She graduated from the Royal College of Surgeons in Edinburgh in 1953. A Fulbright fellowship brought her to Boston Children’s Hospital, where she studied with Dr. Sidney Farber, the noted cancer researcher, among others. A drawing on his wall showing a circle of caregivers with the family at the center first got her thinking about how illness affected more than just the patient.

“A family with a sick child is a sick family,” she said. “So you must think about everybody — the siblings, the mother, the father, maybe grandmother. You must remember that they’re part of a group.”

In 1964 she moved to the University of Chicago, and in 1969 she took the job in Philadelphia, where as chief of pediatric oncology she became known for doing things a little differently. Once, for instance, she realized a young patient might be less resistant to treatment if she were allowed to bring her pet rabbit into the unit. Another child brought a parakeet.

“Fortunately, nobody liked oncology,” she said in a recent interview. “The people who run the place would rather not go to the oncology floor. So I got away with things I could do in oncology which I’m sure you couldn’t have done on a healthy ward.”

She led the oncology unit for 20 years. When she first arrived, feeling the call to care for children, “there wasn’t much else you could do but care,” she said — the mortality rate for young cancer patients was high. She thought she could at least help them through what was ahead.

“I knew a lot of them were going to die,” she said, “and I could talk about dying.”

But during her tenure the mortality rate dropped — by 50 percent for neuroblastoma patients, according to many accounts. Meanwhile, Ronald McDonald Houses opened by the dozens. The houses, as she envisioned them, would provide not merely a cheap bed but also home-cooked meals and emotional support as “veteran” families mingled with newcomers.

“People in these houses know the trials of having a sick child,” she told U.S. News & World Report in 1981, “and will help if you want to cry and help if you want to celebrate.”

Read More: World News | Entertainment News | Celeb News
NYT

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Podcaster Dame Deborah James dies of bowel cancer aged 40

Dame Deborah James, the headteacher turned podcaster who raised millions of pounds…

The C.D.C. found 43 Omicron cases, almost all of them mild, in the first week of December.

Global roundup A Covid-19 intensive care unit at University Hospital Leipzig last…

Post Malone’s Weight Loss Journey in Photos: Before, After

Post Malone — whose real name is Austin Richard Post — may…

Who Are the Unvaccinated in America? There’s No One Answer.

As coronavirus cases rise across the United States, the fight against the…