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It only took a couple of years sitting at a lab
bench in college (Harvard University) to convince me I really needed
to work with people, and so switched from my plan to be a scientist
to one of becoming a doctor. A couple years in medical school (Albert
Einstein College of Medicine in New York) convinced me what I really
wanted was to be a pediatrician: I'd have the most fun patients,
I'd have the nicest colleagues, and that was the only way I'd end
up with patients who would always laugh at my jokes. I'd met my
wife, Cherie, during college: she was from Los Angeles, so we took
off to that Other Coast where I did my residency and then a fellowship
in Pediatric Hematology & Oncology at Childrens Hospital of
Los Angeles.
After
another lab bench tour at Caltech, and then 3 years as an attending
in Pediatric Hematology/Oncology at L.A. Childrens, we decided we
missed the East Coast too much. We had loved Boston and I'd grown
up in Schenectady, NY, so we started looking around the area. We
moved to the Pioneer Valley in 1994, at which time my wife started
commuting up to Burlington where she taught at the University of
Vermont. I continued as an attending in Pediatric Hematology-Oncology
at Baystate Medical Center, becoming division chief in 2000. I loved
my work in Pediatric Hematology/Oncology: I not only could help
children who desperately need help (and most times we really CAN
help), but I had the special privilege of getting very close to
the kids and their families over a very long period of time. I also
served as the Medical Director for a camp for teenagers with cancer
called "Island of Hope." This was a complete joy to see
kids who were or had been so sick rowing boats, swinging on ropes,
and otherwise facing Outward Bound challenges on Thompson's Island
in Boston Harbor (not to mention holding my belay rope while I scaled
a 70 foot climbing tower!). Hematology/Oncology was a very intense
way to practice medicine but, rewarding as it was, both the time
and the emotions involved began to loom large, particularly after
my son, Nate, came into our lives in 1999.
And so in September 2003, I decided to return to
that original happier side of Pediatrics and move from the hospital
setting to work in the community. My son was already a patient here
at NAP, and I knew the pediatricians in the group from working with
them while at Baystate. I knew this was exactly the place I wanted
to be. I do still see some patients with blood disorders. Most important,
though, at NAP I have the wonderful opportunity to share in the
lives of new kids and families and to watch them grow. And now I'm
also seeing those same kids in my community: at Stop & Shop,
or the Y (you'll recognize me as the one in the little pool being
jumped by the four year old), or Look Park. For hobbies I like to
tackle building projects at our house, ride my bike, juggle, and
best of all, putter in my garden, coaxing those tomatoes to turn
red. I'm still working on the jokes, though
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