Louisville Medicine Volume 63, Issue 12 | Page 39

DR. WHO? MEMBER SPOTLIGHT ELIOT THOMPSON, MD Aaron Burch B eing a pediatrician, musician, husband and father can be a workout, but Dr. Eliot Thompson learned a valuable lesson from his own dad years ago, which helped him through some of the most hectic days of his life. Dr. Leroy Thompson was an OB/GYN for many years, delivering babies through long hours and late nights in a private practice, but he rarely complained, even after coming home from 3 a.m. deliveries. “I used to ask my dad, ‘How do you do it? Aren’t you tired?’ recalled the younger Dr. Thompson. “And he told me, ‘You’re as tired as you think you are.’ He convinced me that perseverance was human nature. So I decided from that lesson I could do anything I set my mind to.” That mindset has been with Dr. Thompson for years as he’s navigated the worlds of medicine and music. He’s spent most of his life here in Louisville after moving from Nashville as a baby, graduating from Ballard High School in 1984 and then enrolling at the University of Louisville to study biology before pursuing medicine. “When I was in college was the only time I got pushed to the limits of being tired,” Dr. Thompson thought back. “I pledged Kappa Alpha Psi and that was one of the hardest things I’ve ever done. I kept a little clock in my backpack, and I’d go in the bathroom to take 18 minute naps between classes because that was all the time I could get for sleep. But, when I got to medical school and they wanted me to stay up all night…piece of cake.” At medical school, Dr. Thompson knew there were two professions he just didn’t want. The first was work as an OB/GYN, often thinking back to the crazy schedule his dad had kept. The other was pediatrics. His father had shared a waiting room with a pediatrician, and crying children were of no interest to him. “It’s funny that the two things I enjoyed the most in school were pediatrics and OB,” Dr. Thompson laughed. “When you deliver a baby, everyone’s so happy and excited. It’s an amazing feeling. And, pediatrics is really cool, because you get to watch kids grow up. You’re really a part of people’s families. So I changed my mind on those without a doubt.” At U of L, Dr. Thompson was a Robert Wood Johnson Scholar and was active in the Student National Medical Association as well as the American Medical Student Association. In 1992, he finished medical school and remained with U of L for the pediatric residency program. During residency, Dr. Thompson spent nearly six months at the Neonatal Intensive Care Units at Kosair Children’s Hospital and University Hospital. “It was a wonderful place to be,” he recalled. “For better or worse, that time made me extremely confident because everything was strictly regimented. I knew what to do, when and how to do it. I always had attendings looking over my shoulder, which is great for a young resident who thinks he knows everything.” Dr. Thompson remembered one day in the PICU, when a patient was going downhill, he saw they met the criteria for a central line and asked the nurses to begin prep. “The nurses were smart enough to go grab an attending and say, ‘Doctor, you have a resident about to put a central line in.’ All of a sudden, the doctor shows up and says, ‘Hey Eliot, what are you doing?’ I told him, and he said, ‘Okay, well, that’s the right thing to do, but you can’t do it by yourself. ‘I said, ‘Ohhhh!…’” Those little moments would soon make him a better physician. Dr. Thompson spent almost six months in a row in the NICU (continued on page 38) Editor’s Note: Welcome to Louisville Medicine’s member spotlight section, Dr. Who? In the interest of simply getting to know each other as a society of colleagues, we’ll be highlighting random GLMS physicians on a regular basis. If you would like to recommend any GLMS physician member to the Editorial Board for this section, please e-mail [email protected] or call him at 736-6338. MAY 2016 37