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Congratulations, you’re a
mother—and a doctor!
Lisa Clayton’s firstborn
arrives at the same time as her medical
school diploma

By Anita Martin and Nick Piotrowicz
As a
former emergency medicine technician,
Lisa Clayon, D.O., knows that urgent
medical situations require quick
adaptability and sound decision-making.
But when she went into labor the same
morning as her commencement ceremony at
the Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM), Clayton’s
medical instincts had to compete with
her emotions.
“My
water broke around 3:30 [a.m.], but I
was in denial,” she said, laughing. “I
really wanted to attend graduation, and
I refused to let my husband take me to
the hospital at first. I said, ‘this can
wait until after the ceremony!’”
Clayton
soon gave in, arriving at O’Bleness
Memorial Hospital around 5:30 a.m. She
gave birth to Andrew David Clayton
(seven pounds, 11 ounces, 20 inches)
nine hours later at 2:27 p.m. The two
attending physicians who helped deliver
Andrew were OU-HCOM graduates Jody Gerome Zuchowski, D.O. (’05), assistant
professor of ob/gyn, and Linda Ross, D.O.
(’07).
Shortly
thereafter, the O’Bleness Birth Center
received the highest volume of visitors
the nurses can recall—mostly dressed in
graduation gowns.
“[Andrew] saw more doctors in one day
than any baby ever has,” Clayton joked,
adding that “the family atmosphere of
OU-HCOM really came through. My dad
couldn’t believe that 40-plus people
showed up in the waiting room on their
own graduation day.”
Among
them were Clayton’s mentor, Nicole
Wadsworth, D.O. (’97), assistant
professor of family medicine and
assistant dean of preclinical education;
and Nicholas Espinoza, D.O. (’90), CORE
assistant dean, who coordinated
Clayton’s third- and fourth-year
clinical rotations at Mercy St. Vincent
Medical Center in Toledo, a member of
OU-COM’s statewide consortium of
teaching hospitals, the Centers for
Osteopathic Research and Education.
The
next day, Wadsworth returned to
O’Bleness, along with OU-HCOM Dean Jack
Brose, D.O., to conduct a personal
graduation ceremony for Clayton.
Wadsworth draped Clayton’s ceremonial
graduation hood over her shoulders,
Brose presented her diploma, and she
took the traditional Osteopathic
Oath—all in the company of her family
members.
“I
can’t emphasize enough how much it meant
to me that the dean of a medical school
would take the time to come to the
hospital on a Sunday and personally hand
me my diploma,” she said.
Clayton
is well-versed in urgent medical
situations, by anyone’s standards. As a
former emergency medicine technician (EMT),
she was among the first responders after
the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on
the World Trade Center.
“Our
volunteer unit was sent to Ground Zero
after the first plane hit. By the time
we got there, the second plane had hit,”
Clayton said. “We spent four days
searching for survivors.”
The New
Jersey native was recognized for her
efforts with a national September 11
Volunteer Recognition Award. She also
received a TOUCH Pin Award at OU-HCOM
(given to those with more than 50 hours
of community service through the
college’s program, Translating
Osteopathic Understanding into Community
Health) and two Vincent Terranova
Awards, given in her hometown of
Lawrenceville, N.J., to outstanding
local volunteers.
Clayton
next moved on to Fort Rucker, Alabama,
where she worked in a United States Army
Aeromedical Research Lab for two years,
designing cockpits for fighter jets and
monitoring pilots’ capacities for
cardiovascular stress.
On
deciding to become a doctor, Clayton
looked into OU-HCOM on the suggestion of
her Ohio-native father. “I knew I wanted
to do osteopathic medicine, and when I
came for the interview, it was a perfect
fit,” she said.
During
her medical training, Wadsworth could
tell that Lisa knew the field of
emergency medicine very intimately.
“She
has great medical knowledge and a much
broader understanding than most when it
comes to emergency medicine,” said
Wadsworth, who also serves as medical
director of the O’Bleness Emergency
Department.
“Lisa
has a very great ability to interact
with people,” Wadsworth added. “Her
presence inspires trust and comfort.
That allows her to get information
quickly and build rapport, which is
critical because of the time
constraints.”
Clayton
says her training at OU-HCOM taught her
the “other side of things”—what goes on
after patients are admitted for
emergency treatment. “It’s really neat
working on this level: receiving
patients, assessing and treating the
disease process and educating patients
on prevention.”
On July
27, Clayton will begin an emergency
medicine residency at Morristown
Memorial Hospital in Morristown, New
Jersey.
“[Morristown Memorial was] nice enough
to give me four extra weeks off,” she
said, then adds with a laugh, “to give
me a more lenient initial schedule,
they’re starting me off with one month
of obstetrics.”
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