For Dr. Marcia Clark, medicine began with curiosity.
As an athlete, a musculoskeletal injury sparked an interest in how the human body performs and heals. That curiosity led her first to kinesiology and eventually to medicine.
Choosing orthopedic surgery, however, was far less straightforward.
Throughout her training, she repeatedly heard the same message: orthopedic surgery wasn’t a specialty for women. The work was too physically demanding. The hours were incompatible with raising a family. A surgical career simply wasn’t realistic.
Rather than accepting those assumptions, Dr. Clark chose to challenge them.
"My career has been, in part, a commitment to making those conversations less common for the women who come after me," she says.
Alberta was always where she hoped to build that career.
Born and raised in the province, she credits bursaries and scholarships with making her education possible. Staying in Alberta, she says, felt like a way to give something back.
Over time, that decision has only been reinforced.
Having worked in national healthcare leadership and evaluated health systems across Canada and internationally, Dr. Clark has developed a unique perspective on what Alberta has built.
She points to examples that patients may not always notice, but which meaningfully improve care, from integrated health information systems to post-operative physiotherapy that supports patients through recovery.
"These are things that take years to build," she says, "and they matter to patients in ways they may not always see."
Like many physicians, Dr. Clark’s challenges have evolved throughout her career.
Early on, balancing surgery and family life brought its own set of questions, many of them directed at her simply because she was a woman.
How do you manage children and surgery? Who cooks at home? You’re not having more children are you?
Her husband assumed the primary parenting role, providing invaluable support, but the societal expectations surrounding women in surgery remained a constant undercurrent.
Later, different challenges emerged.
While residency provides excellent clinical training, she says, it does little to prepare physicians for running a practice, managing risk, navigating governance or meeting patient expectations.
"The business and administrative side involves a learning curve that isn’t always acknowledged," she says.
One lesson has become increasingly clear over time: careers are not fixed.
"How you practice will evolve," she says. "It may expand, contract or shift direction. You have more agency in shaping that arc than it sometimes feels like you do."
Residency also taught lessons that continue to influence her practice today.
Working within highly functioning surgical teams showed her what makes collaboration successful -and what happens when it breaks down. Just as importantly, residency taught her the value of setting clear expectations: understanding goals, recognizing available resources and communicating openly.
Those lessons have remained relevant throughout her career.
Looking back, however, it is not a single event that has most shaped her approach to patient care.
Instead, it is a collection of quieter observations.
She has learned that kindness and compassion are not separate from excellent medicine; they are part of it.
She has seen how offering grace to a struggling colleague can change someone’s day.
And every patient has reinforced one fundamental truth.
"They are allowing us into their bodies and their lives at a point of real vulnerability," she says.
In surgery especially, physicians intentionally cause temporary harm in pursuit of long-term healing - a responsibility she has never wanted to take lightly.
Today, Dr. Clark believes resident physicians occupy one of the most important positions within Alberta’s healthcare system.
Residents work closest to patients, often becoming the first physician someone remembers. They also notice inefficiencies, ask difficult questions and bring fresh perspectives that more experienced physicians can sometimes lose over time.
"My message to residents is not to let training erode that habit," she says. "The system is better when people inside it are willing to ask why things work the way they do - and whether they could work better."
When asked what she is most proud of, Dr. Clark doesn’t point to a particular title or accomplishment.
Instead, she reflects on consistency.
Showing up over time.
Contributing to medicine, leadership and medical education.
Honouring the trust placed in her by patients, colleagues and learners.
She is equally proud of the patients whose lives have changed because of surgery.
"Watching someone move without pain, return to things they had given up on, get their life back after surgery - that doesn’t become ordinary."
For the next generation of physicians, Dr. Clark believes medicine offers something few professions can.
Patients invite physicians into some of the most vulnerable moments of their lives, trusting them not only with their health but with their fears, hopes and circumstances.
With that trust comes responsibility.
Not only to provide excellent clinical care, but to advocate for patients and help shape a healthcare system that better meets their needs.
"That is the privilege of this work," she says. "Not the title - but what you are trusted to do, and for whom. It is worth taking seriously."
