April 26, 2024

Athens News

News in English from Greece

Matina Pagoni’s personal life: her husband, the decision not to have children, and why she became a doctor

Sometimes, seeing “official” faces constantly flashing on the screen, one involuntarily wonders: what is their personal life, who they really are on the other side of the screen. This time the interview was given by Matina Pagoni, President of the Association of Physicians of the Hospitals of Athens and Piraeus (EINAP), revealing very interesting information about herself.

In an interview with the host of ANT1, Ms. Pagoni mentioned why she is “childfree” (i.e. her decision not to have children) as well as her personal life.

“I’m married. Except my husband prefers to keep a low profile. He does not want popularity, he does not do PR, he listens to the news normally until I appear on the screen. When he sees me, he criticizes and sometimes very harshly, it’s true, – said Matina Pagoni, continuing, – My choice not to have children was a conscious one. From the moment I started to practice medicine and build a career, my thought was and is that when you want to have a child, it should be raised by parents and especially their mother.

“Therefore, when I “went headlong” into medicine and began to be away from home for many hours, I realized that it makes no sense to give birth to a child and give it into the hands of some unknown woman (nanny) or push it to grandmother. The child needs his mother. This is how I was brought up: to be responsible for all my actions myself and not to shift anything to others. It was my honest decision. My husband also accepted my views after we discussed it,” she stressed.

The President of EINAP also mentioned the first meeting with her husband. “I was in Lemnos after graduation, in practice. My future husband was the director of the Pathology Clinic, a hospital that I took over from the very first day I arrived on the island.”

She admitted that she decided to become a doctor when, at the age of 7, she visited her father in the intensive care unit of the hospital, who had health problems.

“I was seven years old and I wanted to see my dad. I cried in the hospital, so the head of the department said that he would take me to him, but asked me not to cry. He told me to be brave and stay calm, and I agreed. I did not understand what was there, I thought he would speak to me, and I would kiss him. I asked the doctor if my father would get better, and the answer was that “he is here to treat patients well.” Then I told him that I would also become a doctor in order to treat people well.

I didn’t cry… But when I went home, I started to get hysterical, my body had to go through this whole nightmare, the sick people I saw, those who were suffering from help, who were on the verge… Everything that I said later at home to my relatives, so it is that “I will become a doctor.”

It was purely my personal experience that made me make this decision. I still have those images. Traumatic experience. Children should not be allowed into the ICU,” Matina Pagoni said.

What does she say about the threats that she received repeatedly

“I received threats … I was worried … But when you decide to go on public display, to speak on television, calmness is required here. If you feel very insecure, you go to the police, otherwise you answer calmly. I talk to negative people on my cell phone, and if at first they insulted me, now they recognize me.

I think we will spend Easter in the country. We will continue to vaccinate, there is a new protein vaccine for those who say they are afraid of others. The incidence rates will gradually decrease, we will cope with Omicron. But we kindly ask citizens to get the third vaccination,” Ms. Pagoni summed up her speech.



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