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Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
John Monson
60 episodes
1 week ago
Surgeons from around the world talk about their life in a free ranging conversation that covers much more than their professional story. It’s called ”Stuff that Matters” for a reason because we hear their thoughts on life priorities, defining events, mentors and how they want to be remembered when it’s all done. After all, there is more to life than work!!
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Mental Health
Health & Fitness
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All content for Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters is the property of John Monson and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Surgeons from around the world talk about their life in a free ranging conversation that covers much more than their professional story. It’s called ”Stuff that Matters” for a reason because we hear their thoughts on life priorities, defining events, mentors and how they want to be remembered when it’s all done. After all, there is more to life than work!!
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Mental Health
Health & Fitness
Episodes (20/60)
Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Ashok Pathak - from India to East Yorkshire and a career in Surgery, Cricket and Giving Back
Ashok Pathak from Hull in the UK, recently retired after a wonderful career as an Orthopedic Surgeon and leader in the creation of a career pathway for the Associate Specialty grade trainees. Born and educated in India where his father was a chest physician and a man who taught the values of giving back to those in need. The family established a hospital to treat Tuberculosis - almost endemic in the early 1950's - and it grew to 150 beds at one point in time. All the treatment was totally free and Ashok still runs the charity today. As a young Indian man, cricket was very important to Ashok to because a wicketkeeper and batsman playing first class cricket for his University and State. A passion for him as a young man, this is still his first love today and he has travelled to world watching many test matches live. However, medicine (and surgery) was an even bigger draw so he moved to the UK and has basically spent almost all of his career in East Yorkshire - where we first met in 1993. During this interview, he describes the career challenges, casual (and not so casual) career racism he faced in the early days and the work he ultimately did as an advocate for parallel trained doctors within the NHS. He was awarded the MBE for his services to medicine in England and India. Here is a man who understands the important things and values in life. Family, kindness, caring for those in need - truly #stuffthatmatters Don't forget, if you prefer to watch rather than listen, the full interview is available on the @youtube channel for #Surgeonslives #cricket #surgery #givingback #racisminsurgery #nhs #yorkshirecountrycricket #othopedicsurgery #familybusiness #charitymatters https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashok-pathak-243bb861/?originalSubdomain=uk http://cricketbeyondboundaries.com/india-hull-medicine-cricket-and-charity-an-anglo-indian-affair/ https://indianexpress.com/article/news-archive/print/indianorigin-surgeon-honoured-with-mbe-in-uk/?ref=archive_pg  
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1 week ago
52 minutes

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Matt Weiss talks career, changing direction and fixing cancer care from within a big system
Matt Weiss is the deputy physician in Chief and Director of Surgical Oncology at Northwell Health Cancer Institute. He is an internationally recognized surgical oncologist with a special interest in pancreatic cancer and particularly interested in outcomes and matters of quality. His early career followed a very traditional academic pathway culminating in a long period on Faculty at Hopkins where his senior mentor was Dr. John Cameron. As everyone knows, there is an expectation that Hopkins surgeons will become a Chair of a university department so it was a surprise for many when Matt changed direction and joined Northwell Health a few years ago. As he describes in this fascinating interview, he was unable to resist the opportunity of improving cancer outcomes from within a large system like Northwell Health that cares for so many lives. Of course, he's still harbors ambitions on the academic front and believes that one day he will become a Chair when the time is right. But for now he is passionately engaged in the vision of a system approach. Of course, there is more to this man than his surgical career. A worryingly, good golfer, he is a lapsed fisherman and overcame his midlife crisis by buying a Porsche. He is also a fan of the Rolling Stones. Don't forget to like and subscribe to the channel and send your comments. If you prefer to watch rather than listen, then this interview is available the #surgeonslives @YouTube channel. https://www.northwell.edu/find-care/find-a-doctor/dr-matthew-john-weiss-md-1568416618 https://x.com/surgeonweiss https://www.linkedin.com/in/matt-weiss-b1155a6/ #northwellhealth #pancreaticcancer #Hopkinssurgery #academicsurgery #research #surgeryrecovery #cancer #rollingstones #fishing #familytime  
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3 weeks ago
58 minutes

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Samir Pathak talks about surgery, racism, cricket and charity
