Home Sweet Home: A Physician's Return to Tucson

Home Sweet Home: A Physician's Return to Tucson

By Anna C. ChristensenUniversity of Arizona Cancer Center
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Dr. Julie Bauman, associate director of translational research and division chief of hematology and oncology at the UA College of Medicine – Tucson, and her mother, Dr. Kay Bauman.
Dr. Julie Bauman, associate director of translational research and division chief of hematology and oncology at the UA College of Medicine – Tucson, and her mother, Dr. Kay Bauman.

The Bauman name has been a part of the University of Arizona's story for more than a generation. Hanging on a wall at the UA Cancer Center is a plaque that reads, "In memory of James K. Bauman, M.D., a gift from his family." It has been here since the Sydney E. Salmon Building first opened in 1998.

Julie E. Bauman, M.D., M.P.H., joined the Cancer Center in September 2016 as associate director of translational research and division chief of hematology and oncology at the College of Medicine – Tucson.

But unlike some newcomers to Tucson, Bauman didn't need to develop a tolerance for three-digit heat, get into the habit of drinking twice as much water as what seemed normal or learn to stay out of striking distance of jumping cholla. As a Southwest native, those things came naturally.

Her birthplace, however, is about as dissimilar to Tucson as it gets.

Bauman was born in an Inuit village in Bethel, Alaska, where her parents worked for the Indian Health Service. They left Alaska to work with migrant farmworkers in the Southwest – first in Phoenix, then southern Texas and finally, when Bauman was in seventh grade, in Tucson.

Her parents' love of nature gave form to many of her childhood memories.

"I was raised camping," Bauman recalls. "I spent my childhood summers camping all over the Four Corners states. The Southwestern landscape is my spiritual home. I look at the Catalina Mountains, and I just relax and feel centered. I call the Catalinas my true north."

To Cooler Climes and Back

In 1985, Bauman graduated from Salpointe Catholic High School. She received her bachelor's degree from Eastern Michigan University before earning a dual M.D./M.P.H. from Tufts University, located outside Boston. This foray out of the Southwest, into vastly different climates, delivered a surprising cultural shock to her system.

"The light of the Southwest – I didn't know at the time how dependent I was on it for health and a sense of place and space," she remembers, reflecting on her early college years in the Midwest.

After a residency in Utah, Bauman went to Seattle for a fellowship. She then held professorships in New Mexico and Pennsylvania. It was at the University of Washington that she homed in on head and neck cancer as a specialty.

"Head and neck cancer affects vital functions so critical to our humanity: facial expression, speaking, eating, breathing," she says. "I became passionate not just about improving treatments for people with head and neck cancer, where science has delivered so many recent successes, but about improving all elements of survivorship. I became increasingly specialized, and when I moved to Pittsburgh I exclusively focused on head and neck cancer research."

But Tucson beckoned. While she had previously interviewed for other positions at the Cancer Center, "the time was never quite right," she says.

"I was at the University of Pittsburgh, and I had really followed my academic passions, making progress in head and neck cancer, immunotherapy and chemoprevention research. The University of Pittsburgh is one of the international leaders in head and neck cancer research, and was an amazing place for my academic development," Bauman recalls. "However, my personal sense of place and space was never comfortable there."

Luckily, an opportunity to return to Tucson fell into her lap.

"I was invited to apply for the division chief position in my hometown, and it turned my head for a lot of reasons," Bauman recalls. "My mother is still here, my sister is here, my roots are here."

It wasn't just her family or the light and landscape of her youth that made Bauman feel at home.

"The openness of people to one another is very different in the West," Bauman says. "I went to medical school in Boston. Most recently, I was at the University of Pittsburgh. What I love about the University of Arizona is that there is a really amazing set of accomplished, brilliant scientific minds here and yet the spirit of interaction is so collaborative. Physicians and scientists are every bit as accomplished and yet, in my view, much more humble and open."

While her work as a researcher and oncologist keeps her busy, she still enjoys spending time outdoors, hiking, swimming and cycling. Most recently, she has taken up taekwondo with her family. Another hobby is the study of the world's religions, which enables her to connect to patients across the spectrum of spiritual traditions.

"One of the things that I love about being an oncologist is that we're in people's lives at a time when their spirituality and their sense of meaning is really challenged," she says.

A More Meaningful Homecoming

Bauman's Tucson homecoming wasn't just an opportunity to bring her three children and husband closer to her mother and sister. It also was an opportunity for a unique reunion with her father, who passed away suddenly when she was 16 years old.

"My dad was an OB/GYN here in Tucson," Bauman recalls. "My mom really wanted to create a way of memorializing him as a physician, and wanted us to have a way of seeing him memorialized."

The construction of the Cancer Center's Sydney E. Salmon Building presented an opportunity for this memorial, and Bauman's mother, Kay, made a donation to the Cancer Center, memorializing James K. Bauman, M.D., with a plaque that hung on the new building's wall.

When Bauman started working at the Cancer Center, she looked for that plaque but couldn't find it. Unbeknownst to her, Chad Adams, assistant director of cancer clinical research, and Elik Essif, facilities coordinator for the Cancer Center, had hatched a plan.

"When Dr. Bauman was interviewing here, I asked her if there was any relation to the Bauman name that I had seen on the wall," Adams said. "She told me that was her father, and when we got to speaking about her family, both parents being physicians, and her mother practicing medicine at the UA, you could tell just how much her parents meant to her. Elik and I wanted Dr. Bauman to be able to see it every day and feel at home."

Essif located the plaque and carefully moved it from its previous location on the second floor to Bauman's office.

"One day I came to work, a few months after I'd started, and the facilities manager had found it and had moved it to above my door," Bauman recalls. "When I walked in, there it was, right above my own name as if it had always been there. I took a picture and texted it to my mother, and it was very moving to her."

Bauman now can reach out and touch that plaque every time she enters her office, bringing back her father's memory and reinforcing the lifelong connection she has with Tucson and the University of Arizona.

Her commitment to providing care to people with cancer is just as strong as her love for Tucson.

"What gets me out of bed every day? My patients," Bauman says. "It's being a part of a person's life when they're going through something this important. It is remarkable to me how the diagnosis of cancer helps people to marshal their strength, focus on what's truly meaningful and really participate in their own treatment – even the decision to stop treatment. The privilege of being an oncologist is being a true partner in my patient's journey."

A version of this article originally appeared on the UA Cancer Center's website.

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