Doc got into prosthetics back in the early Nineties, a few years after loosing his leg below the knee in a trucking accident. He always enjoyed creating things with his hands and helping people, so he was a perfect fit for fabricating prosthetic limbs. Doc says he gets special enjoyment from making the limbs our pediatric patients use to walk. A single father, he and his son love to take road trips out West, often deciding each day where to go next. Doc also has a special knack for numbers and has become better than anyone else at P & O Care at predicting our monthly billing based on the devices in fabrication. Always competitive and ambitious—and incredibly funny—Doc drives all of us to continually improve the quality of care we provide our patients.
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Friday, July 27, 2007
Technician Profile: Mark “Doc” Woodson
Doc got into prosthetics back in the early Nineties, a few years after loosing his leg below the knee in a trucking accident. He always enjoyed creating things with his hands and helping people, so he was a perfect fit for fabricating prosthetic limbs. Doc says he gets special enjoyment from making the limbs our pediatric patients use to walk. A single father, he and his son love to take road trips out West, often deciding each day where to go next. Doc also has a special knack for numbers and has become better than anyone else at P & O Care at predicting our monthly billing based on the devices in fabrication. Always competitive and ambitious—and incredibly funny—Doc drives all of us to continually improve the quality of care we provide our patients.
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