Q&A:
Thomas Anderson, D.O. (’83), F.A.C.R.O.
Radiation oncology
When
did you switch from your original path, primary care, to
radiation oncology?
In my third and fourth years, I
became intrigued by internal medicine and radiology. I
was fearful of becoming a diagnostic radiologist—that I
wouldn’t have patient contact—so I chose radiation
oncology. Meanwhile, during our residencies we could
moonlight, so I did practice family medicine in the old
days, every Saturday.
What
do you like the most about radiation oncology?
You become very much a part of the
(patient’s) family. It brings in the entire family
because it’s a life-changing event. I do hospice, too,
and that’s along the same line.
And
what’s the most challenging part?
When you know someone—especially a
young patient—has an advanced terminal disease. You have
to be honest but not take away hope. There are days when
you do want to bang your head against the wall, but you
find mechanisms to help patients and families—and
yourself—cope. As a physician, I think that’s a maturing
process.
What
do you think we could be doing as a medical school to
prepare medical students to deal with death?
I think we need to address hospice
in the medical curriculum: when enough is enough,
delivering bad news, coping with loss. We’re always
taught as physicians that we’re going to make things
better, but we’re all human: we were all born, and we’re
all going to die. It’s really about compassion—and good
communication.
In a word, how would you describe the current generation
of med students?
Unbelievable. The benchmark just
keeps getting higher. It’s a whole different learning
world. They sit there with their laptops, typing away.
It amazed me two years ago when a student emailed me
with a question about a Power Point slide before their
lecture—I guess they get their slides ahead of time—and
they were already generating questions before the
lecture. We see that in Columbus, too. It’s hard for us
old guys to keep up with them and their little palm
pilots. All we had was a note service and IBM
typewriters (laughs).