Passing the torch: Radcliffe family continues service at PNG hospital

Passing the torch: Radcliffe family continues service at PNG hospital

by | 06 Jun 2018

Ben and Katherine Radcliffe and their four children.

Jim Radcliffe served 33 years as a surgeon at Kudjip Nazarene Hospital in the Western Highlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG). When he spoke in churches during his home assignment tours in the U.S., he often said, “I hope to work myself out of a job.”

Little did Jim realize that when he and his wife, Kathy, retired at the end of 2017, it would be their son Ben who took over as the surgeon at the hospital.

Back when Ben was attending the one-room high school in Kudjip, he had his ideas about his future.

“I wanted to teach history and coach basketball,” he says. “What I didn’t want was to be a missionary or a doctor!”

That changed during his senior year when he took a course on the history of Christian missions. He read about the work of Christian Medical College Vellore, in south India, and heard God’s voice: “If I asked you to do anything, would you do it?”

Ben’s answer was yes, and he yielded to God’s call to a career in medicine. His idea then was to become a physician who would go overseas only from time to time, to relieve missionary doctors.

Two years later, during revival services at Mount Vernon Nazarene University, he felt God’s call again. This time he knew God was calling him back overseas to pursue a career as a missionary doctor.

In his junior year, Ben began dating fellow student Katherine Stevens, who told him she had experienced her call to be a missionary at age 12. They were both pre-med students. Ben graduated in 2003 and worked on campus for a year until Katherine graduated. They were married in August 2004.

They both applied to several medical schools. Eventually, Boonshoft School of Medicine at Wright State University invited Katherine for an interview. The interviewer asked, “Have any family members studied here?”

"Well, my husband applied here last year, but you didn't accept him."

The interviewer studied Ben’s file and said, “Can your husband come for an interview?”

“He’s in the parking lot—but he’s dressed in a T-shirt and jeans.”

“Tell him to come up here.”

They were both accepted and became the first married couple in the history of the school.

After obtaining their medical degrees in 2009, Katherine went on to a residency in family medicine, finishing in 2012. Ben completed his surgery residency in 2014 at Ohio State University College of Medicine where his father had studied. Following his graduation, Ben and Katherine returned to PNG to assist for several months at the Kudjip hospital. The medical college held Ben in such high esteem that they sent a quarter million dollars worth of medical hardware with him to take to the hospital.

Next, the couple applied to the Samaritan Purse’s Post Residency Program. The program funds a two-year term of service for Christian physicians and their families called to medical missions. The program has partnerships with medical facilities in many parts of the world — including Kudjip Nazarene Hospital. 

In February 2015, they got accepted and were on their way to PNG with their two boys, Simeon and Matthias.

“When I said yes to God, I didn’t think I would go back to PNG,” Ben says. “But what a thrill it was to follow God’s leading and spend two years working with Dad.”

But Ben didn't get to work at Kudjip Nazarene Hospital just because his dad was a surgeon there. Ben worked hard, earning his father's respect as a surgeon. 

"Ben's training was superb," Jim said. "He took charge of most of the surgeries, and I assisted him. He is a first-class surgeon."

Then an emergency developed when Katherine found she was pregnant with twins.

“We would have been comfortable with the Kudjip staff delivering the babies,” Ben said. “But Katherine had kidney stones and other issues that complicated matters.”

The high-risk situation required a five-month stay in Ohio for the birth of twin girls, Tabea and Naomi. They then completed their two-year appointment and returned to Ohio for further surgery for Katherine.

Ben and Katherine arrived back in PNG with their four children in February 2018. During their previous short stints in Kudjip, father and son had worked together as surgeons for nearly three years. Jim has since retired, and Ben is back on the island, working full-time as a missionary doctor.

“I am sad my parents have moved on,” Ben said. “This is a bittersweet transition, as I won’t get to work with Dad anymore. My medical ministry will benefit from my father’s reputation. Doors will open to me because of him.”

According to Jim Radcliffe, his son and daughter-in-law serve a hospital that has entered a new era.

Katherine is the coordinator of medical volunteers. She handles the scheduling of medical students and residents who come to Kudjip from around the world to do training rotations and for medical professionals who volunteer at the hospital, such as with the Samaritan’s Purse program.

Ben, like his father, has a vision of working himself out of a job. He influences the lives of dozens of medical personnel who are learning from him. Kudjip Hospital participates in a program that trains Papua New Guinean doctors who work in rural and remote areas and was recently approved as a training site for doctors specializing in general surgery.

As a doctor, Ben Radcliffe brings healing in the surgical unit. As a follower of Jesus, he lives a life glorifying his Savior.

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