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Sunday, May 11, 2025

Remembering Dr David Picou

by

362 days ago
20240514
Dr David Bratt

Dr David Bratt

I first met Dr David Pi­cou, Emer­i­tus Pro­fes­sor of Ex­per­i­men­tal Med­i­cine at UWI and the hold­er of a Cha­co­nia Gold, in 1978. I had been ap­point­ed Lec­tur­er in Child Health at the UWI East­ern Caribbean Med­ical Scheme, Port-of-Spain Gen­er­al Hos­pi­tal (PoS­GH), and it was sug­gest­ed I go up to Pi­ar­co to trans­port mem­bers of the Fac­ul­ty of Med­ical Sci­ences, Mona, who were overnight­ing in town on their way back to Ja­maica from the an­nu­al Caribbean Com­mon­wealth Med­ical Re­search Coun­cil (CCM­RC) meet­ing, which had been held in Guyana that year.

As the lec­tur­ers ex­it­ed cus­toms, it quick­ly be­came ap­par­ent who was in charge, for here was this small, slen­der Chi­nese guy, clip­board in hand, busi­ly or­gan­is­ing every­one, qui­et­ly putting peo­ple in con­tact with oth­ers and telling peo­ple where to go. He was in charge and every­one knew it, not be­cause he was the pro­fes­sor or more as­sertive or stronger than the oth­ers, David was in charge be­cause that was what he did, that was what he was, an or­gan­is­er, and every­one, pro­fes­sors, lec­tur­ers, sec­re­taries, ac­cept­ed that he was the main man. He was a nat­ur­al for this.

The next time I saw him was in Bar­ba­dos at the an­nu­al med­ical re­search meet­ing, which took place in a dif­fer­ent is­land each year, an­oth­er Pi­cou idea. For years, David or­gan­ised and ran those meet­ings from the late 1950s to 2002 and, in fact, was the first di­rec­tor of the Caribbean Health Re­search Coun­cil (CHRC) when the CCM­RC mor­phed in­to this new en­ti­ty.

Not many peo­ple know but he es­sen­tial­ly built the Er­ic Williams Med­ical Sci­ence Com­plex. Be­fore him, it was me­an­der­ing along the Trinidad way. It was he and the ad­min­is­tra­tive team he cre­at­ed from scratch who took con­trol in 1980 and got what was an idea in the minds of oth­ers, mov­ing. In this, he was quite un­like most Trinida­di­ans, he was a do­er, a leader in the qui­etest way pos­si­ble, nev­er blow­ing his trum­pet, just get­ting things done with the min­i­mum of fuss and mak­ing friends along the way.

He was in­cred­i­bly de­tailed and once told me that be­fore ac­tu­al con­struc­tion of the com­plex be­gan, he had “walked” through the ar­chi­tec­tur­al blue­prints, fol­low­ing every cor­ri­dor and open­ing every door to make sure it opened in the cor­rect di­rec­tion so as not to in­ter­fere with the flow of traf­fic, wheel­chairs, beds, etc. All this years be­fore the build­ings were built.

David was al­so the first Tri­ni pae­di­a­tri­cian. He grad­u­at­ed from one of the best-known Amer­i­can pae­di­atric hos­pi­tals, the Chil­dren’s Hos­pi­tal of Philadel­phia (CHOP), in 1955 and al­though he nev­er prac­ticed as a pae­di­a­tri­cian, he nev­er for­got his be­gin­nings among chil­dren and did most of his re­search for them.

David was born on Char­lotte Street, Port-of-Spain, where Rene­gades pa­n­yard is now lo­cat­ed and grew up in the days when down­town was the cen­tre of Car­ni­val. Pan and Car­ni­val was in his blood. He and I and our re­spec­tive wives played to­geth­er in Poi­son for many years in the com­pa­ny of his good part­ner, Prof Max Richards and his wife.

Ca­lyp­so was al­so a favourite. Med­ical ex­ams at the Port-of-Spain Hos­pi­tal in the 70s and 80s of­ten co­in­cid­ed with the ca­lyp­so tent sea­son. Af­ter a busy day of ex­ams, he of­ten in­vit­ed all of the ex­am­in­ers to go to Shad­ow’s tent on Hen­ry Street, around the cor­ner from the hos­pi­tal.

An­oth­er favourite pas­time of his was the get-to­geth­er at his house af­ter ex­ams were com­plet­ed with his good friend from Bar­ba­dos Micky Wal­dron, Pro­fes­sor of Surgery, the man who per­suad­ed me to re­turn home to join UWI, and oth­er lec­tur­ers from up the is­lands. David was the con­sum­mate West In­di­an, un­der­stand­ing the cru­cial role of UWI in bring­ing us all to­geth­er.

The last time I saw him in my of­fice, he was vis­it­ing my daugh­ter for a hear­ing prob­lem. He was in a wheel­chair and not very com­mu­nica­tive but he had the same huge, beam­ing, cheer­ful smile and gen­tle man­ner.

The idea that his last mo­ments were not the best be­cause of the at­ti­tude of some of the work­ers on the ward at EWM­SC, the com­plex that he built, is nau­se­at­ing. David was such a gen­tle per­son. Al­ways ac­com­mo­dat­ing and help­ful. He did not de­serve this.

We al­ways seem to be look­ing for he­roes in T&T. We seem to con­cen­trate on sport­ing and cul­tur­al he­roes. Here is an­oth­er hero, a med­ical man who put T&T on the med­ical map and built EWM­SC, yet there is noth­ing to re­mem­ber him by there, not a ward or a build­ing named af­ter him, not even a pic­ture at the en­trance.

I was al­ways against nam­ing the Chil­dren’s Hos­pi­tal af­ter a beau­ty queen, one who has done noth­ing for it since then. It’s time we changed its name to the David Pi­cou Chil­dren’s Hos­pi­tal.


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