Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 5 | Page 35

MEMBERS DR. Who MEMBER SPOTLIGHT MIRIAM KRAUSE, MD Aaron Burch B orn in Heidelberg, Germany, Dr. Miriam Krause’s jour- ney to Louisville was filled with rewards and surprises. With the support of family and friends, she has built a life more than 4,000 miles away from her hometown, as a practicing reproductive endocrinologist and OB/ GYN for Fertility and Endocrine Associates. German,” Dr. Krause laughed. “I also had five years of French and spent six months in Brazil which made me pretty fluent in Portu- guese.” Adapting quickly to languages is useful when moving to far- away places, but first Dr. Krause had to enter and complete medical school. In 1999, she began her career at Ruprecht-Karls-Universität, the Heidelberg University School of Medicine. The daughter of Dietmar and Gerlinde, Dr. Krause is the oldest of three siblings and the first of her family to go into medicine or live in America. She and her two brothers were raised in the 5,000-per- son village of Talheim in the south of Germany, and she lived there until she moved out for college. Her parents loved to travel though, taking their children to visit America, drive throughout Europe and camp in Scandinavia. “Medical school was a change. I moved out after high school at age 19. The university was just an hour away but, of course, I felt a little lonely not being around my family at first, but soon I made new friends and kept busy studying,” she recalled. It was during medical school that Dr. Krause first began to consider a practice in America. She rotated to the U.S. three times during her medical school years, testing the waters. “My parents had a camping bus, and we traveled a lot as I was growing up,” Dr. Krause recalled. “In Scandinavia, you can camp anywhere as long as you don’t destroy nature. So, we’d go wherever we wanted to hike and kayak. I didn’t always like it, since there were some summers where it rained the whole time. I preferred the mountains or the beach, and we did some of that too. We liked anything outdoorsy.” “I did one rotation at Texas A&M, a month in San Diego at an urgent care center and then four months in Nebraska at UNMC. I was open to anything,” Dr. Krause said. “Those were really useful. They helped me learn more about the American medical system and got me excited about wanting to do a residency here in America.” From early childhood, Dr. Krause gravitated towards becoming a physician. “Anytime anyone hurt themselves, I’d want to be the one to clean it or put a Band-Aid on. That stuck with me through school, and I always knew I wanted to be a doctor.” While there are no prior physicians in the Krause family, Dr. Krause’s mother was a language teacher and her father was a mechan- ical engineer. Through their guidance came a natural inquisitiveness in Dr. Krause which appeared, not just in her predilection towards medicine, but also in the way foreign languages came easily to her. “I always liked languages. I’m fluent in English and still remember Graduating from medical school in November 2006, Dr. Krause had to wait almost nine months before the next residency class began in the U.S. To extend her medical knowledge, she spent six months in Porto Alegre, Brazil, thanks to an exchange program between Heidelberg University and the Universidade Federal Do Rio Grande Do Sul (UFRGS for short). “I’d never been to Southern America before. I thought everyone there spoke English. Then I got to Porto Alegre, and no one spoke English or German. I knew right away it was going to be interest- ing,” Dr. Krause said, explaining that her research focused on the lining of the uterus and the differing factors it can allow in relation to implantation. (continued on page 34) 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. OCTOBER 2017 33