Samir Pathak is an HPB surgeon from Leeds in the UK. The family business has been medicine for several generations, but he has also been brought up immersed in the Indian culture of cricket - and in his family's case charity. n this truly fascinating interview, he discusses his early surgical career and training. This was impacted by having undergo multiple operations before the age of 10. He also describes another family passion which is cricket -where he almost made the first class level. A truly challenging experience for him was being asked to Chair a committee, investigating the accusations of institutional racism in Yorkshire County Cricket Club. To call that task, a poisoned chalice would be an understatement, but he speaks quite openly about the experience, both good and bad, including the inevitable frustrations of political interference and how it has guided his future approach in his work life as well as outside. His grandfather and father have been involved in a tuberculosis treatment charity in India which is still helping people today. For his part, Samir has established a charity that brings the most under privileged children possible to the UK within a cricket environment in a way that truly changes the direction of their lives. This is not the typical interview from Surgeons Lives, but I think you will find it fascinating and I hope you will agree that Samir has established a very high bar to be admired. If you prefer to watch rather than listen, don't forget that the full interview is available on the #Surgeonslives #YouTube channel. Please don't forget to like and subscribe and comment about this interview. https://yorkshireccc.com/news/club-statement-2/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/samir-pathak-08525236/ https://x.com/drsampathak?lang=en #surgeryrecovery #racism #cricket #pancreaticcancer #neilsmart #research #surgery #surgeonslives #stuffthatmatters #charity #givingback #familybusiness  
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1 month ago
55 minutes

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Sherry Wren - Stanford Surgeon talks about Humanitarian Surgery, No longer being the Bridesmaid, Sci-Fi and Diving
Dr. Sherry Wren is a Professor of of Surgery at Stanford in California but in this interview with Surgeons Lives it's evident that she is a lot more than that. An early career was spent chasing the academic pinnacle of being a Department Chair, but after a number of years of always being the bridesmaid and never the bride, she experienced an epiphany that made her realize that this was no longer the most important thing to her in life. Today, she remains a busy and active clinical surgeon over the last decade or more, her real passion has developed in the arena of global and humanitarian surgery. She started by making brief visits to conflict zones around the world providing direct clinical care, but soon realized that teaching people how to deliver care was far more beneficial as a long-term investment. She continues with this passion today. During the conversation today, we hear about her early experiences growing up in Chicago, pursuing a profession with very few women in sight and her personal enthusiasm for sci-fi literature, good food, and regularly spending time on dive boats in exotic locations such as Indonesia. Don't forget if you prefer to watch rather than listen, this entire interview and all the others from this series can be found on the dedicated @Youtube channel @surgeonslives. Please also don't forget to like, subscribe and comment to the channel so that we can see your feedback. #globalsurgery #scifi #americancollegeofsurgeons #humanitariansurgery #surgery #leadership #academicsurgery #womeninsurgery #lifestyle #careerambition #departmentchair https://www.facs.org/for-medical-professionals/news-publications/news-and-articles/bulletin/2022/nov-dec-clinical-congress-2022-highlights/sherry-m-wren-md-facs-fcs-ecsa-elected-as-acs-secretary/ https://stanfordhealthcare.org/doctors/w/sherry-wren.html https://www.linkedin.com/in/sherry-m-wren/    
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3 months ago
58 minutes 2 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Lord Ara Darzi - Part 2. Life after Government, Mistakes made and where to now for the NHS
Latest episode of #surgeonslives #stuffthatmattersAgree with him or not, it cannot be denied that Lord Ara Darzi has definitely seen under the hood at the inner working of central government when it comes to setting policy and the delivery of healthcare within the UK. In this - the second episode with Ara - he describes how he came to become part of Government for two years, taking him away from a spectacular career as an academic surgeon with an amazing flare for innovation and thinking outside the box. Since that time, he career has gone from strength to strength as he has undertaken a whole raft of different initiatives covering global health, technology and most recently, antimicrobial resistance.Thankfully for him, Ara has learnt to tune out the noise that comes with such high profile roles and avoid distractions that always try and divert his focus from the target ahead.A modest and respectful man if you have any interest in the world of healthcare, you could be well advised to listen to some truly profound and insightful comments about what has and has not gone well in the last few decades and where the future lies to right the ship again.Also available as a full video option on the #Surgeonslives YouTube channel @Surgeonslives https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ara_Darzi,_Baron_Darzi_of_Denhamhttps://www.imperial.nhs.uk/consultant-directory/ara-darzihttps://royalsociety.org/people/ara-darzi-11300/#innovation #artificialintelligence #surgery #politics #antimicrobialresistance #research #leadership #nhs #darzilord #healthcareinnovation
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3 months ago
56 minutes 1 second

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Lord Ara Darzi talks about Innovation, learning politics and being fearless.
