Only@UNMC with William Lyons, M.D.

You know them when you have them.

Maybe you’re busy with a patient, working with a student or learning from a professor.

Immersed completely in the moment, it hits you, “This is where I’m supposed to be and this is what I’m supposed to be doing.”

They are “Only@UNMC” moments — born from the combination of people, place and purpose that exists only at UNMC.

William Lyons, M.D., associate professor, division of internal medicine geriatrics in the College of Medicine, describes an Only@UNMC moment.











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William Lyons, M.D.
“One morning, an elderly man was brought into clinic by his daughter because of a worsening cough. He could hardly move, as his bronchitis was flaring up. He wore a baseball cap with a label on the crown: Pearl Harbor Survivor.

“After some rest and inhaled bronchodilators, he told me about his work as a supply clerk on Oahu that fateful Sunday morning 60 years before, and of the friends he lost on the Oklahoma and Arizona. For a few days after the attack, he told me, rescue crews heard metal clanging from below water, as sailors trapped in compartments signaled to their pals.

“There are not many Pearl Harbor survivors left, but he and his Navy buddies still get together at a local coffee shop every year to remember the day of infamy. I was honored to be invited to their next get-together.

“Some older patients can get chatty in clinic with their stories. If you are pressed for time, it can be tempting to try to hurry them along. But once in a while a patient gives you a legacy like that one, and it makes you realize the privilege of our work.”

Share your “Only@UNMC” moments.

2 comments

  1. Tom O'Connor says:

    What an awesome story! Thanks for sharing it with us.

  2. Jeanie Kayser-Jones says:

    Hi Bill, what a wonderful story. You are the best! Once I met a man in a nursing home who was one of the young men who landed on the Normandy Beach, and I met another man who survived the Bataan Death March. The courage of those young men was unbelievable. Bill, I would love to have you see my older brother, who has several health problems. Are you accepting patients? I will try to find a phone no. to call Geriatric Medicine at UNMC, but when I googled you and got this wonderful story, along with the one about your outstanding teaching award, I had to respond to the story. I hope that you have a wonderful Christmas. Warm regards, Jeanie

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