Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 12 | Page 40

MEMBERS DR. Who MEMBER SPOTLIGHT GIAVONNE RONDO, MD Aaron Burch B efore her interview began, Internist Dr. Giavonne Rondo took a moment to provide a small tour of the Shawnee Christian Healthcare Center. She introduced each member of her team in excited fashion, proudly explaining what they did and why they were essential to the care of patients. It was a welcoming and immediate statement. “It takes a village to treat patients, and here is mine.” Nestled in Louisville’s West End, just a hop, skip and jump from Dr. Rondo’s childhood home, the Center is a place of strength and hope for a community becoming more susceptible to illness and affected by violence. “I’d like to see this area improve, and I think a local health care center is a start to that process,” Dr. Rondo explained as the interview began in the Center’s Prayer Room. Designed as a place of quiet and contemplation, the intimate setting allowed the Louisville native to meditate on how she arrived at this moment in her life. “I was born and raised in West Louisville. I lived here for the first 11 years of my life before my family moved to the Buechel area. That’s where I went to middle and high school,” Dr. Rondo began. As the youngest of eight siblings, with 11 years between her age and the next oldest, Dr. Rondo grew up with a whole village looking after her. “We were really big on family events, dinners, going bowling. Some of my favorite memories are playing out in the yard with nieces and nephews near my age. We had lots of dogs, we rode bicycles all through the neighborhood.” Dr. Rondo’s father was a Renaissance man. He was a mailman, who started his own paper route as a side job and worked as associate pastor for a local Baptist church. Her mother served as a clerk for the VA Hospital and then as an assistant teacher before staying home to take care of the family. They instilled in their youngest daughter a dedication to the ones you love, a drive to help others and an enduring faith in a higher power. “As I was growing up, my mother started to become ill. She suffered from high blood pressure and congestive heart failure,” Dr. Rondo said. “We’d go to doctor’s offices quite a bit when I was in high school. I absolutely loved our family doctor. His name was Prospero Ishkanian, and he was the best. He was such a kind- hearted and knowledgeable person.” 38 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE Dr. Rondo's extended family. The Rondo’s family doctor was a true family friend. Over the next few decades, Dr. Ishkanian would treat not just her mother, but her father, several aunts and her grandmother as well. “If there’s anyone who influenced me, it’s him.” In the back of her mind, as she accompanied her mother on hospital visits, Dr. Rondo became fascinated with the world of medicine. She thought being a nurse was right for her. Or, she did until a friend said, “Why not go the extra mile and become a doctor?” “At first, I wasn’t thinking about that. I didn’t see black doctors. I didn’t really see female doctors. But, those words resonated with me. I realized being a doctor WAS possible, and I wanted to prove that I was up to that challenge.” After her graduation from Manual in 1989, Dr. Rondo traveled to Spelman College in Atlanta, an African-American, all female college. Spelman provided a perfect atmosphere for personal and professional growth. However, life intervened. “A week into my time at Spelman, my mother died,” Dr. Rondo explained. “It was a life-altering moment, and it put a damper on a lot of things. However, my professors, classmates and dormmates at Spelman were so supportive. I was in a wonderful cocoon which gave me a lot of love through that time.”