Accidental beauty contestant: Dr. Lizbeth de Padua was Miss Philippines 40 years ago
Jennifer MarangosSpecial to The Morning Call
"I have one message for today's youth," says Dr. Lizbeth de Padua. "Be careful what you do when you are 19 because it will come back to haunt you 40 or 50 years later."
"I have one message for today's youth," says Dr. Lizbeth de Padua. "Be careful what you do when you are 19 because it will come back to haunt you 40 or 50 years later."
It's not a typical teenage act of rebellion that is trailing de Padua in her current life as a physician with St. Luke's Neurology Associates. It's her time as a contestant for Miss Universe 1976, representing her native Philippines.
Being a former beauty queen isn't something that de Padua, a neurologist specializing in treating patients with epilepsy, has readily talked about through the years. But, thanks to the Internet, it is a part of her past that still manages to pop up.
"When I came to St. Luke's, one of our staff members said, 'Oh I Googled you and guess what I found?'" de Padua says. "You can't hide anything now. Patients now are very computer savvy. They look up their doctors before they even see them. There is really no hiding."
Last month, Miss Philippines Pia Alonzo Wurtzbach was declared the winner of the 2015 Miss Universe pageant. That fact, coupled with her own hidden agenda, prompted de Padua to begin to share her pageant story a bit more openly.
"Although I complain about people finding out about it, it is a conversational thing, and I have ulterior motives in agreeing to these interviews," she says.
"I want to bring some attention to what we are doing here at St. Luke's in caring for epilepsy patients. We have all the equipment to provide for epileptic patients in the Valley that otherwise they would have to go to Philadelphia or New York to get."
De Padua, who came to St. Luke's from a job in Minnesota about two years ago, says she was attracted to both the organization and the Lehigh Valley.
"I liked the area," she says. "It has everything you can get in a large city or that I could be interested in without all the hassles. And I liked the way that St. Luke's is being run. That sealed the deal. St. Luke's has management that is focused on doing the best for the patients and the doctors."
And it was a desire to impact patients that brought de Padua to her specialty in epileptology to begin with. When she began her residency at Temple University, she recalls, treatments for other neurological conditions such as multiple sclerosis or stroke or Alzheimer's diseasereally didn't exist.
"I realized that if I went into some specialty in epilepsy, I wouldn't just be serving myself and my interest in neurology. There was something I could do for people," she says. "It's not instantaneous. It takes months and years sometimes to get people on the right medications. But when they get better you can really make a difference in their lives. My interest may have been academic, [but] the reason I love what I do is because of the outcomes."
Her decision to enter the Miss Philippines contest was a little less thought out.
"It was really nothing that I ever planned to do," de Padua recalls. She had graduated from college that spring and was waiting to start medical school in the fall.
"I got a letter from a fashion magazine. Someone had sent them my photo and they wanted to do a story on me. I had graduated summa cum laude and I am sure that was part of the interest. The letter said to go to this beauty salon to get my hair and makeup done for the photo shoot. The owner of the salon was also a talent scout for the pageant."
He asked de Padua if she would be interested in competing for Miss Philippines, adding that he wasn't even sure it would be possible since the judges were in the process of evaluating contestants. He told her that that day, something called the "press presentation" was happening.
"That's when the candidates walk around a swimming pool and if they get a good response, they get let in. I had nothing to do that day, so I went. They let me in," de Padua said.
She enrolled in medical school in the Philippines a year later and then completed residency training in the United States.
"Winning Miss Philippines was kind of a blessing and a curse," she says. "As much as I try to downplay it now, it gave me name recognition in the Philippines. After I was done with it, every department I was in in medical school, someone said, 'Oh you are Miss Philippines.' Sometimes, it was unwanted attention.
"I met women from all over the world. It changed my life actually. Beauty pageants are a big deal over there," says de Padua, whose only regret in entering the pageant is that she feels that she didn't do such a great job representing her country at the international level.
"Entering the Miss Philippines pageant was kind of an accidental thing," she says. "I didn't serve very well. A lot of the contestants put a lot of time and effort into winning beauty pageants. Miss Universe was in July. I won Miss Philippines in May.
"I was 19 years old at the time, and a nerdy biology graduate. They gave me some lessons in how to walk and that kind of stuff. There was a lot of pressure from the whole country.
"I was the first one who had gotten the title who had a full college degree, and I had graduated with honors and everything, so everyone thought we had a good chance of winning. I had qualifications that most beauty contest winners don't have. I didn't even get to the top 15.
"If you want someone to win a beauty pageant, you need someone who is interested in winning beauty pageants," she says.
Jennifer Marangos is a freelance writer.
http://www.mcall.com/health/mc-lizbeth-de-padua-doctor-philippines-20160125-story.html
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