A Prescription for Faith
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"A Prescription for Faith" takes us across the world as we see the ways faith informs decisions Jose Caceres makes throughout his high pressure career in Cardiology.
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A Prescription for Faith - Jose A. Caceres, M.D.
Copyright © 2021
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Note: All biblical quotations are taken from the New Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition (NRSV)
Print ISBN: 978-1-09835-202-8
eBook ISBN: 978-1-09835-203-5
Faith is God’s work within us.
— Thomas Aquinas
Affectionately dedicated to my wife, Fe,
and
my sons, Joseph and Steven
Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Homelessness
Generalized Anxiety
Morbid Obesity
Deafness
Heart Transplants
Alcoholism
Loneliness
Hypertension
Difficult Patients
Charity
Alzheimer’s Disease
Skilled Nursing Facilities
The Unschooled
Kidney Transplants
The Ill-Favored
Marriage
Cigarette Addiction
Heart Failure
The Club of the Nineties
Temptations of the Flesh
Clinical Depression
Educating Primary Care Providers
Brain Tumors
Heart Attacks
End of Living
Epilogue
Foreword
As a newly-ordained priest, my first years were filled with the blessing of preparing many couples for their weddings and then celebrating their wedding Masses. One such couple that particularly impressed me was Dr. Jose and Fe. They were different from many other couples who just wanted to focus on the wedding day. Jose and Fe wanted to focus on their marriage and were engaged in making sure they would be the best spouses to and for one another. They had a maturity, love, and faith that was not as present in many other couples, so I looked forward to our conversations as we explored how to ensure they would have a lifetime of love, fidelity and faith. After their wedding, when I had the opportunity to visit them in their office and eventually meet their two sons, I saw this love, care, and humble service continue to be shared with more and more people. So, it is my honor to briefly introduce Dr. Caceres to you.
Growing up in his native Peru, Dr. Caceres was blessed to have the seed of faith instilled in him at the beginning of his life. Baptism planted that seed, and his family cultivated and nourished that living faith. His expression of faith was made manifest in his desire to serve others, even at an early age. As his faith grew, his desire to express that faith became even stronger. Through prayer and discernment, Dr. Caceres came to know that his vocation was to be a medical doctor.
We all have had experiences with medical doctors at one time or another. The vast majority of us experience doctors during rushed office visits limited to discussing our medical issue of that present moment. In A Prescription for Faith
Dr. Caceres, gives the reader an inside look at his vocation as a doctor and how much his faith plays an important role in his medical practice. In the call of Jesus for each of us to go out and make disciples of all nations (Mt 28:18-19), Dr. Caceres has shown us that one need not go off to a developing country to share Christ with others or have a theological degree, but that we can do it in our own daily lives. He is able, with great joy, to share the Catholic Christian faith that he has received.
Too many of us have tried to separate God from the many different aspects of our lives. This compartmentalization has led many to believe that God does not belong in our places of work. With his vision of faith and service in the workplace, Dr. Caceres shows the reader how he experiences and shares his faith in Christ in his daily work. An important factor in being able to do this begins with Dr. Caceres himself. He makes this quite clear. God has blessed him with a profound faith and that gift of faith cannot be kept to himself. It must be shared with others. Dr. Caceres is able to share his faith though patience, care, love, and above all the ability to see Christ in others. He makes it a point to look beyond a person’s physical malady, emotional distress, and even religious persuasions (or lack thereof) to see and encounter Christ in all of his patients. In doing so, the door is opened for him to share the faith he so values in his life.
From the beginning of this book to the end, Dr. Caceres provides each of us with a framework for our lives, no matter what our vocation. He has a great love in his heart for all people, but especially for those who no longer practice their faith or who have never been given the opportunity to believe. Such people make up a sadly an ever-growing group in our country, and they deserve our attention. They deserve our very best efforts. Being able to share the faith with everyone we encounter, whether at work or play, is the root of us being able to serve our fellow man.
Most Revered Timothy Freyer, D.D.
Auxiliary Bishop
Diocese of Orange in California
November 2020
Acknowledgments
I extend to the Holy Trinity my sincerest gratitude for the gift of my Catholic faith. I give my heartfelt thanksgiving for the merciful love, blessings, and graces bestowed on me to become the person I am today: no more and no less to the eyes of God. Indeed, I wrote this book to the greater glory of God, so we can recognize our Lord in the faces and lives of the people we encounter every day.
To the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of Jesus, to whom I consecrated my entire self as a teenager.
My deepest gratitude to my lovely wife, Fe Caceres, for her unconditional love and patience with me as I devoted countless weekends to the preparation of this book, over the past three years.
My heartfelt appreciation to Pope Francis, who has inspired me to find God in all things, grow in my faith, persevere in prayer, and write this book centered on Jesus.
Special thanks to my patients for the privilege of serving as their physician, and for allowing me to share their stories in this work. I am truly grateful to these generous men and women and their families for welcoming me into their homes to record detailed accounts of their lives, including their joys and sorrows.
I am indebted to Derek Yee, my dearest and most loyal friend, who always was there for me, believed in me, supported me, and hoped for the best for me. He helped me to put one word after another, from A to Z, until the book was done. Truly, this book would not have materialized without his assistance.
