Eileen Niedfield

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Doctor
M. Frederic Niedfield
MD, MMS
Personal
Born(1920-06-16)June 16, 1920
Brooklyn, New York
DiedMarch 19, 2007(2007-03-19) (aged 86)
Orange, California
ReligionRoman Catholic
NationalityAmerican

Eileen Rae Niedfield (1920–2007), in religious life Sr. Mary Frederic Niedfield, MMS, MD, FACS was a surgeon and general physician in India for nearly 40 years, two in Bhutan. Graduating in 1951, she was notable for being in the first cohort of Georgetown University Medical School alumni that included women. She was valedictorian, and received the highest national board grades in pathology in the United States.[1] Some students have called for the university to name a medical pavilion after her.

In her work in India and Bhutan from 1955 to 1992, she served many Muslim women whose husbands and fathers would not allow them to be treated by male doctors. Some of the postings were remote, where people otherwise had no access to medical care. Her work brought her to the attention of Mother Teresa, whose nursing sisters shared training and facilities with her congregation.

When she returned to the United States in 1992, she moved to San Diego to serve HIV and AIDS patients because she believed the need was great. Her dedication extended further through part-time volunteer work at St. Vincent de Paul Village-Joan Kroc Medical Clinic for individuals experiencing homelessness.

Early life and education

Niedfield was born in Manhattan, New York, on June 16, 1920, the eldest daughter of Alma Marie Thor Niedfield (1891–1971) and Joseph Henry Niedfield (1893–1952). Her mother was descended from German and Irish immigrants. Alma worked as a model and stage actor, including with James Montgomery Flagg, during her childhood. Sr. Niedfield's maternal grandmother, Margaret Fagan (1869–1942), immigrated to New York during the Irish potato famine, working as a bookkeeper for a lace import company.[2] Niedfield's father, Joseph, was descended from German immigrants and converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism as a young man.[3] He served in Army in World War I, and worked as a firefighter in the New York City Fire Department.[4]

Graduation day as valedictorian, June 11, 1951, Georgetown University School of Medicine.

Her younger sister, Marjorie Alma Niedfield (1922–2011), earned a Bachelor's of Science in Nursing and worked as a Registered Nurse for many years.[5] She and her husband, Daniel Keirnan, worked to raise funds and awareness for Niedfield's work throughout her career.[6]

Niedfield attended St. Savior Parish Elementary School of Brooklyn, graduating in 1933.[7] She then continued in its middle and high school, and founded the Skyline newspaper in 1938 with Sister M. Rachael, S. S. N. D. They also worked together on the first sodality (a group founded to promote the spiritual works of mercy and corporal works of mercy) at St. Savior, and Niedfield was elected its first prefect.[8]

In 1938, she began university study at Manhattanville College, run by the Society of the Sacred Heart/RSCJ. She played field hockey, and co-wrote a play that was presented in November.[9] During her first semester of college, she attended a speech by Mother Anna Maria Dengel, an MD who had founded the Medical Mission Sisters of Philadelphia (MMS) in 1925. Niedfield was so impressed she left college after her first semester to enter the MMS as a postulant on February 11, 1939.[10] She took vows and became Sister Mary Frederic, making her first public vows on August 15, 1941.[11]

She then transferred to Trinity College in Washington, DC (now Trinity Washington University), graduating with a Bachelor of Science degree in chemistry, magna cum laude, in 1945. Niedfield took her perpetual vows on August 15, 1945, and her final vows a year later on August 15, 1946. In the two years between college and medical school she studied X-ray techniques for a year, and spent six months at a Catholic clinic in Atlanta that served Black patients (all medical facilities were segregated in those years).[12] It was then known as the Catholic Colored Clinic in Atlanta, and later as Southwest Atlanta Hospital, now closed. She then continued to Georgetown University Medical School, enrolling in 1947.[13] She graduated from the Georgetown University School of Medicine on June 11, 1951, as class valedictorian alongside four other women who together were the first to graduate in the program's 101-year history.[14] She graduated summa cum laude, and received a gold medal for highest achievement in bacteriology.[15] She then qualified as a surgeon with her residency at Georgetown University Hospital (now part of MedStar).[16]

