By
Shauna Scott Rhone
The Cincinnati Enquirer
![[img]](Fathers and sons, together to the bone_files/dads_150x200.jpg) At Frieberg
Orthopedic in Kenwood. From left (see zoom view):
Francis and Raul Florez, James B. and Craig B. Willis,
and Dick and Scott Jolson. (Dick Swaim
photo) | ZOOM
| |
When fathers and sons find
common ground in their careers, that's special. When their
careers allow them to work in the same office, that's unusual.
When that office contains not one but three father-son
pairings, that's amazing.
Freiberg Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, with offices in
Mount Airy and Kenwood, is a family business, home to several
similar pairings since it opened in 1890.
Currently, Drs. Richard and Scott Jolson, James and Craig
Willis and Raul and Francis Florez all call Freiberg home.
Having family work under the same roof might seem too close
for comfort for some, but these doctors relish the
opportunity.
"We ask each other questions or go over cases," says Scott
Jolson, 42, of Wyoming. "It's always nice having somebody
there you trust, especially somebody who has the same type of
interests as you."
Both specialize in knee and shoulder surgery.
Although Richard Jolson, 75, of East Walnut Hills, retired
his scalpel in 1996, he still has patients and consults
regularly. He also sees patients at the Veterans
Administration Hospital in Avondale. His former surgery
sidekick is considering joining him there, too.
| LIKE FATHER, LIKE CHILD |
| More dad/kid pairs: We asked you to send
us your father-child look-alike photos. See what you
sent us in our Father's Day photo gallery.
|
"They've asked me to come
down there," says Scott. "One of the fun things would be
'cause Dad's there, so I get to do more stuff with him."
Says Richard, "There's never been a competition between us.
It's a thrill for me to send a patient of mine for treatment
to Scott."
As a teenager, Francis Florez, 44, of Glendale, felt at
ease in the operating room when his father took him on a tour.
"I said, 'This is fun,' " he remembers. "I could do this."
Choosing his father's specialty sealed their future
together.
"I now had the bridge over to my father that none of my
siblings had, because now I could talk to him forever about
orthopedics, about medicine."
His father, Raul Florez, 79, of Clifton, has seen the field
of orthopedic medicine expand as fast as his son has grown
over the years.
"His knowledge is more advanced because we have progressed
quite a bit," he says. "The steps taken in orthopedics from
1950 until now are really considerable."
That progress allows the general orthopedic physicians to
share cases and work more closely together.
"Although he stopped operating in 1995, the best part was
operating together," says Francis. "Actually being in the OR,
with him showing me this and me showing him that. Now, it's
good to have him around when I'm seeing patients. It's like me
having the benefit of his wisdom."
When Craig Willis, 33, of Montgomery, announced he was
considering following his father into medicine, the reaction
was surprising.
"I told him to go into law," James Willis, 62, of Amberley
Village says with a chuckle. "I did try to dissuade him. You
want to really be sure you want to (go into medicine), because
it's just a long road."
Craig eagerly dived into the challenge of being the
apprentice doctor. His "next wave" education, combined with
Dad's time-tested methods, created a spate of innovations in
hand and wrist surgery.
"We both enjoy doing the same things," says Craig, "and to
see him doing it makes me more excited, more interested and
intent on furthering my drive to learn how to do what he
does."
"I'm proud of the way he interacts with people," James says
of his son, the doctor. "Other doctors tell me how good he is
with his patients and how well he interacts with his peers.
Some doctors never learn how to do that."
---
E-mail at srhone@enquirer.com.
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