Latest News

Push, Fail, Push Harder: Olympic Athletes Who Became MDs


 

The Volleyball Player/The Plastic Surgeon

Dr. Nnamani Silva’s journey to the Olympics was also paved with an extensive list of supporters, beginning with her parents. And she has taken that sense of collaboration, coordination, and teamwork into her medical career.

The daughter of Nigerian immigrants who came to the United States to escape civil war, Dr. Nnamani Silva said her parents embraced the American dream. “To see what they were able to do with hard work, dedication, and sacrifice, I had no choice but to work hard because I saw their example. And that love for and belief in America was so strong in my house growing up,” she said.

Dreams of practicing medicine came first. A severe asthmatic growing up, Dr. Nnamani Silva recalled having wonderful doctors. “I had so many emergency room visits and hospitalizations,” she said. “But the doctors always gave me hope, and they literally transformed my life. I thought if I could pass that on to my future patients, that would be the greatest honor of my life.”

Volleyball gave Dr. Nnamani Silva the opportunity to attend Stanford, and she took time off during her junior year to train and compete in the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. She also played for the United States at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing where the team took silver. Afterward, she continued to play overseas for several years.

At 33, and with a newborn daughter, Dr. Nnamani Silva returned to her original goal of becoming a doctor. She attended the University of California, San Francisco, and is currently a resident in the Harvard Plastic Surgery Program. She includes her husband, parents, and in-laws in this achievement, whom she said “saved” her. “There is no chance I would have finished medical school and survived residency without them.”

As a volleyball player, Dr. Nnamani Silva said she “believes in teams wholeheartedly,” valuing the exchange of energy and skill that she feels brings out the best in people. As a medical student, she initially didn’t realize how her previous life would apply to teamwork in the operating room. But it soon became clear.

“In surgery, when you harness the talents of everyone around you and you create that synergy, it’s an amazing feeling,” she said. And the stakes are often high. “It requires a lot of focus, discipline, determination, and resilience because you’re going to be humbled all the time.” Something athletes know a little bit about.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Confronting Healthcare Disinformation on Social Media
MDedge Endocrinology
A Doctor’s Guide to Relocation
MDedge Endocrinology
Medicare Rates in 2025 Would Cut Pay For Docs by 3%
MDedge Endocrinology
Does Medicare Enrollment Raise Diabetes Medication Costs?
MDedge Endocrinology
Mounjaro Beats Ozempic, So Why Isn’t It More Popular?
MDedge Endocrinology
Expanding Use of GLP-1 RAs for Weight Management
MDedge Endocrinology
Revamping Resident Schedules to Reduce Burnout
MDedge Endocrinology
Primary Care Internal Medicine Is Dead
MDedge Endocrinology
For Richer, for Poorer: Low-Carb Diets Work for All Incomes
MDedge Endocrinology
Healthcare Workers Face Gender-Based Violence
MDedge Endocrinology