During 1951, she interned for one year at Saint Michael's Medical Center in Newark, New Jersey. Then, on October 1, 1952, she began work as a junior resident surgeon at Arlington Hospital in Northern Virginia, near Washington, DC, becoming the first member of a religious community to serve as a resident at that hospital.[12]

She expressed her deep affection for her work in a December 1953 article in The Washington Post, stating, "I love it. I don't even want to come home. It is so much more satisfactory to be where you are needed."[17]

After an internship and residency, she returned to Georgetown University for a Master of Science in Surgery degree, which she received in 1954.[18] Niedfield served as the Chief Resident for Surgery at Georgetown University Hospital from 1954 to 1955.[19]

Medical service in India and Bhutan

With a tiger cub in India.

Niedfield studied the Hindustani language during her surgery coursework, and then sailed for India in 1955. The MMS operated seven hospitals in South Asia, four in India and three in Pakistan, eventually expanding to eleven. She joined Dr. Ruth Taggart, a graduate of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, who was the hospital superintendent.[20] Cumulatively, she spent nearly 40 years working in a variety of roles including surgeon, chief of surgery, and hospital superintendent, at Kurji Holy Family Hospital, Village of Mandar, Rachi District, State of Bihar, with four years (1960–64) in Patna, India, serving many Muslim women whose husbands and fathers would not allow them to be treated by male doctors.[21] The hospital averaged 600 major surgical cases per year, and had 3,000 total inpatients annually.[22] Its services included general care, surgery, obstetrics-gynecology, pediatrics, a pharmacy, a substance abuse detox center, and a nursing school, all of which she oversaw while serving as hospital superintendent (1987–1992).[23]

Her congregation and Mother Teresa's were connected, because Mother Teresa worked briefly at one of the Medical Mission Sisters' hospitals, and they and the Missionaries of Charity periodically trained one another's nurses.[24]

She became a bi-monthly columnist for the MMS, contributing a column titled "The Doctor's Diary."[13] On April 24, 1967, the work of the MMS was honored by Representative Joshua Eilberg (D-Pennsylvania) when he read a citation including her name into the Congressional Record.[25] In the book The Hills Around Me, author Imtiaz Fiona Griffiths describes how Dr. Niedfield saved her husband's life in India by performing emergency surgery.[26]

Return to India

In 1966 she returned to the United States to complete some requirements of the American Board of Surgery that had recently been augmented. She then become a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, and was listed as a board-certified surgeon.[25] She also filled a suitcase with an intravenous glucose mixture because of a sugar shortage in India, coupled with a famine. "It's only enough for four or five operations," she told a correspondent for the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, "but it might well save a life."[27] Supplies were a constant worry. While in India, she started a nonprofit charity, "Sr. Niedfield's Brothers," to collect funds for surgical instruments and medical supplies. In Washington, DC, Dr. George Ware collected the money and sent it to her.[28]

Her time in Bhutan

Niedfield spent two years (1979-1981) in Bhutan, a kingdom on the border between Tibet and India.[29] She wrote that it was all but impossible to enter Bhutan without an official invitation, as its policies were isolationist. However, the Buddhist Bhutanese government was eager to update the quality of its healthcare, so health ministers invited her in a non-missionary capacity.[30]

There she served as the zonal medical officer and as the chief medical officer at the 60-bed Tashigang Civil Hospital in eastern Bhutan near the Chinese border. Patients suffering from leprosy and tuberculosis were common. Some of the health centers in the zone were only accessible on horseback.[31] Creating and conducting short courses on basic medical care, and issuing standing orders for simple medical conditions, were vital, as it was impossible to get to each center across the large zone more than four times each year.[31] Although the Bhutan government offered to renew her contract, she said she left because the work was too remote and lonely.[30]

