Doctor Killed at Bronx Hospital a ‘Monumental Loss for Us’

Doctor Killed at Bronx Hospital a ‘Monumental Loss for Us’

She was not supposed to be working on Friday at Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center, making afternoon rounds on the 17th floor. Dr. Tracy Sin-Yee Tam usually worked in a ground-level family medicine clinic, where she would treat patients from the hospital’s South Bronx neighborhood.

But those who knew Dr. Tam were not surprised to learn what she was doing inside the hospital when the authorities said a gunman, a disgruntled former doctor there, opened fire, killing Dr. Tam and wounding six others before killing himself.

Another doctor had needed his shift covered. Dr. Tam volunteered.

“She would never say no,” Jude Beckles-Ross, 46, a friend of Dr. Tam’s, said through tears on Sunday outside the doctor’s home in Queens.

She was early in her career, but Dr. Tam, 32, had already established a reputation for being caring and conscientious in a way that those around her found remarkable, even in a field built on caring for others that require intense commitment.

Dr. Tam, whose father drives a taxi in Queens, had struggled to make it into medical school, but mentors and colleagues said she had plenty of options when she graduated. Again and again, she chose to work in demanding environments in neighborhoods of New York City where people had limited access to medical care, places that few young doctors enthusiastically pursue.

At Bronx-Lebanon, about 70 percent of the patients are on Medicaid, and physicians regularly assume a role that goes beyond physical care, helping patients address family disputes or emotional issues, said Dr. Sridhar Chilimuri, Bronx-Lebanon’s physician in chief. The atmosphere can chip away at a young doctor’s idealism, he said, yet he was impressed by how strongly Dr. Tam, who had been an attending doctor at the hospital for a year, held fast to hers.

“Training young physicians to be doctors is an extraordinarily difficult thing,” Dr. Chilimuri said. “Making them idealistic, and also do exactly what we’re doing, is just impossible.” He added, “To lose somebody like that now is really a monumental loss for us.”

Dr. Tam was in one of the earliest classes to enroll at Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine, a medical school that had its first graduating class in 2011. The school occupies an old department store building in Harlem, across 125th Street from the Apollo Theater. Much of the student body comes from New York City, said Martin Diamond, the college’s founding dean, and its mission is to recruit minorities into medicine and to train and encourage students to work in locations that were historically underserved.

Dr. Tam started at Touro in a master’s degree program, which provided a one-year window to make it into medical school, but required students to maintain a high grade-point average. “This was a good avenue for us,” said Jennifer Dorcé-Medard, a friend who practices family medicine in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. “A better chance and a second chance for us to achieve our dreams.”

Dr. Tam lived in Jamaica, Queens, Dr. Dorcé-Medard in Corona, so they would pair up for study sessions that went late into the night. The two made it into the medical school, a four-year program from which they both graduated in 2013. Dr. Dorcé-Medard recalled seeing Dr. Tam last year, as they were finishing their residencies. “Can you believe we did it?” she remembered telling her. “It was like we conquered something together.”

After Touro, Dr. Tam started her residency in family medicine at Palisades Medical Center in North Bergen, N.J., and from there she moved to a clinic in Harlem, which placed her back in the kind of community she had sought to work in.

One memory of Dr. Tam sticks with Dr. Iyad Baker, who supervised her as program director during her residency: The family of a patient called after a visit to talk about her work. Often, he said, people called to complain. But in her case, they wanted to convey their gratitude.

“She was never above tucking her patients in at night,” Dr. Baker said. “She would come in even when her shift is over,” he added. “She’d ask the human thing, just what a good person would do: Can I get you a glass of water? Would you like me to get you a magazine? Things that are not very common to do in the field.”

Dr. Tam’s professors remembered her sweet smile and her politeness. Colleagues and friends said she was shy. Her commute, to New Jersey as a resident, and later to the Bronx, was a punishing one, a long way to travel from Queens.

One mentor, Dr. Naghma Burney, said that last year Dr. Tam spent what should have been a month off working with her in the hospital, hoping to learn more.

“The way she died was the way she lived,” said Shailee Udani, a physician in Manhattan who worked at Palisades Medical Center.

Outside of medicine, her family was her focus. She lived with her parents, who immigrated from China, and her younger sister. On Sunday, friends and other doctors visited Dr. Tam’s home, a two-story brick house in the Hillcrest Estates neighborhood. Some left flowers on the front steps, while her family mostly stayed inside, avoiding visitors. A relative who answered the door on Sunday declined to talk to a reporter.

Liza Raza, her friend, said Dr. Tam was “just perfect, in terms of her humanity.”

Dr. Burney has held on to a note written in Dr. Tam’s swooping cursive, thanking her for her “exceptional influence.”

“You have no idea how much your patience and kindness have led the way to want me to be like you toward treating patients,” Dr. Tam wrote.

She said that Dr. Tam had told her that working at Bronx-Lebanon had brought her “so much satisfaction,” adding, “she told me, ‘They need help.’”

“What an end to a beautiful life,” Dr. Burney said. “She could have helped so many people out. She could have added so much to the community.”

Dr. Burney repeated a piece of advice she has often passed on to residents, that she felt Dr. Tam took to heart. “Patients don’t care how much you know,” Dr. Burney had told her, “they want to know how much you care.”

The next time she saw Dr. Tam pull out the small spiral notebook that many residents carry in their pockets, Dr. Burney noticed she had written the words across its cover.

Source:- https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/02/nyregion/doctor-killed-bronx-lebanon-hospital-tracy-tam.html

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James Rock

My name is James from Boston; and a freelance writer for multiple publications and a content writer for News articles. Most articles have appeared in some good newspapers. At present above 1000+ articles are published in Biphoo News section.

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