This is the first of two episodes during which I have the chance to interview Professor Ara Darzi - or Lord Darzi as he became when he entered the House of Lords in 2007. Ara Darzi was born in Baghdad to Armenian parents and after high school education entered medical school in the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in Dublin. After graduation and surgical training in Ireland, including a research fellowship, he moved to London shortly thereafter where he began his career initially as an NHS consultant once he had completed his training. In the early 1990s I had the privilege of working with Ara as I was also newly on staff at Imperial College in Saint Marys Hospital medical school in London. There, Ara first demonstrated his extraordinary talents for surgical skill and innovation in many areas of technology. Within a decade, he had risen through the ranks to become the Chair of Surgery at Imperial College and the future was definitely looking bright. In 2006, he was asked by a health minister to undertake a review of the NHS within LONDON. Around this time he had received a Knighthood and then unexpectedly was invited by the Prime Minister at the time, Gordon Brown, to join his government of all talents. Two years as a health minister was an extraordinary experience, but enough for someone who did not wish to spend his life in mainstream politics. Instead, he has sat in the house of Lord's as an independent life peer and become a global figure in the world of health innovation and disruptive technology. I cannot think of many surgeons whose career has spanned such an extraordinary breath of achievements. As much as anything else, this is why I decided that this interview should be in two parts. Please don't forget to like and subscribe to the channel so you receive all the notifications. I have no doubt many people will have some comments about Lord Darzi and I would love to hear them. If you prefer to listen rather than watch, then don't forget that the full audio of this interview is on all your favorite podcast audio platforms. #innovation #collaboration #surgery #research #robotics #medicalpolitics #houseoflords #laparoscopysurgery https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ara_Darzi,_Baron_Darzi_of_Denham https://www.flagshippioneering.com/people/ara-darzi https://www.imperial.nhs.uk/consultant-directory/ara-darzi https://royalsociety.org/people/ara-darzi-11300/ https://www.theguardian.com/society/article/2024/jul/11/prof-lord-ara-darzi-surgeon-nhs-review  
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4 months ago
48 minutes 43 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Dr. Gerry Fried on technology, leadership, travel, innovation - and much, much more
Dr. Gerry Fried is the former Chair of the Department of Surgery at McGill University in Montreal and is now leading the Department's initiatives in the technology and innovation space as well as surgical simulation. In this very wide ranging interview, he touches on a whole gamut of topics ranging from the benefits of travel in terms of surgical education, having crucial conversations with badly behaved or failing colleagues, the development of innovation under pressure and the inevitable intrusion of technology into the daily life of surgeons and their patients. He recognizes that while technology can be incredibly beneficial, there are also downsides to some recent developments. This is a man who has been there and done most of it and there's very little he hasn't seen throughout a long and distinguish career. At 75 years of age, he is thoroughly enjoying his work and finds great excitement in new initiatives. He continues to travel the world widely seeking out extraordinary culinary experiences. If you prefer to watch rather than listen, then don't forget that this full interview is available on the @Surgeonslives channel on @Youtube. Please don't forget to like and subscribe to the channel so you will get all the notifications. I also want to hear your comments and thoughts about this and other interviews. https://www.mcgill.ca/generalsurgery/gerald-m-fried https://ca.linkedin.com/in/dr-gerald-fried #surgicalinnovation #retirementplanning #academicsurgery #artificialintelligence #podcast #leadershipskills #badbehevior  
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5 months ago
55 minutes 26 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Mark Talamini discusses overseas experiences, changing careers and disruptive technology
