May 17, 2013
MEDICAL UNIVERSITY of SOUTH CAROLINA
Vol. 31, No. 38
Graduate shows grit in shadow of adversity BY CINDY ABOLE Public Relations
M
ay 17 is a day that College of Medicine graduate Louise Anne Alexander, M.D., has dreamed about for many years. Ever since the Greer native was a child and throughout high school, she knew she wanted a career that involved interacting with or caring for children. She volunteered at hospitals and other activities that involved children. Alexander was able to translate that passion to medicine after taking a medical practice course offered through Clemson University’s Department of Biological Sciences. After completing that class, she could not imagine herself doing anything else. Alexander started medical school at MUSC in summer 2008 and was unexpectedly hit by a car while jogging on July 8, 2010. Alexander had just spent the day in the Colbert Education Center & Library studying for step one of the medical licensing boards, which was to be completed prior to the third-year of medical school and clinical rotations. She had arrived at a stopping point in her studies that afternoon and decided to take a break with an easy jog around downtown Charleston’s Colonial Lake and back again. Alexander never made it past the corner of Ashley Avenue and Calhoun Street. When she woke up, every part of Alexander’s body was hurting as she was loaded into an ambulance. She didn’t remember being hit by a large SUV and that people came to her aid. The near-death accident was not part of her plans, and it nearly derailed her academic priorities and dreams of becoming a physician. In MUSC’s adult emergency department, Alexander was diagnosed with multiple broken vertebrae in her back and ribs, and some vision loss due to hitting her head and blacking out.
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Louise Anne Alexander wouldn’t let being hit by a car stop her from receiving her M.D. Today, ODV +"H :#& Y![[ >%J*!D[[V B& ]?>Y? D: 5<F Alexander. She spent the first three weeks on her back recovering on a couch and managing her pain with medications. “Everything hurt,” she said. “Mostly, I just lay in a dark room because of the pain. I didn’t want to talk, listen to music or interact with anyone.” Her parents became fearful as they realized the severity of her injuries and the long road of healing that was ahead. Not long after the event, she contacted the COM dean’s office and Chris Pelic, M.D., former associate dean for student affairs, about her situation. He assured
GRADUATE CONQUERS LYMPHOMA A fever and chills turned out to be symptoms from a large mass in an MHA student’s chest.
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her that everything would work out and that her immediate focus should be on her much-needed care. Within three weeks, she arrived at Pelic’s office to discuss her choices and devise a course of action for her scenario. It was the first time since the accident that Alexander left her house, and she struggled to sit upright in a chair. He remembers seeing Alexander at perhaps her most vulnerable moment with tired bloodshot eyes, bruises and road rash scrapes throughout different areas of her body. He reassured her that despite the seriousness of her injuries, the timing of this accident, at a gap between the end of her basic science studies and the start of her clinical years, was ideal in terms of her academic schedule. Pelic (now associate dean for student career planning and advising) offered her support at any level by the college’s Group on Student Affairs throughout her recovery. “It was a tough time for me,” said Alexander. “I realized I was at the peak of one of the most intense study periods of my life in medical school where I felt I was the most efficient, most productive and most challenged to not being able to do anything. It was a struggle for me to accept.” The decision to take almost a year off from school to heal allowed Alexander to rest and be introspective of her medical school career and long-term goals. She realized she missed a good work-life balance, especially in her early years of medical school. For the next few months, she and Pelic communicated openly via email. Together, they formulated a course of action to study and take the necessary steps to prepare for her comeback to medical school. A faith-filled person, Alexander dug deep, reminding herself of the healing profession that she had committed to as one that preserves, saves lives and diagnoses problems. At the start of her first clinical rotation in May 2011,
See Grit on page 10
NEW NURSE HAILS FROM SOMALIA
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Teaching excellence
Student sacrificed seeing the birth of his child for a U.S. education.
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Meet Jake
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Student’s memory lives on
READ THE CATALYST ONLINE — http://www.musc.edu/catalyst