TCOM student’s rocky road to Match Day

By Jan Jarvis

Gemma Sookprasong
 
Last fall, Gemma Sookprasong flew to Wichita, Kan., for an interview that could lead to a medical residency at a hospital there.

She never made it to the interview, but she did end up at that hospital.

“I woke up in a trauma bay,” she said.

The car accident that sent Sookprasong to the hospital could have ended the fourth-year Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine student’s dream of graduating in May and becoming a family medicine physician.

“I was really worried I wouldn’t be able to graduate on time,” she said. “But I do realize how lucky I am.”

Sookprasong will have plenty of reasons to celebrate this Friday when she learns which residency program she has matched with. She’ll be joined by 166 other TCOM students who will open envelopes that reveal their fate during the Class of 2018 Match Day Celebration at the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History.

For Sookprasong, it will be an especially momentous day.

The accident, in which a driver rear-ended her vehicle, left her with a skull fracture, 19 stitches on her face, 10 cracked teeth and a cerebral fluid leak. She spent a week in the hospital before she was well enough to return to Fort Worth. She took with her a suture removal kit to take out the stitches herself with the help of a friend, along with a determination to resume her residency quest.

But it was not to be, at least not as she planned.

Within days, one side of her face turned weak and numb. Soon the weakness spread to the other side of her face and at a follow-up appointment with her primary care physician, she was sent to the emergency room.

There she was admitted to the hospital by the same doctor with whom she had done her emergency room rotation earlier in her training.

By then she couldn’t taste food, shut her mouth or close her eyes to sleep.

“I had to use my hand to make my mouth move,” she said.

The fractures in her skull had caused facial nerve damage. She worried she would have to undergo surgery, but steroids were used to reduce the swelling.

Her recovery would include trips to the dentist to repair her cracked teeth and a visit to an audiologist to address the mild hearing loss she suffered.

But over the next month, she recovered enough to achieve her goal of doing 15 residency interviews by the end of the year. Her injuries might have slowed her down, but they didn’t stop her from graduating on time.

The accident was a good reminder of what it is like to be a patient, said Sookprasong, who had also been hospitalized for eight days with pneumonia before her senior year in college.

“I think compassion will be one of my biggest strengths as a physician,” she said.

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