
February
6, 2004 |
The
Durant Fellowship: Walking in the footsteps of a great humanitarian
They are large shoes to fill. When beloved MGH physician,
Thomas S. Durant, MD, died in November 2001 from cancer, he left behind
a rich, humanitarian history of helping impoverished people in the most
deprived parts of the world. Durant, who served the MGH as assistant director,
spent most of his career traveling to bleak places such as Cambodia, Albania,
Bosnia, Rwanda, Somalia, Croatia and Afghanistan, bringing supplies, medicine,
medical expertise and, most important of all, hope to those who had lost
all hope of survival.
His
legacy now lives on with the Thomas S. Durant, MD, Fellowship in Refugee
Medicine. Its first recipient, Kristian R. Olson, MD, of MGH Internal
Medicine, recently spent 10 months walking in the footsteps Durant left
behind.
At left and below, Olson with Thailand
refugees
The Durant Fellowship provides funding for an MGH clinician to assist
in the prevention and treatment of disease among refugees throughout the
world. "Kris was the unanimous choice for the first Durant Fellow,"
says Larry Ronan, MD, director of the Durant Fellowship. "He completely
fulfilled our high expectations as a dedicated, enthusiastic MGH representative
in refugee medicine."
Olson, who returned from the Thailand-Burma border in November, was fortunate
to have met Durant. Olson had developed an interest in international health
care when he was completing a combined residency in Pediatrics and Internal
Medicine at the MGH. "Because of my interest, I was put in touch
with Dr. Durant," says Olson. "He gave me great advice and would
talk about some of his adventures. I remember how surprised I was when
he said to me, 'I'm jealous of you. If I had the chance, I would do this
all over again.' He was a great mentor."
When
the fellowship was established after Durant's death, Olson applied. Once
he was selected, he traveled to London to study tropical diseases for
three months at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He
then went to Thailand to take care of refugees for the American Refugee
Committee — the same organization Durant had represented.
As a clinical coordinator, Olson was put in charge of medical care for
a 4,000-person refugee camp that had gone without a doctor since the previous
physician had left four weeks earlier. Because the United Nations would
not let civilians stay in the refugee camps for security reasons, Olson
had to drive an hour and a half each day on treacherous roads from a Thai
village — through three military checkpoints — to get to the
camp. The refugees lived in bamboo huts with no electricity or running
water. Raised on stilts, the field hospital had a basic lab to run medical
tests, a small inpatient area for severely ill patients and an outpatient
clinic. Olson provided care along with refugees who had some medical training
— nine medics and a handful of midwives.
He found that the medics were very eager to learn more about traditional
Western medicine. "Teaching them was a humbling experience for me,"
he says. "They were so eager to learn. When we were doing rounds,
they would write notes on their arms and later transfer the notes to their
journals. They had everything memorized the next day. The experience made
me a better teacher."
The medics spoke English, but most in the camp spoke Karen, a local dialect.
After two months, Olson was transferred to work in two other camps with
populations of 12,000 and 17,000 residents, providing medical care and
performing an assessment of HIV in the camps.
During his time there, Olson corresponded with Durant's widow, Fredericka,
and upon his return to the United States, she commented how much Olson's
letter reminded her of some of her late husband's sentiments about this
kind of work.
"It was a great experience. I would love to
go back," Olson says. "I like to think of it as a fellowship
in perspective. After studying medicine at a cutting-edge Western facility
and then being transplanted to a deprived place with so few resources,
it gave me a different perspective on my practice. It was medical care
stripped down to its essentials."
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