| How It All Began
Milton Pediatrics and John C. “Jack” Robinson have
been together since 1967 when Dr. Robinson opened a solo practice
on Adams Street in Milton’s Lower Mills. At the same time
Dr. Robinson joined Dr. Robert N. Ganz in practice at Massachusetts
General Hospital in Boston during Dr. Ganz’s 40th year of
practice.
Following
Dr. Ganz's retirement in 1983, both practices merged to become what
is now called Milton Pediatrics. The current Boston office is now
located at 10 Hawthorne Place, adjacent to Massachusetts General
Hospital.
“It was simpler in those days,” says the native New
Yorker and graduate of Princeton University and Tufts University
Medical School. “I had a secretary, and we had one examination
room.” The practice—not yet dubbed “Milton Pediatrics”—grew
quickly: Dr. Rudy Toch, an Army colonel, had taken over the practice
of Dr. Kenneth Sands, who had died suddenly. When Dr. Toch wanted
to go to Vietnam, Dr. Robinson was left with both doctors’
patients. When a Dr. "Jack" Connolly left for Chicago,
the patient list again grew, and Dr. Robinson was joined briefly
by two associates.
By 1973, Dr. Robinson needed a partner, which he found in Dr. Allen
Lapey. The two practiced in tandem until 1983 when Dr. Lapey returned
to research and his specialty, pulmonary disease, at Mass General
Hospital in Boston.
In 1976, Dr. Robinson moved around the block to an office on High
Street, which afforded the luxury of two examination rooms. In 1978,
Dr. Lawrence Cohan joined the practice, where he remains today.
Dr. Mark Vonnegut, who left several years ago to open his own office,
also joined forces. In 1985, the doctors noticed that female patients
stopped coming for their check-ups as they approached puberty; and
responded by hiring Dr. Rebecca Niloff.
Shortly before Dr. Niloff's arrival, the practice relocated to
the renovated Gridley Bryant School Building on Willard Street in
Quincy, and briefly became Gridley-Bryant Pediatrics.
It was upon returning from a vacation that his colleagues informed
Dr. Robinson that the practice had a new name: Milton Pediatrics.
“They always did things without me while I was on vacation,”
Dr. Robinson quips.
While the practice has grown and health care has grown into a complicated
endeavor, Dr. Robinson affirms values that he learned early in his
profession: “We take time with people in the office. Patients
spend most of their time talking directly to a doctor. We see fewer
patients in a day—but that’s our style.”
The style has won loyalty from families and associates, but also
from nurses and support staff. Cathy Mahoney has managed the Quincy
office since 1973; Marlene O’Donnell has managed the Boston
Office since 1974. Other long time staff members include Sue Garrity
since 1978, Anna Lapsley since 1981, Karen Flaherty since 1986,
Sally Hanson since 1990, Annette Deagle and Terry Rivers since 1993
and Ann Marie Horrigan since 1994. Frequently the children of staff
members have filled in as office assistants to allow regular staff
members time for vacation. The cleaning staff are friends and relatives
of staff members as well.
”We have a wonderful cast of characters,” Dr. Robinson
says.
Dr. Robinson notes that at first private practice disappointed
him; his residency had presented crisis after crisis. Now, he had
so many well children that he didn’t feel needed. A month
into practice, when a month-old child was brought into the office
in a state of shock and Dr. Robinson for the first—but not
the last—time served as surrogate ambulance driver, he remembered
that even well children in strong communities suffer serious and
life-threatening illness. He’s been needed ever since.
Throughout
the years, more physicians have joined the practice, which by now
had taken up residence on Willard Street in Quincy. (The practice
kept the name, despite the geographic change.) Lisa Wong came in
1986; Carol Allfather in 1990; Pauline Pappas in 1994; David Armsby
in 1997; Heidi Shaff in 2003; Ana Markovic in 2003; and Jessica
McGovern in 2005. Dr. Allfather retired, Dr. Armsby returned to
his native West Coast in the fall of 2005, and Dr. Markovic left
the practice in the fall of 2006. With the arrival of Dr. Ben Willwerth
in December 2005 and Dr. Jin in 2006, the number of physicians returned
to nine. In February of 2006, the Quincy office relocated to the
Blue Hills Medical Center at 340 Wood Road in Braintree. In August
of 2007, Milton Pediatrics welcomes Dr. Scott Paul.
“Taking care of the children and grandchildren of patients
has been extremely rewarding. The loyalty of the staff and the great
quality of our physicians have made this practice a pleasure.”
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