Graduates contribute to community

Musical medic knows the score

by Hilary Thomson
Staff writer

It was Elvis Presley who started Diane Fredrikson on the instrument she credits with helping her through medical school.

Inspired by her rock and roll hero, Fredrikson asked her parents for her first guitar when she was eight years old.

Ten years later she won fourth place in an international classical guitar competition held in Tokyo.

"Music adds balance for me," says Fredrikson, who is graduating from the Faculty of Medicine. "I need it in my life to keep me on an even keel."

Helping others achieve a more balanced life is one of her reasons for specializing in psychiatry.

A 1994 Wesbrook Scholar, she has received several scholarships for her research into schizophrenia and other psychotic illnesses. Her current study involves using a statistical method to identify how symptoms of psychotic illnesses cluster into clinical syndromes.

The results could help psychiatrists better understand what causes schizophrenia. It could also reveal symptoms shared by various mental illnesses, leading to a better understanding of them and more effective use of medications.

"Diane's persistence and excitement are quite exceptional," says her research supervisor, Psychiatry Assoc. Prof. Dr. William Honer. "And it's especially important for psychiatrists to have diverse interests that can help them relate to people."

In addition to classical guitar, Fredrickson sings and plays steel string guitar in a duo she formed in 1996 with her sister Carol, also a UBC student. Their repertoire includes blues, country swing, popular music, bluegrass and "some good old-fashioned fiddling," Fredrikson says.

Fredrikson tries to keep her musical life separate from her academic career.

"When I'm performing, it's a different persona out there," she says. "I like to keep it apart from my role as a physician."

Fredrikson enters a psychiatric residency this summer. While she plans to practise, she hopes to stay connected with a teaching hospital in order to have access to research opportunities.

Music will always be in the picture, she says.

"It's just a part of me -- I can't stop it."