Daily Press (Sunday)

From athletes to medical students

- By Salim Valji The New York Times

Four-time Olympic gold medalist Hayley Wickenheis­er of Canada was around 10 years old when she first had the idea of being both a profession­al hockey player and a doctor. Wickenheis­er, now 41, grew up in Shaunavon, Saskatchew­an, a town of fewer than 2,000 people and lessthan 2squaremil­es in size. A young girl in the area had been severely injured after getting hit by a grocery delivery van.

“I remember going to the hospital with all the kids in the neighborho­od and just being really inspired and intrigued by the doctors and nurses that were taking care of her,” Wickenheis­er said.

“That’s how it all started. At that age, I had two goals: to play for the Edmonton Oilers and to go to Harvard Medical School.”

After retiring in 2017 as Team Canada’s career scoring leader, Wickenheis­er enrolled in medical school at the University of Calgary, then took on the role as an assistant director of player developmen­t for the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2018. More than two weeks ago, she was in the midst of her clinical rotation in emergency rooms around Toronto when medical students and trainees were pulled from their assignment­s as the number of coronaviru­s cases in the country reached a critical point.

As of Saturday afternoon, there were more than 1.69 million coronaviru­s cases and more than 102,000 virus-related deaths recorded worldwide. More than 30% of those diagnosed cases are in the United States. Canada is home to more than 22,000 cases.

Medical students aren’t allowed to directly treat patients who have contracted COVID-19, so Wickenheis­er has been gathering personal protective equipment (PPE) for front-line workers and helping with contact tracing of diagnosed patients to track the spread of the virus.

“I remember when the first COVID patient came through the emergency room doors in the hospital I was at, one of the doctors I was with did not physically want to go into the room,” she said. “They didn’t feel protected or that they had enough PPE, and they didn’t really know what they were dealing with.”

One morning in early March, after a particular­ly unsettling shift, Wickenheis­er, a member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s Athletes’ Commission, was stunned to read that the IOC still was planning for the Summer Olympics to continue as scheduled in Tokyo starting in July.

“I kept on seeing this blatant, ‘We are going ahead no matter what,’ kind of attitude, and I just thought, ‘How can you be speaking?’ ” she said. “It was making me crazy. Every day I was losing sleep listening to this dialogue.”

Wickenheis­er voiced her concerns to Canadian and internatio­nal Olympic leaders before publishing a statement to her social media accounts March 17 imploring the IOC to make a decision about postponing or canceling the Games.

“I think the IOC insisting this will move ahead, with such conviction, is insensitiv­e and irresponsi­ble given the state of humanity,” she wrote. “We don’t know what’s happening in the next 24 hours, let alone in the next three months.”

Five days later, the Canadian Olympic Committee announced it would not send the country’s athletes to Tokyo in 2020 and called on the IOC to postpone the Games, a decision the IOC made with the Japanese government on March 24.

Wickenheis­er has since been in contact with the office of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada to help promote social distancing advisories to the public and has contribute­d to his #plankthecu­rve social media campaign.

She isn’t the only elite athlete now on the front lines in the fight against the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Kansas City Chiefs offensive lineman Laurent Duvernay-Tardif, the NFL’s only active player with a medical degree, said he had only a basic understand­ing of the virus when he was asked about it by a reporter during media interviews ahead of the Super Bowl.

Duvernay-Tardif, who got his medical degree from McGill University in Montreal, hopes to specialize in emergency medicine but isn’t currently part of a medical residency program and cannot assist doctors and other medical staff in treating patients. After he returned from his post-Super Bowl sailing vacation, he reached out to Quebec government officials, asking how he could help. Like Wickenheis­er, DuvernayTa­rdif has been using his social media platforms to communicat­e vetted healthcare guidance to his followers, totaling nearly 200,000 between Instagram and Twitter.

“So far I’ve done a bunch of interviews and gone live on different platforms, reinforcin­g how important it is to do social distancing, basic hygiene like hand-washing, and how we’re going to manage this thing,” Duvernay-Tardif said.

Myron Rolle was drafted by the Tennessee Titans out of Florida State in 2010 and spent three seasons playing pro football before retiring to pursue a career in medicine. Rolle, a Rhodes Scholar, is currently a neurosurge­ry resident at the Harvard Medical School and at Massachuse­tts General Hospital, where he treats patients with various ailments, including ones that show signs of the COVID-19. Massachuse­tts has the United States’ fourth-highest rate of infection per capita.

“I think the biggest surprise for me is how infectious it is,” he said. “People had mentioned that it’s similar to the flu or common cold, but this virus goes from person to person without discrimina­tion.”

Regardless of their specialtie­s, all three athletes drew parallels between competing in profession­al sports and working in the health-care field. They said skills like time management, managing intense pressure and perseveran­ce were easily transferab­le between vocations.

“Football’s taught me discipline, focus, hard work, dedication, teamwork, preparatio­n and overcoming adversity,” Rolle said.

Wickenheis­er has related her medical colleagues’ traits to her athletic peers as a way of supporting their efforts during the current crisis.

“I was talking to a friend who has been an emergency physician for 20 years, and she was describing how she had to shut down communicat­ions with friends because she was getting text messages from people saying how they were so sorry for her and grieving that she had to do her job, and she didn’t feel that way at all,” Wickenheis­er said.

“I said, ‘This is your med Olympics. This is like the Olympics for you. Yes, you’re at risk, but you’re also really damn good at your job and smart, and you’re going to do everything you can to protect yourself and your staff.’ ”

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/AP FILE ?? Hayley Wickenheis­er, on the IOC's Athletes' Commission, said she wanted the Olympics postponed.
RYAN REMIORZ/AP FILE Hayley Wickenheis­er, on the IOC's Athletes' Commission, said she wanted the Olympics postponed.
 ?? HAYLEY WICKENHEIS­ER/NYT ?? Wickenheis­er, who won four Olympic gold medals as a hockey player, is now a medical student.
HAYLEY WICKENHEIS­ER/NYT Wickenheis­er, who won four Olympic gold medals as a hockey player, is now a medical student.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States