Other medical service and legacy

During Niedfield's time abroad, she was brought back to the US for training, time with family, and rest. She dedicated one of these trips (1976–77) in service as a staff physician with the American Medical Association's "Project USA" program in support of the US Department of Health, Education, & Welfare. She worked in South Dakota at the Aberdeen Area Indian Health Service, the Omaha-Winnebago Service Unit, and at the Fort Defiance, Arizona Indian Hospital.[32]

In 1992, she moved to serve at the Owen Clinic with HIV/AIDS patients.[30] "I was interested in AIDS because I felt there was a great need not just medically but also socially and spiritually," she told a reporter.[7] In those years she was also a part-time volunteer at the St. Vincent de Paul Village-Joan Kroc Medical Clinic in San Diego, serving people experiencing homelessness. During her time in San Diego, Niedfield also worked part time as a primary care physician in internal medicine at the San Diego Veterans Administration Outpatient Clinic (1993–2001), and as an assistant clinical professor of internal medicine for the University of California San Diego.[30]

In 2001, largely due to failing eyesight, she retired from practicing medicine at the age of 81 and moved to the Regina Residence in Orange, California, run by the Sisters of St. Joseph.[30] She died on March 19, 2007.[33]

In 2019, students at Georgetown University circulated a petition and published an op-ed calling on the university to name a pavilion for her at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital.[34][35]

