the world of medical
    textbooks. His books on anatomy and electromyography sold well over
    one million copies.

    But at least as important was the legacy he left as a teacher and
    mentor.

    His son Haig, a Cobourg-based surgeon, figured his father trained
    more than 1,000 Canadian doctors, many of whom remembered him vividly
    years after leaving his class.

    "He managed to inject enthusiasm into his lectures on anatomy, which
    is not always the most exciting subject," his son said.

    Former pupils often remember Basmajian -- who was ambidextrous --
    at his blackboard drawing diagrams with one hand while labelling them
    with the other.

    Haig remembered his father taking calls at home from students with
    questions and remembering their names years later.

    "I didn't have a lot of professors like that when I was in medical
    school," he said.

    Basmajian's wife of 60 years, Dora, said she appreciated her husband's
    generosity with others.

    "He made time for everyone but I didn't mind sharing him," she said.

    "He had so much energy, I couldn't have handled it all alone."
Working...
X