Heraldnet.com
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2008 2:37 am
ADVERTISEMENT

LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
Jerry Cornfield
"Fly Paine Field" takes flight
Your town news
Julie Muhlstein
Columnist Julie Muhlstein's take on life in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Marysville Methodists glued to the Gulf
Latest gallery

The Evergreen State Fair
August 31. 2008 (34 photos)
[More Herald photos]
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Thursday
Skagit shooting victims' bodies being brought t...
Lockdown lifted at Lake Stevens schools
Marysville-Pilchuck out of lockdown; man arrest...
Wednesday


On the Kitty Hawk's last watch
Reardon keeping budget secret, some county lead...
Barista flasher charged with exposure; claims r...
Tuesday


Streets around Lake Stevens risky
Mukilteo couple to watch astronaut son blast off
Windows broken at Lynnwood parking lot
Monday


Fair's been quite a ride
Local delegates ready for GOP convention
Initiative targets illegal immigrants
Sunday


Everett lives in Scoop Jackson's shadow
On this weekend 40 years ago, Sultan really rocked
Bank records studied in Christian school sex case
Saturday
McCain's VP pick exciting to conservatives
Bothell road project will let colleges grow
Deputy is found not at fault in chase death
Friday


Local supporters are captivated by Obama's speech
'I thought I was dead,' teen rescued from Three...
More schools in state added to No Child Left Be...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Local News   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

Dan Bates / The Herald  (click to enlarge)
Everett oncologist Dr. Paul Knoll has fought cancer in his patients for decades and in himself for the past six years.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Friday, May 2, 2008

Now a cancer patient himself, Everett oncologist relucantly retires

Dr. Paul Knoll set out to be a physicist. After three years at the University of Washington, he felt a strong tug in another direction.

"I wanted to use human skills, rather than physics and math," Knoll said.

At 57, the Everett oncologist has spent his career emulating role models from his UW medical school years. With great skill and knowledge, those doctors demonstrated emotion and empathy.

A scientist compelled to serve humanity, Knoll followed their lead. He has practiced in Everett since 1981, first on his own and for years with the Western Washington Medical Group.

In Knoll's small office at the new Providence Regional Cancer Partnership, artwork has been taken down from the walls. Today is his last day on the job.

He's too young to retire, but it's time to go. Knoll is losing his own battle with the disease he has spent his professional life fighting.

First diagnosed with colon cancer in 2002, the cancer doctor has twice had the disease recur. He's had arduous surgeries and courses of chemotherapy. He is not being treated now, except for excruciating pain.

"I don't want to lose my edge as a physician," Knoll said Wednesday. "I am certainly going to miss the practice. I am grieving for it."

He is anguished over leaving his patients. "It's hard to see them at this point. They are also losing me," said Knoll, who's been helping patients in their transition to other care.

Knoll's own doctor is his Western Washington Medical Group colleague, Dr. Mark Coughenour. Being a doctor-as-patient is a revelation, Knoll said. He knows what it's like to be on the receiving end of treatment. And his cancer gives him a personal way to talk with frightened patients.

"It's been extraordinary. I have much in common with everybody else," he said. Depending on the patient, Knoll has sometimes shared that he's been through treatment. Pulling up his shirtsleeve to reveal a port under his skin used to administer medications, he said he'd tell patients, "See? I've got one."

His caring career isn't going unrecognized.

On Thursday, he'll have the community's thanks when he receives the 2008 Physician of the Year Award from the Home Care Association of Washington. The award will be presented at a luncheon at the Holiday Inn in Everett.

For more than 25 years, Knoll has been involved with Providence Hospice and Home Care of Snohomish County. He's been a volunteer medical director in what started as a grass-roots organization dedicated to helping patients die at home, with as little pain as possible. Knoll devoted hours each week to reviewing hospice cases, and wrote medication orders and even went to pharmacies when other doctors weren't available.

Joni Copeland, director of business development for Providence Hospice, said Knoll is intensely dedicated to a dying patients' right to comfort. "For his humanity, we wanted to lift him up at this time," she said.

In a letter nominating him for the award, Providence Hospice staff wrote of Knoll's cancer journey: "He now is intimately getting to know the personal and family struggles that his patients and our hospice patients are facing."

After the 2002 surgery and chemotherapy that followed his first diagnosis, Knoll thought he was free of cancer.

"It was quite a shock," he said, when the disease was found in 2006 in a lymph node in his neck. Many treatments have followed, but cancer is now in his spine and nearby tissue. While still exploring options, including Swedish Medical Center's Seattle CyberKnife Center, he knows that he may buy time, but he won't get a cure.

His case isn't typical of colon cancer, which he said often spreads to the liver and lungs. Through the years, he's seen improved cure rates. "I'm just not one of them," Knoll said. "I look much better than I feel," he added, explaining that stopping chemotherapy allowed his hair to grow back.

He has done little lately but work, come home exhausted and sleep. Knoll looks forward to spending time at home in Mukilteo with his wife, Mary, a violinist with the Everett Symphony. They met in college, and married when Knoll was 20.

They have a 28-year-old daughter studying political science at UW, and a son, 23, who'll soon graduate from the University of California, Los Angeles, in music performance. He plays the oboe.

A devotee of classical music, Knoll has an iPod loaded with favorites. He's also well enough to walk his 15-year-old sheltie, Tasha. He and his wife traveled last fall to Italy, where they love the art, food and culture.

He has two pieces of advice, one medical, the other general.

"I might have picked it up earlier if I'd done a colonoscopy at 50," he said. "Mortality is reduced a lot with early detection. It should be done at age 50, earlier if you have family history."

Enjoy life: That's another lesson Knoll learned. "You get so involved in work and activity. I wish I'd had more time to relax and have fun, to lighten up and take it easy."

Anne Hartline, a longtime Providence Everett Medical Center employee who has worked as a hospice educator, is 10 years into her breast cancer battle. When Knoll was undergoing chemotherapy, Hartline was also being treated. They sometimes sat together during long treatments at the Everett cancer center.

"He's a great guy," said Hartline, 57, of Arlington. Patients form special bonds with oncologists. "It literally is a lifeline," she said.

"Part of physician training, they don't let the private person into that," Hartline said. Letting patients know of his struggle, Hartline said Knoll is giving them a gift.

Knoll stands in awe of some of those patients.

"It's given me respect for how well they cope. It's really just hard to get through," Knoll said. "Some of those patients are tougher than I am."



Columnist Julie Muhlstein: 425-339-3460 or muhlstein@heraldnet.com.

1. Boeing Machinists vote to strike; union leaders say wait
2. Grim task of investigating Skagit County killings
3. 2 Lake Stevens schools in lockdown
4. Marysville-Pilchuck out of lockdown; man arrested nearby
5. New Glacier Peak High School dubbed 'pretty rad'
6. Boeing Machinists’ strike deferred
7. County Council says it was denied access to budget
8. Lockdown lifted at Lake Stevens schools
9. Don't miss out on settlement's payout
10. Couple's roadside lunch interrupted by attempted burglary
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Bringing the world to Edmonds
FEMA turns to media to improve public image
Annexation's frustrations
A run for Charlotte
Annexation's frustrations
Minimalist food bars have local flavor
E-W aims for fifth straight league title
Wildcats moving forward
Terrace approves stormwater rate hike
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes


ADVERTISEMENT