Dr. Brian Wirzba

Medicine wasn’t a foregone conclusion for Dr. Brian Wirzba. He grew up around clinics through his mother, a medical office assistant, but headed into biochemistry thinking medicine was a long shot. “I honestly didn’t think I’d get in,” he says. He did and mentors quickly changed the course of his life. They showed him a way to blend science with care across every phase of adult life, while teaching, leading in the system, managing inpatient and outpatient work and running a practice with real autonomy. General Internal Medicine fit his temperament. “I get bored doing the same thing for more than four hours in a row,” he admits. “GIM lets me do a bit of everything.”

Alberta was home. Born and raised here, he considered options across Western Canada after training and still chose to stay. “Alberta was the place to be in the 1990s,” he says. He also married a proud Saskatchewanite, but Alberta would anchor his practice.

The hardest part of his career hasn’t been the medicine. It’s been the system that’s supposed to support it. “The biggest challenge is the system responsible for care that often doesn’t support the frontline workers who provide it,” he says. That frustration pushed him toward leadership and advocacy, where he could help fix what wasn’t working.

Residency gave him the full sweep of Internal Medicine. He saw complex consults and everyday cases, services that work well and patients the system leaves behind. “It let me crystallize the kind of practice I wanted,” he says. The lesson that stuck most came from his mentors. They didn’t just manage diagnoses. They saw people. “Patients have families, friends, lives beyond their medical issues. That’s the key to my practice.”

He’s realistic about Alberta’s future. “Healthcare changes every year. Right now there’s uncertainty, but there’s no shortage of opportunity to care for patients or lead in a redesigned system,” he says. The test is simple: keep patient care at the center of reform.

What makes him proud is the mix he set out to build: practicing the kind of care he values, teaching the next generation and shaping local and provincial structures. “Training, practice and system impact” isn’t a slogan to him. It’s the day-to-day.

His advice to resident physicians as PARA marks 50 years is direct. “Learn all you can. Spot the frustrating parts of care and get involved to fix them. Really see your patients as fellow citizens who may be scared of what you’ll say. Treat everyone with compassion, care and comfort.” Mentors helped him hold that line and keep balance. “Medicine is a career, but life is bigger. Find the balance.”

That perspective spills into everything else. “In a divisive world, seeing people as individuals worthy of love, compassion and care makes life easier to navigate,” he says. It’s how he meets patients, teaches learners and walks through a system he’s working to improve.

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