Dr. Mark Talamini leads the physician employment group in the Northwell Health system. He spent many years in Academic Surgery rising through the ranks in Johns Hopkins before serving as Department Chair in the University of California, San Diego and then Stony Brook University before joining Northwell in 2021. In his early career, he spent some clinical time overseas in Bangladesh and then Ireland. He was there at the very beginning of minimally invasive surgery performing the first laparoscopic cholecystectomy in Hopkins. In recent years, he has transitioned into a fundamentally administrative and executive leadership role and has much to say on how to improve the daily well-being of employed surgeons and other physicians. He is optimistic about reducing the drudgery that faces so many physicians on a daily basis. If you prefer to watch rather than listen, then don't forget that this interview is available on the desiccated YouTube channel. Please don't forget to like, subscribe and comment on this and any other interviews on the channel. #academicsurgery #leadership #artificialintelligence #physicianwellness #burnout #surgery #minimallyinvasivesurgery #laparoscopysurgery https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-talamini-17150027/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Talamini https://talks-with-talamini.podbean.com https://x.com/talaminidoc?lang=en  
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6 months ago
57 minutes 16 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Steve Schwaitzberg talks being a pilot, academic surgery and SAGES education
Steve Schwaitzberg is a foregut and endocrine surgeon who is also the Chair of Surgery at the University of Buffalo in upstate New York. However, he originally wanted to be a pilot, but his eyesight wasn't good enough so somebody said you should go to medical school. He only became interested in surgery when his original choice of internal medicine was derailed by falling out with one of his supervisors. Sometimes it is a game of chance! Medical school and residency in Baylor in Texas exposed him to arrange of iconic figures and mentors in Surgery which set him on the path towards a research fellowship studying hypothermia. Back in his hometown of Boston he then decided to join the army reserves and found himself involved in Desert Storm where he realized that minimally invasive techniques such as laparoscopy could make a real difference for wounded soldiers. Fast forward a decade or more and in 2015 he moved to Buffalo while moving upwards through the ranks of SAGES, where he ultimately became President. In this interview, we learn a lot about how mentors affect a career path and how so much of it was not planned. This is a man who believes passionately in giving back through education and assisting those who need help developing their career. If you prefer watching rather than listening, don't forget that the full episode is available on the @Surgeonslives YouTube channel. Don't forget to like and subscribe and please send comments and suggestions. https://medicine.buffalo.edu/faculty/profile.html?ubit=schwaitz https://x.com/schwaitzberg https://www.linkedin.com/in/steveschwaitzberg/ #sages #surgeryeducation #endocrinesurgery #laparoscopysurgery #academicsurgery #givingback  
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6 months ago
1 hour 5 minutes 13 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Mark Orloff talks transplanted surgery and famous family
Dr. Mark Orloff is a professor of surgery at the University of Rochester Medical Center in upstate New York. He's been there for 34 years on Faculty and is coming up to retirement. He was born in Germany, where his father was in the military and moved around a bit before landing in San Diego, where he spent most of his early life in a beach style community living the southern California dream. He grew up in a family of six siblings that produced several surgeons, including his sister Susan, who is also a liver transplanter. His father was Chair of Surgery in San Diego and was something of a legend in the world of HPB surgery. So, as you can imagine, he understands the challenges, both good and bad, growing up in the shadow of a famous father. His remarkable mother essentially brought up the kids in many respects before returning to a new career as a diagnostic radiologist in her 50s. Mark has much to say about almost all of these aspects of his life and upbringing, as well as commenting on where he sees the future of organ transplantation. This is an interview that you will not want to miss as he brings much wisdom to the discussion. Don't forget to like and subscribe to the channel, and if you prefer to watch rather than listen, don't forget you can find the full interview on the #surgeonslives YouTube Channel. #orloff #livertransplant #URMC #surgery #lifestyle #livingwithalegend #siblingrivalry
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7 months ago
1 hour 1 minute 16 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
John Alverdy - from Jazz music to the microbiome
Dr. John Alverdy is a professor of Surgery at the University Of Chicago who is probably best known in recent years for his extraordinary work on the microbiome and how it may relate to anastomotic leaks. He is a true surgeon scientist, following a path of scientific rigor that most of us could only imagine. He has been NIH funded for a quarter of a century and despite recently retiring from operating, he continues to run his lab three days a week - and more as he sees fit. His early career was anything but conventional having started in medical school in Guadalajara in Mexico before returning for his residency training in his hometown of Chicago. He spent a research fellowship with Dr. George Sheldon in San Francisco before going on Faculty back at the University of Chicago where he has been ever since. Although he perhaps didn't recognize it in himself, his early mentors spotted his intelligence and determination to pursue a scientific career. Throughout the years, there has been so much more to this man than laboratory experiments and clinical surgery. He is something of a musician and is equally fascinated with the mathematical complexities of a solo by John Coltrane as he is by mapping the interactions of the gut microbiome. During this interview, he has quite a lot to say about the challenges facing any surgeon wishing to pursue a research career and how it is perhaps becoming more and more difficult every year. If you prefer to watch rather than listen, then don't forget that this interview is available on all the #SurgeonsLives YouTube channel. Don't forget to like, subscribe and comment on the interviews as much as you like. #microbiome #anastomoticleak #surgicalresearch #NIHfunding #herbiehancock #johncoltrane #chicago #universityofchicago https://mmp.bsd.uchicago.edu/steering-committee/john-alverdy/ https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/John-C-Alverdy-39796247 https://www.castleconnolly.com/top-doctors/john-c-alverdy-surgery-82cc015288 https://www.uchicagomedicine.org/forefront/surgery-articles/surgeon-receives-prestigious-award-for-groundbreaking-clinical-research  
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8 months ago
56 minutes 11 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Patrick Borgen MD talks Breast Cancer, Royalty, Brooklyn and Dirtbikes
Patrick Borgen is the Chair of the Dept of Surgery at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn New York. He also heads-up the breast program which he has developed into the only accredited breast center in Brooklyn serving over 3 million people. Although he was born in South Dakota on a military base, he grew up in Louisiana, where he went to medical school and did his residency before moving for a Research Fellowship to Memorial Sloan Kettering in New York. He spent almost 20 years at Memorial rising to the position of Chief of the breast service. About 10 years ago, he moved to Brooklyn, and in this conversation, he describes the culture shock of moving from an ivory tower facility full of the rich and famous to a borough where more than 50% of the patients are either under insured or have no insurance at all. Despite that, he hasn't regretted his move for a moment and tells us about the challenges and fulfillment of working in such a setting. When he goes home at night to his farm in New Jersey he can have fun with his dirt bikes or go out fishing in his boat. He also has a 1970s triumph sports car to take him on country drives. In a thoroughly illuminating talk with a man who almost certainly qualifies as a polymath, he talks about the changes he has seen in breast cancer management, his brushes with royalty and celebrity as well as where he sees the future of cancer medicine is going. Please don't forget to like and subscribe to the channel and send any comments you may have. Also, if you prefer watching rather than listening, this interview is available on the usual YouTube channel. #maimonides #breastcancer #academicsurgery #memorialsloanketting #Brooklyn #dirtbikes #louisiana https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/provider/dr-patrick-borgen-1700860301 https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrick-borgen-5080831b9/ https://youtu.be/cg6WGYzUP7A?si=pQJDFtTeUpeMS8Yv  
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9 months ago
1 hour 19 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Neil Smart - Surgeon and Unexpected Patient
Professor Neil Smart is a consultant colorectal surgeon at the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital in the UK. He's best known for his clinical interests in rectal cancer, hernia prevention and treatment as well as abdominal wall reconstruction. He is one of a modern generation of clinical academics despite not working in what was traditionally considered to be the main academic centers in the big cities of the UK. Since 2019, he has been the editor-in-chief of Colorectal Disease and along with his research portfolio and editorial work. It seemed that life couldn't be better. At that point, however is life was turned upside down with the sudden appearance of dysphagia while attending a surgical conference in Turkey. The diagnosis of a locally advanced esophageal cancer soon followed and before long he was in the midst of intensive neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy, and finally a radical esophagectomy. In this truly, fascinating and inspirational conversation Neil discusses many aspects of his career pathway before focusing on the unexpected events of 2024 and how he has managed to deal with the transition from being surgeon to a patient with a life-threatening disease. Please don't forget, if you prefer watching rather than listening, this and all the other episodes of Surgeons' Lives can be found on YouTube #surgeonslives #stuffthatmatters #esophagealcancer #colorectaldisease #mortality #lifechangingevents #cancer #whyme @neil_j_smart on X https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=VGI6Q0MAAAAJ&hl=en  
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9 months ago
1 hour 5 minutes 42 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Oscar Traynor Talks Transplant
Professor Oscar Traynor is currently the Director of International Surgical Training Programs at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. He was born and grew up in Dublin and having originally wanted to be an airline pilot, he found that he was unexpectedly unable to pursue this career and so entered medical school to "see what I was like". He was soon sufficiently mesmerized by Medicine to pursue a career in Surgery. As part of his training, he spent a year in London, where he encountered the late Professor Leslie Blumgart, who became a fiercely, loyal mentor and ultimately good friend throughout his entire career. So it was that Oscar decided to pursue the relatively new specialty of liver surgery and he spent another year in fellowship with Professor Henri Bismuth in Paris. Returning to Dublin in 1987 he started not only his consultant career but also a long journey to create a liver transplant program for the country of Ireland. Naturally this was not without some bumps in the road but over the next quarter century it turned into the success story it is today. During the same timeframe, he developed an interest in surgical training and became Dean of Postgraduate Surgical Training at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. He held this post for 23 years during which, he was responsible for the introduction of formal skills lab training through simulation and the development of human factors training. In a fascinating interview, he has much to say about the challenges of creating a new program and the need for partnership and collaboration to achieve success. His grandfather, after whom he was named, was a famous and prominent politician in the early 20th century in Ireland and would certainly look on the achievements of the 21st-century Oscar with both fascination and pride. Don't forget, if you prefer to watch these interviews, the entire series is available on YouTube. https://www.rcsi.com/dublin/news-and-events/news/news-article/2021/10/professor-oscar-traynor-awarded-honorary-fellowship-of-american-college-of-surgeons https://www.linkedin.com/in/oscar-traynor-82a34225/?originalSubdomain=ie https://www.rcsi.com/people/profile/otraynor  
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10 months ago
59 minutes 6 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Pat Sylla on being better
Dr. Pat Sylla is the current Division Chief of Colon and rental Surgery in Mount Sinai in New York. She was born in Paris, grew up in the Ivory Coast in West Africa, and went to college and medical school in the US. She also completed her residency and fellowships in colorectal surgery and minimally invasive surgery. She's probably best known as one of the great innovators in surgical technique, including TaTME which she developed while in Boston at MGH. Because of her cosmopolitan background, she has a world view on some of the issues facing surgeons, women, and indeed herself as she reflects on how she can give back to the world that formed her as a young child. During this fascinating interview, she describes how her first experience of finding a mentor was a complete failure, and how she has managed the challenges of being a black surgeon, female, and with a funny accent as well. She's been hugely successful in the world of surgical academia and subspecialties societies having recently completed a highly successful year as president of SAGES while spending as much time as possible with her two growing boys - is there nothing she cannot do we ask ourselves. This interview is appearing on her 50th birthday, which should give you some idea of how extraordinarily successful she has been in a relatively short period of time. Of course, if you prefer to watch rather than listen, the entire interview is available on Youtube as usual. https://www.linkedin.com/in/patricia-sylla-md-facs-fascrs-540487240/ https://health.usnews.com/doctors/patricia-sylla-588117 https://x.com/patsyllamd  
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10 months ago
57 minutes 5 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Steve Stain - from Pus to President
In this latest episode of Surgeons Lives, Steve Stain recalls his journey from infancy in San Antonio, Texas, to growing up near Fresno in California and entering College and Medical School.   He certainly started with the basics, draining pus for his boss in a drug abuse practice. He describes being supported by some outstanding mentors in his early residency and guided into a career in Academic Surgery that proved extremely successful. Faculty jobs in California and Tennessee led him to be recruited as Chair of Surgery in Albany, New York, and for more than a decade it was a marriage made in heaven. However, times change, and when leadership vision shifted it was time to move on to his next adventure. The last few years has seen him, become Chair of Surgery at the Lahey Clinic in Massachusetts, where he describes himself as in many respect, a middle ranking manager! However, we all know that that's understating his contributions to Surgery, and to supporting his colleagues. His story of being supported by multiple mentors in the early stages of his career is important because it's informed the way he supports young surgeons in his career as a surgical leader. Don't forget to like, subscribe and comment on the video and if you prefer to listen rather than watch, then don't forget that this interview is on all your favorite podcast channels #surgeonslives #stuffthatmatters #mentorship #laheyclinic @americancollegeofsurgeons #americansurgicalassociation #children #familylife #drainingpus https://www.lahey.org/news-stories/all-news-stories/news/2021/02/steven-stain-md-named-lhmc-chair-of-surgery https://www.facs.org/for-medical-professionals/news-publications/news-and-articles/acs-brief/may-9-2023-issue/dr-steven-stain-acs-regent-is-the-new-asa-president/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/steven-stain-7b03b88/ https://www.castleconnolly.com/top-doctors/steven-c-stain-surgery-  
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11 months ago
59 minutes 38 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
David Linehan - From Boston Irish to Dean and CEO
David Linehan MD is the current Dean and CEO of the University of Rochester School of Medicine and the Medical Center. He grew up in Boston having lost his father as a toddler. Despite living in the tough streets of Dorchester - Whitey Bulger and all that stuff - he learned that education and hard work would lead him to a better life. Academic achievement took him through College and the Medical School necessary to become a surgeon. A Surgical Oncology Fellowship at MSKCC in New York was the final step to establishing a successful early career as a surgeon scientist at Wash U in St. Louis where he became known as a pioneer in novel therapies for pancreatic cancer. Rochester called and a decade as the Chairman of Surgery prepared him well for the latest step upwards to the world of Institution leadership and all that involves. In this interview, he takes us through his early life in Boston attending school with the Bulger kids - the same school that became the epicenter of the Catholic Church scandal powerfully portrayed in the movie "Spotlight". He talks about hitting the mentorship jackpot and what changing career directions is likely to involve. Fascinating stuff to hear - or indeed watch on the @Youtube channel @surgeonslives  Don't forget to Like and Subscribe please!! #leadership #surgeonscientist #academicsurgery #surgeonslives #pancreaticcancer #surgicalresearch #worklifebalance #surgery #hobbies #mentorship #becomingadean #spotlight #whiteybulger #Boston #bostonirish https://www.rochester.edu/newscenter/david-linehan-named-ceo-of-university-of-rochester-medical-center-576112/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-linehan-urmc/
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1 year ago
57 minutes 26 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Gill Tierney - Surgeon, educator and chatty woman has much to say.
Latest episode of #Surgeonslives #Stuffthatmatters has landed with an interview with another surgeon from the UK   Gill Tierney is a force of nature. A general and colorectal surgeon who works in the midlands of the UK she rose to become the second woman elected President of the Association of Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland. By her own admission she has never been afraid to speak out and is generally a chatty person - but one who specializes in connecting people who might do great things together. She has clear views about the gender challenges in modern surgery - but they might be different to the obvious perhaps? Married to another colorectal surgeon, she certainly understands the work-life balance dilemma and wants to see that expand far beyond gender choices. Female mentors, worrying about old white males, pieces of life advice and how to change the NHS are all discussed here in a fun ride through a career. Don't forget, if you prefer to watch rather than listen, the interview is available on my @surgeonslives channel on @Youtube Please like, subscribe and send some comments to the channel. #surgeonslives #stuffthatmatters #darzireport #asgbi #acpgbi #worklifebalance #femalesurgeons #burnout #lifestyle #genderequality #workforceintelligence #surgery #surgeon #surgeryeducation #lookslikeasurgeon https://www.asgbi.org.uk/about-us/surgical-leaders-in-management-slim/gillian-tierney
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1 year ago
55 minutes 44 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Nat Soper - Surgeon, Innovator and Dinosaur
Nat Soper is one of the best known laparoscopic surgeons worldwide. He was there at the very beginning and was definitely one of the true innovators in laparoscopic, minimally invasive, natural orifice surgery. He is currently the Chair of Surgery at Banner health in Phoenix, but that was never his intention! He describes in this interview, a stellar career culminating in being Division Chief at Northwestern in Chicago, where he was for more than a decade before it was suddenly decided that he was surplus to requirements without warning. Not very many surgeons are willing to speak openly about such dramatic life change, so don't miss this opportunity to hear his views on the stresses and traumas of having to make a life change that was definitely not planned. If you prefer to watch, then this interview is available on @Youtube @Surgeonslives. Please don't forget to like and subscribe and send us comments. https://phoenixmed.arizona.edu/surgery/soper https://uacomp.resoapps.com/RA122001-Nathaniel_J._Soper/biography/index.hml https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathaniel-soper-2a0bb61b7/   #sages #employment #gettingfired #selfdoubt #medicalpolitics #surgery #lifestyle #lifestress #worklifebalance #mentorship #laparoscopicsurgeon #robotics  
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1 year ago
51 minutes 3 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Tom Watson talks about past days training models, malignant culture and stoicism
Tom Watson is a thoracic surgeon of excellence and works at Corewell Health in Michigan. A Midwestern boy by background he became part of the USC esophageal gang under the mentorship of Tom DeMeester. He then spent 20 years at the University of Rochester where he rose through the ranks to become Professor of Surgery and then in 2016 moved to become a system chair at MedStar in Washington DC. That wasn't an entirely happy experience and he talks about unhealthy organizational cultures being the trap that awaits the unwary. He is now happily based near Detroit and once again a highly successful clinical academic surgeon. He talks about his newfound faith in the concept of stoicism, as well as his musical background in college where he played in abandon to make beer and food money. Anyone planning to rise up through the ranks of Surgical leadership should listen to this interview and understand some of the real world challenges. If you prefer to watch, then don't forget this is available on @Youtube @surgeonslives  https://www.ctsnet.org/home/thwatson https://doctors.beaumont.org/provider/thomas-j-watson/1922627  
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1 year ago
47 minutes 53 seconds

Surgeons’ Lives - Stuff that Matters
Surgeons from around the world talk about their life in a free ranging conversation that covers much more than their professional story. It’s called ”Stuff that Matters” for a reason because we hear their thoughts on life priorities, defining events, mentors and how they want to be remembered when it’s all done. After all, there is more to life than work!!