FSU College of Medicine 2018 annual report 2018 Annual Report - FSU College of Medicine | Page 16

14 THE PHYSICIANS WE PRODUCE Landry put technology to work by practicing telemedicine for storm survivors in Panama City, more than miles away from his office. These communities have newfound appreciation for their physicians. And vice versa. Several alumni said this experience reaffirmed their decision to practice small-town medicine. Mary Watson their training, their experience, their commitment and their communities spirit. That was enough. For example Watson worked five days straight as the only M.D. in the ER of Calhoun-Liberty Hospital which lost part of its roof but never closed its doors. Bixler made house calls to provide bare-bones face- to-face doctoring, and she and James both practiced medicine in a tent at Mexico Beach. Albritton oversaw the evacuation of patients from Jackson Hospital, carried to safety by a caravan of ambulances that drove all night from Tennessee. Buck, in addition to caring for his young patients, skillfully wielded a chainsaw after the storm roared miles inland. We have very many people in our community who lost their home, they lost their place of work, they lost their place of worship, they lost their gas station and their grocery store and the places where they shop and where they celebrate, they lost literally everything, Bixler said. And to see those community members come together and literally give the shirt off their own back to someone else, that s where a community s heart is. And it s still here. Even though it s broken and battered, it s still here.