For Many, The Worst Disaster We Have Experienced Is The One We Are Living Through — The Pandemic

James Goydos, MD
ILLUMINATION
Published in
3 min readMay 5, 2021
Photo by Bruno Kelzer on Unsplash; photo of lamp with mask hanging from side to look like a tear drop. Photo on James Goydos article about training a cancer doctor who contracted COVID-19.
Photo by Bruno Kelzer on Unsplash

Growing up in California, I experienced 3 major earthquakes, two wildfires that required my family to temporarily evacuate, a landside that almost covered our car on a family vacation, and a flood that lifted our house off its foundations. Later in life, I was in Mexico City during the September 1985 Earthquake, and recently I lived through Superstorm Sandy here in New Jersey, going without power for 2 weeks. All of these natural disasters were difficult in their own ways, but, fortunately, I didn’t lose a friend or loved one during any of them. That is why the worst natural disaster I ever experienced I’m still experiencing — the COVID19 pandemic.

As a physician and biomedical researcher I knew what to expect during an out of control air-borne pandemic and so I have been able to keep my family and close friends safe over the past nine months. With the worst of the pandemic yet to come I’ve redoubled my efforts to watch over my family, get regular testing, and remind my friends and colleagues of the continuing dangers.

Yet with all these precautions I, like so many others, know people who have died after contracting COVID19. The first person I personally knew was a prominent family physician from central New Jersey who I had worked with for over 20 years. He and his wife (also a physician) volunteered to work the COVID wards at their local hospital, even though they were both in their late 60s. Both husband and wife contracted COVID19 with the husband dying two months later. His wife recovered after a long hospital stay and has since retired from the medical field. The second person I knew who died of COVID19 was the father of a medical oncologist who I had worked with for the past 10 years.

However, the most painful moment for me was when I received the news, on July 7, 2020, that a young surgeon who I had recommended for a position at a prominent University Medical Center had contracted COVID19 the week before and had died that morning. I helped train that young man and I was reason he had become a cancer surgeon. I was also the one who got him the job where he contracted the disease.

So many good people have lost their lives to this terrible natural disaster of a pandemic. I hope we are able to get the pandemic under control, and continue to distribute vaccines before even more promising lives are lost.

This article was previously published on James Goydos’ website.

About James Goydos, M.D.

James Goydos is an expert in melanoma research and specialist in surgical oncology with an M.D. from Rutgers University. With over 20 years of experience as a Professor, Surgeon, and Clinical Trial Lead, he is a leading expert in his field.

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James Goydos, MD
ILLUMINATION

Dr. James Goydos — Professor, Surgeon, Clinical Trial Lead. Helping patients see that melanoma isn’t a death sentence. https://jamesgoydos.com