***SPECIAL NOTE: Captain's Entry by Kathryn Janeway
While our "doctor" is indeed an Emergency Medical
Hologram pressed into service, his ongoing evolution due to his
adaptive programming compels me to open this file entry to
catalog his numerous contributions to our crew.
File Update: Delta Quadrant Addendum Report by Cmdr. Chakotay,
First Officer, U.S.S. Voyager
Our ship's Doctor is a holographic figure - an emergency
medical program devised by Starfleet programmers. When the ship's
doctor and entire medical staff were killed in the
"Caretaker's" displacement wave, the Doctor by
necessity became the resident physician aboard the U.S.S.
Voyager, assisted by first Paris and then Kes, a quick study in
medical training.
The program's first statement upon activation is usually
"Please state the nature of the medical emergency"; the
automatic command was altered to allow his own creativity, but
the Doctor preferred the known opening to creating his own more
clever and personable lines. Initiation is automatic upon red
alert status; the program is usually set for high magnetic
cohesion, but it can be lessened to a mere image. For security's
sake in a crisis it carries its own power grid separate from the
nominal ship's Holodeck system. His wide array of programming has
allowed him to keep Neelix alive with hologrpoahic lungs, save
the Vidiian hematologist Danara Pel via a temporary holographic
body, and even to alter DNA so as to remerge Torres' human and
Klingon halves, reform Paris and Janeway from their
retro-evolution as amphibians, and ensure the safety of Wildman's
human-Ktarian baby at birth.
The AK-1 program indeed makes the Doctor is a genius when it
comes to medicine, but his bedside manner leaves something to be
desired - although he has already come far since he was first the
joke and then the bane of the USS Voyager crew. In fact, it's
harder to tell what's evolved more: the Doctor's own
self-respect, or the respect he's given by his colleagues - with
thanks on both counts largely due to his surprise assistant, Kes
- though he still rubs Torres the wrong way and usually can't
stand Neelix. Prodded by her and the simple needs of their
predicament, Janeway has seen to it that not only is the Doctor
accorded more briefings and updates, but he can now turn himself
off - a small matter until seen in the light of independence.
Thanks to various crisis - as when Harry's Holodeck program
began "devouring" the crew and later, the Doctor has
even ventured from his familiar and all-but-mastered medical
world to real-life adventures and even fear and heartbreak
outside Sickbay. Also at Kes' urging he has considered a host of
names but most recently has tried "Schmullus," the
uncle of Vidiian hematologist Dr. Danara Pel whom he saved and
actually fell in love with, leaning on Paris and Kes for romantic
advice. The experience even prompted the Doctor to open his own
personal log on SD 49504.3, to learn to dance, and to borrow
Paris' holo-program for "parking" in an archaic '57
Chevy ground vehicle on Mars.
Due to the memory circuit degradation of extremely close
kinoplasmic radiation, an EMH malfunction occurred ca. SD 48892.1
caused by a feedback loop between the Holodeck computer and the
doctor's program, which was running a holo-novel at the time to
"relax" at the captain's suggestion. No one was
affected but the program itself, which was being convinced that
it was its human lead programmer, Dr. Lewis Zimmerman, amid a
holographic study simulation of a battle-damaged ship and crew.
Apart from the clinical and statistical notes on parenting, he
felt unqualified to help Kes with her decision on motherhood, but
she still picked him as an absent parental figure to perform the
rolisisin pre-mating ritual. He in turn took her advice to make
himself sick, literally, to better empathize with patients; his
resulting holo-version of Levodian flu lasted a day longer than
he'd intended thanks to Kes, and I think he "learned" a
helpful lesson in patience.
File Update: SD 50500 Report by Capt. K. Janeway
I never would have believed it, but our "Doctor" now
has more memory and, thanks to the 29th century, is confined to
Sickbay no more. It is taking some getting used to, but he has
only rarely been troubled by glitches in the self-powered armband
mobile emitter he wears after the time-stealing technocrat
Starling "donated" it to us.
Despite the scare he gave us when his memory overloaded and
degraded, I see no harm in continuing to allow and encourage his
exploration of humanity -- as long as it does not endanger the
crew's security and B'Elanna assures me we have the technical
support to allow it. I admit I was skeptical when we took the
chance of initializing his memory and then used the diagnostic
program to add more, but I would hope -- La Boheme divas aside --
that these experiences to come will have a mellowing effect on
his personality subroutine, which can only aide the crew on our
very long journey.
We could not get along without him, and I owe him my life more
than once - including his daring mix of diplomacy and tactics to
retrieve the Vidiians' antidote to the virus which quarantined
Chakotay and myself on a world to be left behind. His idea to
emit holographic support ships proved promising, but I must add
that I especially commend his defense of the ship with Crewman
Suder against the Kazon-Nistrim, and against the macrocosms which
we subdued together.
And while I opposed his choice, I will always remember and
respect his citing of the Hippocratic Oath to "do no
harm" when I made the difficult decision to deintegrate the
entity Tuvix into its original patterns for Tuvok and Neelix.
The sum total of all these actions increasingly only leads me
to examine our preconceived notions of life and learning.