Marcella R. Bothwell, MD, 2011 Practitioner Excellence Awardee
I want to thank the Academy membership for such an important honor among such other practitioners who were well-qualified. The Academy has asked me to better introduce myself. So, I will happily share my experiences, which I have gained in our most privileged profession that allows us inside the personal lives of those patients we touch on a daily basis. I grew up in Missouri as the youngest of four children. I had the small-town home life that Norman Rockwell would be proud of, where people treat everyone with the respect they deserve despite educational or community status. I loved the state and planned to spend my life’s work there. I was at Mizzou, proudly cheering on our “Tigers” for medical school and residency. Study moved me to St. Louis Children’s Hospital for a pediatric fellowship. During residency and fellowship, I had tremendous mentors including David S. Parsons, MD, Harlan R. Muntz, MD, and Rod P. Lusk, MD, just to name a few. Undeniably I was fortunate to be trained by world-class teachers in pediatric airway and sinus surgery. Recently, however, the beach air of California called my name and I moved to San Diego to be part of Rady Children’s Hospital as a partner. We are affiliated with UCSD, which gives me the academic privileges to both keep up my clinical research and share my skills and experience with the young residents who will be the next generation of our profession. While not at official work, humanitarian outreach and exploring the world have also been exceedingly important for me. I am now planning my third trip to Vietnam this fall for a medical mission. I have also traveled to China and Russia as an ambassador of American medicine. When overseas, meeting people in their homes, hospitals, and places of worship expands my horizons. For that gift given me, I welcome teaching their medical professionals some of our latest techniques. While over many years I have spent time doing basic and clinical research, I have noted that clinical practice helps one child at a time but clinical outcomes research can influence many children. Taking that a step further, I have taken several active roles in politically promoting causes that are important to our field to keep up the high quality of care our patients deserve. I have observed that the big picture of health care and its delivery needs to be addressed by those knowledgeable in the field and at some point would like to follow my interests into political office. I would like to thank all those who have trained me, worked beside me, and all people that I have interacted with because we all are a composite of our experiences.
I grew up in Missouri as the youngest of four children. I had the small-town home life that Norman Rockwell would be proud of, where people treat everyone with the respect they deserve despite educational or community status. I loved the state and planned to spend my life’s work there. I was at Mizzou, proudly cheering on our “Tigers” for medical school and residency. Study moved me to St. Louis Children’s Hospital for a pediatric fellowship. During residency and fellowship, I had tremendous mentors including David S. Parsons, MD, Harlan R. Muntz, MD, and Rod P. Lusk, MD, just to name a few. Undeniably I was fortunate to be trained by world-class teachers in pediatric airway and sinus surgery.
Recently, however, the beach air of California called my name and I moved to San Diego to be part of Rady Children’s Hospital as a partner. We are affiliated with UCSD, which gives me the academic privileges to both keep up my clinical research and share my skills and experience with the young residents who will be the next generation of our profession.
While not at official work, humanitarian outreach and exploring the world have also been exceedingly important for me. I am now planning my third trip to Vietnam this fall for a medical mission. I have also traveled to China and Russia as an ambassador of American medicine. When overseas, meeting people in their homes, hospitals, and places of worship expands my horizons. For that gift given me, I welcome teaching their medical professionals some of our latest techniques.
While over many years I have spent time doing basic and clinical research, I have noted that clinical practice helps one child at a time but clinical outcomes research can influence many children. Taking that a step further, I have taken several active roles in politically promoting causes that are important to our field to keep up the high quality of care our patients deserve. I have observed that the big picture of health care and its delivery needs to be addressed by those knowledgeable in the field and at some point would like to follow my interests into political office.
I would like to thank all those who have trained me, worked beside me, and all people that I have interacted with because we all are a composite of our experiences.