The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1984, Blaðsíða 16

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1984, Blaðsíða 16
14 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER, 1984 At 88, Dr. P. H. T. (Thor) Thorlakson is still a competitive, formidable figure, re- luctantly leaving the field of medicine to those who have the youthful vigor and talent to try to match his vast array of accomplishments. A middle-aged doctor refers to him in awe as “the godfather.” He quit practising at 80 but still enjoys driving to the office or taking Gladys, his wife of 63 years, for a drive. Two of his major accomplishments — the enduring design of the Winnipeg Clinic and the burgeoning Health Sciences Centre — are only the iceberg tips of his contri- butions to health care in Manitoba. Fifty years ago, he envisioned the clinic as a Mayo of Manitoba and conceived the idea of grouping the medical college and the old Winnipeg General Hospital as a medical centre. He promptly set out to make it all happen. As a teacher at the college, he passed on his surgical skills. Thorlakson, whose twin sons, Robert and Ken, are surgeons, had a career rewarded with friendships of such notables as the late Sir Frederick Banting, co-discoverer of insulin. He has been mantled with honors from universities, his profession, country and Iceland, home of his forefathers. Still tall and straight, he is proof that you can take health into retirement. He deplores “self-induced sickness, the appalling moral and financial cost of drinking and driving, drug abuse and the elderly who turn to alcohol and smoke carelessly, setting themselves on fire or taking medication over and over.” Thorlakson was bom in Park River, N.D., son of a Lutheran minister who moved his family to Selkirk in 1920 and served there for 27 years. He says the Health Sciences Centre will continue to grow because of rapid changes in new technology. “Specialties have increased because of the knowledge now easily available. “GPs (general practitioners) have be- come specialized in their own right through their preparations in post graduate work. “Once you could enter medical college after high school but today the pre-med requirement is better preparation. “I don’t think the concept of family practice, where the doctor has a complete family as patients, is possible in a large centre. “Today, young people are too inde- pendent and you will find family members have different doctors,” the clinic founder says. The medical statesman, who started col- lege in 1914 and left after two years to serve overseas in the First World War, came back to graduate in 1919. He says a family often had to sacrifice as the eldest son was put through medical school, adding that today the profession is attainable to all by grant, bursary or scholar- ship, if students achieve adequate marks. Although fathers, sons, daughters, brothers and sisters are in the profession, he said it is not a preserve of the upper middle class. Thorlakson doesn’t share the view that the image of doctors has been tarnished because of confrontations between the profession and politicians. “No doubt there has to be some gov- ernment involvement but unfortunately the government has taken a commanding posi- tion on control of medical practice,” he says. “A good doctor has a special place in a family, just as a lawyer or preacher has. “I like to think of doctors as people and people don’t change that much.” — Courtesy of the Winnipeg Free Press, November 26, 1983.

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