References

  1. ^ "News and Personals". Medical Annals of the District of Columbia. XX (8). Washington, DC: Medical Society of the District of Columbia: 453. 1951.
  2. ^ Brooklyn, Kings, New York, Enumeration District 0608, Image 774.0, FHL Microfilm 2341250, roll 1515. US Federal Census. Census Bureau. 1930. p. 4B.
  3. ^ United States, Social Security Numerical Identification Files (NUMIDENT), 1936–2007. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office. February 11, 2023. Archived from the original on July 10, 2023. Retrieved July 10, 2023.
  4. ^ "Engine Company No. 6-113 Liberty St., Manhattan". The City Record, Fire Department (PDF). January 31, 1921. p. 321. Archived (PDF) from the original on July 11, 2023. Retrieved July 11, 2023. Firemen: Jos. H. Niedfield, 468 Central Park West, Man[hattan]
  5. ^ Cheney, Ralph H., ed. (1937). Brooklyn Botanic Garden Record Volumes 26–27. p. 72. Archived from the original on December 4, 2023. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
  6. ^ "Marjorie N. Kiernan, 1922–2011". Chicago Daily Herald. October 19, 2011.
  7. ^ a b "Doctor-nun star graduate of her grade-school class". Catholic News Service. January 14, 1994. Archived from the original on July 6, 2023. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  8. ^ "'Skyline' Has Anniversary; Outlines Ancestry and Goals". Skyline (newspaper of St. Savior High School, Brooklyn, New York). Vol. 25, no. 2. November 17, 1961.
  9. ^ Manhattanville College Tower Yearbook. New York, NY: Manhattanville College. 1938. pp. 112, 149.
  10. ^ "Profession and Reception". The Medical Missionary. 13 (3). Brookland, Washington, DC: The Society of Catholic Medical Missionaries. March 1939.
  11. ^ "Reception and Profession at the Motherhouse". The Medical Missionary. 15 (7). September 1941.
  12. ^ a b "Surgeon to Quit Her Arlington Hospital Post To Join Nuns With Medical Mission in India". The Washington Post. December 23, 1952.
  13. ^ a b "First Editor's Career as Medical Missionary Spans Globe from Washington to Patna, India". Skyline (newspaper of St. Savior High School, Brooklyn, New York). Vol. 25, no. 2. November 17, 1961.
  14. ^ "News and Personals". Medical Annals of the District of Columbia. 1951.
  15. ^ North, Patti (October 16, 2017). "Women in Medicine: Georgetown University Medical Center's Trailblazing Women". Health Magazine. Archived from the original on July 6, 2023. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  16. ^ Cessato, Bill. "Nuns & Sisters in Georgetown's History: Leaders & Learners". Storymaps, Georgetown University. Archived from the original on April 18, 2023. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  17. ^ "Georgetown University Medical Center's Trailblazing Women". October 16, 2017. Archived from the original on July 6, 2023. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  18. ^ "News of Women in Medicine: General". Journal of the American Medical Women's Association. 10 (7): 258. July 1955.
  19. ^ Niedfield MMS; Frederic M. (January 1, 1981). My Personal Context. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Medical Mission Sisters Archives.
  20. ^ "Woman's Medical College". Journal of the American Medical Women's Association. 10. American Medical Women's Association: 258. 1955. Archived from the original on March 8, 2024. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
  21. ^ "Department of Health, Order, New Delhi, November 7, 1969". Gazette of India. Directorate of Printing, Government of India. 1969.
  22. ^ "Correspondence". Medical Annals of the District of Columbia. XXVII (11). Medical Society of the District of Columbia: 620. November 1958.
  23. ^ "It's always wise to check the program". Clinical Congress News. Chicago, Illinois: American College of Surgeons: 2. October 15, 1970.
  24. ^ "Doctor-nun star graduate of her grade school class". Anchor (Fall River Diocese). January 14, 1994. p. 13. Archived from the original on July 6, 2023. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  25. ^ a b Eilberg, Joshua (April 24, 1967). "Medical Mission Sisters, Extension of Remarks of Hon. Joshua Eilberg of Pennsylvania in the House of Representatives". Congressional Record, March 01 – April 28, 1967. 113: A1988.
  26. ^ Griffiths, Imtiaz Fiona (2021). The Hills Around Me. Victoria, British Columbia, Canada: FriesenPress. pp. 241–2. ISBN 978-1-5255-9074-0. Archived from the original on October 29, 2023. Retrieved July 9, 2023.
  27. ^ "American Province". Transactions & Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. 35: 21. 1967–1968.
  28. ^ Ware, MD, George William (November 1958). "Correspondence, to Dr. Yater". Medical Annals of the District of Columbia. XXVII (11). Medical Society of the District of Columbia: 620.
  29. ^ Barry, Patricia (2001). Surgeons at Georgetown: Surgery and Medical Education in the Nation's Capital, 1849–1969. Franklin, Tennessee: Hillsboro Press. p. 276. ISBN 978-1-57736-236-4. Archived from the original on October 28, 2023. Retrieved July 9, 2023.
  30. ^ a b c d e Hall, MMS, Lucy. "Sister Eileen Niedfield". Medical Mission Sisters and Associates. Archived from the original on August 23, 2023. Retrieved August 22, 2023.
  31. ^ a b Niedfield MMS; Frederic M (1981). A Bhutan Experience. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Medical Mission Sisters Archives.
  32. ^ Directory of Medical Specialists Certified by American Boards, Volumes 1–3. Chicago, Illinois: Advisory Board for Medical Specialties, JAMA Network. 1979. p. 3823. ISBN 978-0-8379-0522-8. Archived from the original on December 8, 2023. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
  33. ^ "Sister Eileen Niedfield". Medical Mission Sisters. Archived from the original on August 23, 2023. Retrieved August 23, 2023.
  34. ^ Borzilleri, C. C. (January 15, 2019). "Viewpoint: Name MedStar Pavilion for Eileen Niedfield". The Hoya (Georgetown University student newspaper). Archived from the original on July 6, 2023. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  35. ^ McBride, Harrison (November 22, 2019). "Student Petition Calls for GU To Name MedStar Building in Honor of Nun". The Hoya (Georgetown University student newspaper). Archived from the original on July 6, 2023. Retrieved July 6, 2023.

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