Louisville Medicine Volume 63, Issue 8 | Page 32

(continued from page 29) After undergraduate courses, in 1970 Dr. O’Connor entered the UVA Medical School. “It was a transition. My roommate and I were together at VMI and UVA. The first few weeks we just sat there and stared at the girls in class. AfDr. O'Conner and his wife, Louise ter four years of not seeing them, it was strange,” he laughed. “One of the things we had to learn was that nobody was going to tell us what to wear, when to eat or when to study.” Although he initially wanted to be a pediatrician, initial rounds quickly changed his mind. “I got the pediatric crud, basically every childhood illness that I could get, to the point I ruptured my ear drum,” he said. “I also found it difficult to treat patients who couldn’t give me a good history.” But there was light at the end of the tunnel. Students at UVA rotated through Pediatrics at the same time as Obstetrics. It was here that Dr. O’Connor found his calling. “I was kind of stunned. Life brought to the world. … It’s a big deal. Plus the family gives you all the credit, but you didn’t actually do anything. But I liked delivering babies and learning one organ area was easy, so I chose OB,” said Dr. O’Connor, who at age 24 delivered his first baby. During medical school, Dr. O’Connor met his wife, Louise, who was working as a nurse. After dating for a year and a half, the couple was married in his third year of medical school. Because of Dr. O’Connor’s participation in the Health Professions Scholarship Program, he had to apply for military residency following medical school. That was how he came to be stationed at the Tripler Army Medical Center on the island of Oahu in Hawaii. “We headed out in the summer of 1974. I liked it fine, but my wife did not. People ask, ‘Why would you not like Hawaii? It’s Paradise.’ But most people who say that go for two weeks and go home. Living there, many people get something known as rock or island Four generations: Andrew O'Connor, David with his daughter Emily and Dr. O'Connor 30 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE fever. You’re stuck on a rock in the middle of the ocean and can’t go anywhere unless you fly or sail,” Dr. O’Connor said. Dr. O'Conner (far left) in 1984 at Water Reed Army Medical Center Dr. O'Connor and The Tripler Medical Center was the busiest of the military obstetrics programs as it was the only military hospital in the western Pacific. The Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force all came through those doors and as such, the obstetrics unit delivered approximately 475 babies each month. The O’Connor’s had a couple children of their own while in Hawaii, their two sons, David and Richard. The family didn’t travel much, mostly staying on the beach and occasionally sailing with other residents. Rather than making distant trips to the South Pacific, the family invested in furniture, silverware and china which were all available fairly cheaply at the Pearl Harbor Naval Base. While in Hawaii, Dr. O’Connor found a second passion when he learned about pathology during his time in the OB/GYN department. “It was fascinating to see these diseases under a microscope. I understood it and really liked it.” Louise with their daughters, Sara, left, and Elizabeth After his residency, it was time to move once again as Dr. O’Connor and his family moved back to Northern Virginia where he began working at Fort Belvoir Community Hospital as an OB/GYN. After two years, he was offered a faculty position at Walter Reed Army Medical Center where he worked as Director of Internship and Student Training. Dr. O’Connor and his wife also welcomed twin girls, Sara and Elizabeth. “Walter Reed had a very strong gynecologic oncology program, but people often left once they were fully tr Z[