Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Dr Tom Thacher goes to Mayo Clinic

I thought about this post for a while before writing. I especially was concerned about the fact that Tom may not approve. Yet, I found it difficult to resist the urge to write about a man who is many things to many people. I eventually came up with a short write-up, adopting a middle-of-the-road approach.
In an earlier post, I discussed the importance of the discipline of Family Medicine as the panacea to the problem of health access in resource-poor settings suggesting the need for a paradigm shift from heavy spending on tertiary institutions to increased budgetary allocation to ensure sustainable primary care development. I had earlier raised the issue of inadequate human capacity, among others, pointing out that for resource-challenged settings to succeed in their bid to improve their health outcomes, they must train and retain healthcare workers who will not only dispense quality primary care but also embark on research that directly impart the people and provide patient-oriented evidence that matters.
There is someone who has played a key role, albeit quietly, in the forgoing for the past 20 years in Nigeria. He is Dr Tom Thacher.
He came to Nigeria as a missionary after completing his residency in Family Medicine in the United States about 20 years ago. He established the department of Family Medicine and Informatics at the Jos University Teaching Hospital after working in some other centers. He started with the training of four residents but at the moment, there are 25 residents in the department. Many of the early residents have graduated and either gone on to become trainers in other centers or taken up positions of responsibility in Nigeria’s health industry.
Tom was the director of research at the Jos University Teaching Hospital. He provided guidance for specialists in other disciplines and supervised residents’ dissertations. He conducted groundbreaking studies in rickets and researched into common killer diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS. I read a copy of a Liverpool University PhD thesis on tuberculosis he supervised. He insists that research done in any community should impart the people.
Tom promoted the place of medical informatics. He recently supervised the creation of a database for entry of all patients’ data seen at the department of Family Medicine of the hospital. The department attends to more than 35,000 patients annually.
Tom is strict and disciplined. Pasted in a conspicuous place in his office is this inscription: “Your lack of planning is not my emergency”. He is an avid reader and a time manager. He leads by example, something rare in this society. We who followed had no option than take a cue. He is content, never showy, almost austere. In spite of his many achievements, his published papers, his pedigree, he remained simple, humble.
He insists on excellence. He supervises my dissertations for the faculties of Family Medicine of the West African College of Physicians and the National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria and demands no less from me.
Dr Tom Thacher’s life in Nigeria cannot be fully elucidated here: it is for another place, for another time.
He now joins faculty at the prestigious Mayo Clinic in Rochester, USA.