Louisville Medicine Volume 67, Issue 1 | Page 42

BUSINESS CARD GALLERY Brenda Wallace, CPA, CMPE 800.880.7800 ext. 1347 [email protected] ADVERTISERS’ INDEX Harding Shymanski & Co PSC 13, 40 www.hsccpa.com Kentucky Women's Cancer Screening Program 6 Norton Healthcare IFC NortonHealthcareProvider.com/Referral SVMIC 1 svmic.com/vantage Louisville, KY • Evansville, IN www.hsccpa.com A subsidiary of Harding, Shymanski & Company, P.S.C. The Pain Institute OBC www.thepaininstitute.com FOR SALE - FURNISHED -1636 sf medical office condo Baptist East Campus -3Br, 3Ba home Naples FL Moorings waterfront -3Br, 3Ba condo Zephyr Cove NV Tahoe lakefront Email to [email protected] Dr. Mackelaite and her father. Dr. Mackelaite in Lithuania with her sister and baby Greta. (continued from page 39) cians, both Dr. Mackelaite and Dr. Alsauskas found jobs at UofL rather quickly. Although both doctors are nephrologists, they do very different work. Dr. Mackelaite is a transplant nephrologist, managing the patients before and after they receive a new kidney. Dr. Alsauskas is an interventional nephrologist specializing in kidney disease. After they moved here in 2010, the couple had two more children, Luke, 7 and Alex, 5. Their oldest, Greta, has taken to riding American Saddle style horses, but Dr. Mackelaite is on the fence in whether she’d let all her children pursue it as a hobby. “There’s such a large horse culture in Kentucky, and it’s very expensive. I’m not a barn mom, I’ll admit. I feel a bit out of place, but I try,” she smiled. As her family has grown and her career has settled into a single 40 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE location, Dr. Mackelaite has had the opportunity to pick up old hobbies and explore new ones. She recently ran a mini-marathon and has taken up playing her cello in a small band with her husband and friends. “When we pulled out the cello, it actually had stink bugs in it!” she said. “We had to clean it up, but it’s been a joy to play again.” Dr. Mackelaite’s practice is going well, and she hopes to improve the transplant program by teaching physicians in smaller towns about the transplant process. Although being an “in-need” city is rarely a positive, it has allowed Louisville and Kentucky to welcome Dr. Mackelaite and her family with open arms. After nine years here, it is safe to add “Louisvillian” to one of her many hats. Aaron Burch is the communications specialist for the Greater Louisville Medical Society.