Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 3 | Page 32

IN REMEMBRANCE In Remembrance ANTOINETTE “TONI” LINVILLE A Legacy of Compassionate Service A ntoinette “Toni” Linville died May 21, 2018, leaving an admirable legacy of compassionate service through the Greater Louisville Medical Society (GLMS; then Jefferson County Medical Society) and through many of her other endeavors. As a nurse, physician’s spouse and health care leader, she played a key role in the founding of the two greatest service legacies of GLMS: Supplies Over Seas and The Healing Place. Toni was the first Executive Director of Supplies Over Seas (SOS) in 1993, working with founder Norton Waterman, MD, in a small basement office of GLMS headquarters in the Old Medical School Building. The strong beginning she engineered was essential to the survival and ultimate evolution of SOS into the nationally acclaimed medical supplies recovery organization it has become. Now, SOS regularly serves medical missions throughout the world with valuable recycled supplies and equipment that are hand-carried by individuals on medical missions, shipped on airborne pallets, or shipped as boxcar-sized sea containers. Since 1993, over 1.5 million pounds of equipment and supplies have been sent to over 91 countries and kept from local landfills. Originally sponsored by GLMS, the program now thrives independently under Denise Sears, the current Executive Director. Another of Toni’s endeavors, The Healing Place (THP), also became a great contribution of GLMS to our community. THP began as a homeless shelter called the Morgan Center, which was transformed by the vision of Will Ward, MD, supported by his medical colleagues including Kenneth Peters, MD, and a dedicated professional staff, including Jay Davidson. Toni Linville chaired many fundraising events for the Morgan Center and was a key supporter of the initial JCMS Outreach Program, which became THP. THP gathered international acclaim based on its peer-mentored recovery program, which has an admirable record of 75 percent sobriety at one year for alcoholics and opiate addicts who complete the pro- gram. Currently, a greatly improved, expanded men’s campus is underway to enhance THP’s mission. THP is led by Jay Davidson, Chairman, and Karen Hascal, President, with many supporting GLMS physicians. Toni Linville’s nursing degree and subsequent public health and graduate certificates were from the University of Minnesota School of Medicine and she completed post-graduate studies in Nursing Administration at Columbia University in Duluth, Minn. She be- came a captain in the US Army Nursing Corps and served in Japan before returning to teach Public Health at major US universities. She came to Louisville to supervise the American Red Cross Blood Services program as well as becoming Director of Nursing for the Louisville American Red Cross. Her Public Health and Blood Ser- vices expertise were uniquely valuable when the AIDS epidemic of the 1980’s began. She also served on the Jefferson County Board of Health and on the JCMS Auxiliary. Here, she met her husband, Dr. James T. Linville, and together they raised a happy and productive family. James’ death preceded Toni’s. They are survived by five children and seven grandchildren. Antoinette “Toni” Linville’s remarkable record of medical ser- vice and compassion will live on through the great organizations she served, the many who continue to benefit from them, and all those she inspired to open their hearts to those in need here and around the world. - Gordon R. Tobin, MD While Antoinette Linville was not a member of GLMS, Dr. Tobin wished to write this to honor her contributions to the Louisville medical community. 30 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE