LAPLACE – Many current residents of LaPlace may not remember a time when medical care was not so readily available as it is today, but one man who does is Dr. S.J. St. Martin, who opened LaPlace Medical Center 50 years ago.
When he opened the clinic’s doors on July 12, 1960, much of the area was still consumed by fields, and the only doctor in town operated an office near the present-day intersection of Main Street and West Fifth Street. Two years earlier, the St. Martin Pharmacy closed. It occupied the same parcel of land where the parking lot of the LaPlace Medical Center is today.
|
|
Beverly Montz, who worked at the clinic on that first day and for 29 years thereafter, recalled many of the changes she saw throughout her years there.
“I was the receptionist, the nurse, everything,” she said.
She said at that time, the clinic was much smaller and — a sign of the time and place — segregated. Montz was quick to point out, however, that although the front of the clinic, the entrances and waiting rooms, were segregated, the examination and treatment spaces were not.
The clinic took off right from the start according to Montz. “We got plenty of patients right away.”
Appointments were nonexistent in those days, so Montz and the rest of the staff often had to put in long days, treating patients who made it through the door before 5 p.m.
“It was rough,” Montz recalled. “We didn’t have a cut off time.”
And the doctor lived across the street, so patients would sometimes knock on his door after hours. That’s all in addition to the house calls he regularly made.
“The office was really, really busy at that time. We had specialists coming in,” said Montz. “He would ask specialists to come in one day per week.”
Through the years, things around the clinic have changed, though some things never will.
“We’re still growing and very busy,” said Andrew St. Martin, adding, “We no longer deliver babies.”
He also explained that with the proliferation of specialized care as well as the presence of River Parishes Hospital, the role of the clinic has changed but its vision and level of care have not.
“Even though there are all sorts of changes, we hope to deliver good, personal care and really take care of the person,” he said.





Comments
Comment posters are responsible for the opinions they express and the accuracy of the information they provide. We urge comment writers to treat this as a public forum where manners matter. We encourage a collegial, non-insulting tone. All readers comments must be approved by our staff before posting to the Web site. Be aware, in accordance with the Communications Decency Act and provisions upheld in judicial appeal, that you are responsible for comments posted on this Web site. The L'Observateur is not liable for messages from third parties.
DO NOT POST:
* Potentially libelous statements or damaging innuendo.
* Obscene, explicit, or racist language.
* Personal attacks, insults or threats.
* The use of another person's real name to disguise your identity.
* Comments unrelated to the story.
Opinions, advice and all other information expressed in The L'Observateur reader comments represent the individual's own views and not necessarily those of L'Observateur. L'Observateur does not endorse and is not responsible for statements, advice or opinions offered by anyone other than authorized L'Observateur spokespersons.
Thank you for your comments!
Patient wrote on Jul 19, 2010 1:27 PM: