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PWHL chief medical officer trades in hockey stick for a paddle at 2nd Olympics

Dr. Tina Atkinson grew up dreaming of going to the Olympics.

Now, she can check both the Winter and Summer Olympics off her bucket list.

The Nova Scotian is the doctor for the Canadian canoe/kayak team at the Olympic Games in Paris. The team began competition in slalom events on Saturday. Sprint events begin on Aug. 6.

Her selection to the team's support staff caps off a whirlwind three years for Atkinson. She was also a doctor on the Canadian women's hockey team's staff at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, and helped launch the PWHL as the league's first chief medical officer this past winter.

"For me, it's about being part of something bigger than yourself and sport, but also the people that you get to work with and spend time with," said Atkinson, who spoke to CBC Sports earlier this week from canoe/kayak team training in Le Temple-sur-Lot, south of Paris.

It's the culmination of a journey that started when Atkinson, who grew up in the small town of Shelburne on the southern coast of Nova Scotia, wrote a high school essay about wanting to become a sport medicine doctor. She played several sports in high school and competed in rugby in university, before going to medical school.

That love of sports came from her family, and that's where her love for the Olympics began, too.

Atkinson has been a sport medicine physician, family doctor and emergency room doctor in the Halifax area for more than two decades.

She was the team physician for the QMJHL's Halifax Mooseheads for more than 10 years, and also spent time as the chief medical officer with Hockey Nova Scotia.

But no experience may be more unique than being the team doctor for the Canadian women's hockey team in the middle of a pandemic inside the 2022 Olympic

Read more on cbc.ca