Medical student comes to Libby through program
In continuing its participation in a
rural integrated medical training program, the Libby Clinic is
hosting third-year medical student Eve Preus.
Preus rolled up her sleeves to begin
work last week at the clinic a few days after arriving in town. She
spent the week navigating her way around and learning names of her
colleagues.
An advantage to training in a
five-month program versus taking the more common route of six-week
hospital rotations is continuity, she said.
“So just getting to know one set of
doctors and one set of hospice staff, one OR (operating room) –
it’s more comfortable for me and I don’t spend so much time
figuring out the system,” Preus said. “I can spend a lot more time
learning about my patients and participating in their care.”
In addition, she’s trying Libby on to
see if she would enjoy practicing medicine in a small town.
Preus left home in Silverdale, Wash.,
to study geology and anthropology on the East Coast during her
undergrad years. She then returned to the Seattle area and worked
at an environmental chemistry company focused on mercury detection
before enrolling in the University of Washington School of
Medicine.
Through her different volunteer
endeavors, she gained a special interest in working abroad to help
increase the standard of health care for women.
“In the developing world there are a
lot of women who just don’t have access to health care and are not
seen as equal citizens,” Preus said, “so I think that those go
hand-in-hand.”