Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 1 | Page 21

W ayne Bruce Tuckson, my only and younger sibling, was born into a life of medicine. Our father, the first person to graduate from high school in his family, trained as a dentist and became the Founding Chairman of the Department of Oral Radiology at Howard University’s College of Dentistry. Our mother, who trained as a nurse, met our father while tending to him during his hospitalization for an appendectomy. I trained as a General Internist. And, then of course, there is Wayne’s lovely wife, Brenda, who also trained in nursing and specialized in dialysis care. Health care is definitely our family’s mission. A young Dr. Tuckson with a chemistry set that fostered his interest in sciences. Wayne was also born into the expectations that he would live a life of service dedicated to issues larger than himself. His formative years were framed within the context of life in segre- gated Washington, D.C., with all of its attendant challenges for African Americans. As a result, our parents, who were proud and determined people, set high expectations for their children’s expression of moral, intellectual and service character. Wayne’s enthusiastic participation in the Cub Scouts, participation as an altar boy for our Episcopalian Church, and commitment to playing trumpet in the school band were all foundational in this regard. Additionally, although Wayne was serious about Little League athletics, he diligently prepared himself to become his high school’s athletic trainer because he sensed that his future mission was ultimately focused on medicine. With his mother, a public health nurse with the Visiting Nurses Association in Washington DC. Wayne’s medical school and residency training in surgery at Howard University were characterized not only by his scholar- ship, but also by the tutelage of his life-long mentor, the eminent surgeon and national role model, LaSalle Leffall. Dr. Leffall not only drilled into Wayne the transformative importance of always exhibiting “equanimity under duress” in the operating room, but also in the conduct of his personal life. This guidance served Wayne well as he has taken on difficult challenges and pursued them with dogged and high-minded de- termination. I am proud that he accepted and excelled in meeting the challenges and opportunities provided by an internship in Obstetrics and Gynecology at the St. Louis University Hospital; a residency in General Surgery at How ard University Hospital; and a research and clinical fellowship in colon and rectal surgery at the prestigious Cleveland Clinic Foundation. All of his family were especially proud when, following in his father’s footsteps, he returned to Howard as an assistant professor in the Department of Surgery and as Chief of the Division of Colon and Rectal Surgery. Wayne’s roots run deep and those roots are a defining element of his character and his call to leadership. (continued on page 21) JUNE 2018 19