Worcester Business Journal

June 30, 2025-The Dog Edition

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/1536903

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 14 of 23

wbjournal.com | June 30, 2025 | Worcester Business Journal 15 THE DOG EDITION F O C U S Dr. Dickson's lifetime canine prescription BY MICA KANNER-MASCOLO WBJ Staff Writer D ogs have been imma- nently woven through- out the life of Dr. Eric Dickson, president and CEO of UMass Memorial Health in Worcester. He met his wife because of her dog, a little black lab named Q, who caught Dickson's eye at the Boston Marathon. Once married, the pair bought their first home because it came with the op- portunity to adopt the former owners' 13-year old-dog Rusty. Rusty stayed under the care of Dickson and his wife, in the home he grew up in, until he passed at age 21. Dickson's son took his first steps at six months old, propelled by the tail of one of their family pups. A self-identified introvert in an extro- vert's job, Dickson's days are oen filled with meetings, standing at podiums, and talking to elected officials. "But I don't have to put on a show for the dog," he said. "It's just unimaginable to me, not having a dog." Dickson's connection to his dogs has been strong from the get-go, with the ashes of his childhood dog Benji buried on his home property. "When I went in the Army when I was 18, the hardest part was lying on a bunk for the first time and not having a dog at my feet," he said. at's certainly no longer a concern. roughout his adult life, Dickson has almost always had at least two dogs at all times. Today, he's father to Sandy, Lars, and Moxie, along with his two cats, a 25-year-old chinchilla, and nine horses, including 46-year-old Rusty, who, coincidentally, came to the Dickson family with the same name as their beloved dog and bore a striking resemblance to him. Every morning, Dickson wakes up at 5 a.m. to feed the dogs, who then accompany him outside to feed the horses. But skipping the coffee, the breakfast, and the morning news is far from an inconvenience. "I always feel like I've already accom- plished something today. I already took care of something that's important to me today," he said. And while owning the menagerie of pets he does has limited certain aspects of Dickson's life, such as travel, it's more than worth it. "Not so many people can take care of three dogs and 12 horses and still get to work at eight o'clock, but it's a trade off I couldn't imagine making," he said. Throughout his adult life owning dogs, Dickson has almost always had a golden retriever, a yellow lab, and a black lab. Today, Dickson owns Sandy, a 14-year-old golden retriever; Lars, a seven-year-old yellow lab; and Moxie, a two-year-old black lab. W PHOTOS | COURTESY OF DR. ERIC DICKSON

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Worcester Business Journal - June 30, 2025-The Dog Edition