The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

‘Driven’ doctor steering country through crisis

Tom Peterkin profiles Scotland’s chief medical officer, Dr Catherine Calderwood

- TOM PETERKIN

Growing up during Northern Ireland’s Troubles and a deeply distressin­g medical dilemma are among the experience­s to shape the doctor steering Scotland through the coronaviru­s crisis.

Scotland’s chief medical officer (CMO) Dr Catherine Calderwood has been thrust into the public eye by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

As Scotland’s most senior doctor she has become a familiar sight on news bulletins as she offers expert advice to Nicola Sturgeon, briefing the nation on the spread of the virus.

As the first female CMO in the post’s 140-year history and the only one to keep seeing patients, she has forged a ground-breaking career.

But behind the public figure is a mother-of-three, whose path to the top of her profession began when Northern Ireland was plunged into terrorist conflict.

Born into a Belfast medical household in 1968 when the Troubles started, her father James was an orthopaedi­c surgeon.

He was part of the team which pioneered techniques to help victims of terrorist knee-cappings walk again.

Her father’s example during those dark days has remained with her throughout her career.

Regardless of whether patients were British soldiers or republican terrorists, all victims of the Troubles were treated with the same care.

In a BBC interview talking about her life, she once said that the principle of all patients being equal in the eyes of the NHS runs through her like the letters “in a stick of rock”.

That belief was further imprinted when she went to Uganda as a medical student aged 20. In interviews, she has described how she found herself on a primitive labour ward.

One night she was helping the on-call doctors. Two women needed a Caesarian section because their babies were struggling. There was only one theatre, one set of equipment and one doctor. Two Caesarians could not be done.

The doctor had to make a choice: Which baby was to be saved? The doctor decided to save the wealthier woman’s baby.

The poorer woman, it was argued, would be left with a Caesarian scar. Given that she lacked money for medical treatment, the scar might rupture if she had another child and she might die.

Recounting her experience to the BBC, Dr Calderwood described it as an “extraordin­arily harsh reality of life to face aged 20 – to think that you as a doctor might have to make a decision where you choose between two people”.

It was a defining moment that made her determined to tackle health inequality.

Another formative influence was Professor Ross Lorimer, her first consultant when she was a junior doctor at Glasgow Royal Infirmary.

It was a hectic time. She was in the emergency department during the ice-cream wars when “the weapon of choice was swords”.

Prof Lorimer’s sympatheti­c and charismati­c manner with impoverish­ed patients from Glasgow’s East End made an abiding impression.

Born in 1968, her medical ambitions were evident from a young age. An old school jotter shows she had ambitions to invent a cure for flu.

Medicine was discussed around the dinner table in her childhood home. And her attitude towards destigmati­sing mental health illness was influenced by her mother Lesley, a psychiatri­st.

After schooling at Methodist College – the famous Belfast grammar school with a formidable academic background – she went to Cambridge University.

She was asked to trial for the Cambridge ladies’ lightweigh­t boat. She declined on the grounds that devoting so much time to rowing would interrupt her studies, a decision that she regrets to this day.

After Cambridge, she came to Glasgow University. She worked as a junior doctor in Glasgow and Edinburgh.

Her Ugandan experience persuaded her to specialise in obstetrics and gynaecolog­y and she trained in Scotland and St Thomas’ Hospital, London. She still runs a clinic in Edinburgh Royal Infirmary.

In 2010 she became a medical adviser to the Scottish Government and five years later was promoted to the top job.

A headline-grabbing initiative has been her championin­g of “realistic medicine” in NHS Scotland.

This has involved moving away from the “doctor knows best” culture to shared decision making involving patient and medic.

In an interview for the British Medical Journal, she once described herself as “quick-witted, optimistic and driven”.

These qualities will be at a premium as she faces the biggest challenge of her profession­al life.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Dr Catherine Calderwood was appointed Scotland’s chief medical officer in 2015.
Picture: PA. Dr Catherine Calderwood was appointed Scotland’s chief medical officer in 2015.

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