Thanks to my colleagues and friends at the National University of Trujillo, School of Medicine, Class XII-1976, for their inspiration and encouragement to become a caring physician.
I extend my appreciation to Ninous Poureshagh, my friend and Chief Financial Officer at Caceres Medical Group, for his timely advice, assistance, and constant motivation to steadily grow our medical practice.
Thanks to my coworkers and staff at Buena Park Heart Center for helping me to provide medical services with a genuine caring attitude for more than 27 years.
My sincerest gratitude to Most Reverend Timothy Edward Freyer, Auxiliary Bishop, Diocese of Orange, California, for his invaluable time and dedication reviewing the manuscript for this work and generously writing its Foreword.
My warmest appreciation to the people who took the time to read and review this book before publication. Special thanks to Professor Peter Kreeft. I am also grateful to my colleagues Dr. Daniel Camarillo, Dr. Michael Shepard, and Dr. Daniel Valentini. Thanks also to Gary Abel, Steve Ezell, Vaughan Herrick, Emilie Kua, Julie Vetica, and Thomas Yee.
To Fr. Ed Broom, Fr. Larry Darnell, Fr. Craig MacMahon, Fr. Patrick Moses, and Fr. David Yankauskas I extend my deepest thanks for their significant contributions to my friendship with Jesus, steadfast encouragement, and kind reviews of this written work.
My gratitude to the priests and parishioners at St. Peter Chanel Catholic Church, St. Irenaeus Catholic Church, St. Hedwig Catholic Church, and St. Pius V Catholic Church, for their fellowship and support in worshipping and serving the Lord.
Finally, I thank you—the reader—for evaluating this book with an open mind and heart. It is my fondest wish that you will find words of reassurance in your faith and love for the Lord and our brethren in its pages.
Prologue
Why do you still do it?
As a cardiologist with some 40 years in practice behind me now, I find that as the years tick on, I’m asked this question with ever-increasing frequency by the people closest to me. And as a man of 72 years of age, I’m sure the question of how I do it also features prominently in their minds. The latter I would attribute to the grace of God. As for the former—that is, why I have not yet retired to life of leisure in a quiet island paradise—well, to answer that, I must first take you back to a paradise of a different sort, the paradise of my childhood, my hometown of Trujillo, Peru.
My entry into this world was far from paradisiacal. I was born out of wedlock, and two months premature. The year was 1947, and specialized care for preterm babies was all but nonexistent, rendering my chances of survival very slim. But it would seem that God had other plans for me, as I not only survived, but later thrived in a large family of nine siblings.
My father, Antonio, was a hardworking man, the proprietor of a general merchandise store and candle factory that supported our family. Stern and demanding, but loving in his own way, he would abide neither disobedience nor laziness in his children. My mother, Celia, was a homemaker, understated yet strong, and endlessly supportive of her husband and nine children. To list the lessons I learned from these two dedicated dynamos would require a book unto itself. Papa Antonio and Mama Celia instilled in me and my eight sisters values and traditions that have quite literally lasted lifetimes.
At the core of these values lay the strong Catholic faith with which we were reared. From the start of my life, I was raised and bathed in the eternal tenets of the Catholic church, forming a relationship with God, attending mass, praying, and giving help to those in need. My father was a rector of the Cursillo de Cristiandad, and co-founder of an organization called Save our Lives, which found a family in need each week, and collected donations on their behalf. I have fond memories of visiting the homes of donors to gather food and clothing to deliver to struggling families. This helped me to identify in myself at an early age a strong desire to serve the needy. I also felt a growing desire to become more involved with the church as I grew older.
By the time I was ready to graduate from high school, my relationship with God had grown considerably. So, too, had grown my activities within the church and my yearning to help those in need. Thus, it seemed only natural that I should enter the priesthood. I sought the counsel of my father, who gave me his blessing to pursue the vocation, with the caveat that I must truly become a proper priest: I must carefully consider all that the profession entails, and be resolute in my conviction to make the necessary sacrifices. I took this advice to heart, and had an honest conversation with myself. The vows of poverty and obedience would be no trouble, I surmised, but the vow of chastity was another matter. In the end, my dream of one day starting a family led to my abandoning the notion of taking holy vows. What I would not—and indeed could not—abandon, however, was the intense yearning within me to serve.
If not as a priest, how, then, might I devote myself to helping those in need? There seemed only one clear choice: I would become a doctor. I would learn to cure the sick, to relieve pain and suffering, to minister to my brothers and sisters in Christ as an agent of healing and compassion. I considered my father’s advice once more, this time as a prospective physician. Would I be a proper doctor? Was I prepared to make the necessary sacrifices? I answered the questions without hesitation, and so I set out to study medicine.
In the pages that follow, you will learn about my journey in the field of medicine, from my education and my earliest years in the profession to the current day. More importantly, you will read about the lives of some of the countless fascinating patients I have had the privilege of treating over the years. These will be true accounts, not embellished in any way, with only the names of the patients changed, to preserve their anonymity. You will read of good times and bad times, sorrows and joys. I hope to give you a glimpse into the sides of medicine of which, perhaps, only doctors are aware.
One common thread will tie together all of our stories—one that extends far beyond the limits of medicine and touches down on the very foundation of our being: faith. You see, the very faith that drew me to a life of service has continued to