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Dr. Tina Meisami - Dr. Tina Meisami | Deborah Baic/The Globe and Mail

Dr. Tina Meisami

Dr. Tina Meisami - Dr. Tina Meisami | Deborah Baic/The Globe and Mail
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Foundation provides free dental treatment to abused women

From Tuesday's Globe and Mail

“It was the only thing in life you can’t do something about,” Tina Meisami says.

The oral and maxillofacial surgeon is describing her brother’s sudden death in 2007 from cardiac arrest.

Dressed in a dark-grey pantsuit, her long hair over her shoulders, the 41-year-old Dr. Meisami is seated in the reception area of her private oral-surgery practice in uptown Toronto. The office is clean and bright, decorated with loose, colourful drawings of faces, most of them women. Behind the reception area are tribal masks she began collecting during a fellowship in Johannesburg to complete her training after graduation from the University of Toronto.

It’s clear that she is the kind of woman who believes she can do a lot about many things, if she sets her mind to it. Her practice employs seven people. She is on call every fourth night at Etobicoke General Hospital, where she is a staff surgeon, performing operations for dentofacial deformities and facial trauma.

Eight months ago, she had her first child, a daughter named Jia. Until one month before she gave birth, she was performing surgeries. She only took three months off before returning to work.

Married for three years, she met her husband, Matt Ratto, a professor in the faculty of information at the University of Toronto, online after her mother worried that she was working too hard. “How is a man supposed to find you?” her mother asked. Dr. Meisami knew what to do.

So, when her brother, Borna, died, she knew what to do then too: make something positive out of his influence on her. He was also a doctor, an orthopedic surgeon. “He was an old soul, wise beyond his years,” she says.

Two years ago, on International Women’s Day, she initiated the Dr. Borna Meisami Commemorative Foundation with four of her female dental colleagues, who have been friends since studying at U of T. They provide free dental and orthodontic treatment to abused women in the Toronto area. “Rebuild a smile, empower a woman, restore her life” is their slogan.

The first year, they identified five women in shelters they could help. Since then, two more female dentists have joined the initiative. Last year, they took on seven cases among them. The goal is to get more dental specialists involved so that more patients can be treated.

“The only way to deal with the pain of losing him [her brother] was to do something profound. The pain is inconsolable,” Dr. Meisami explains calmly and dispassionately, as though diagnosing her own emotional state and prescribing something to ease the grief.

Seated on sofas and chairs around Dr. Meisami are her colleagues, who donate their services to the foundation. Several tell the stories of the women they have treated and the transformation that ensues. “Depression and anxiety issues can sometimes be solved by doing something as simple as fixing someone’s teeth,” says Maureen Fenn, a family dentist.

Many of the patients are single mothers. “They put their children first, and they’re on the back burner,” Dr. Meisami says. “We are all care providers,” she adds, looking to her colleagues. “There’s something in all of us to want to take care of people and please others.”

She points out that “these are women who because of their situation are not used to being looked after. But this says to them, ‘I matter. My needs are relevant.’ It’s empowering them to be confident again.”

Many get jobs. They enter into healthier relationships. “The face is the centre of the human being,” Dr. Meisami explains. “People assess you by how you look. And there’s a stigma associated with someone who has teeth that are missing, discoloured or broken.”

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