“The recent wave of lawsuits filed on behalf of former NLF players has brought to the forefront the dangers of sports injuries, as well as the question of liability. From broken noses to broken feet and everything in between, get an up-close-and-personal view of the health and safety issues related to playing in the National Football League. Six-time Pro Bowl selection and Chargers legend Dan Fouts will be joined by John York, M.D., Co-chairman, San Francisco 49ers; Chairman, NFL’s Health & Safety Advisory Committee and Jed York, CEO, San Francisco 49ers, as well as Eastman, A. Brent Eastman, M.D., Trauma Surgeon, Chief Medical Officer and Corporate Sr. Vice President, Scripps Health, whose expertise as a trauma surgeon has made him a leader in the field of emergency medical care.” Excerpts from Commonwealth Club website.
News
Inside Surgery Newsletters
Inside Surgery is a publication of the UCSF Department of Surgery highlighting major medical and scientific advances driven by department faculty. Each issue focuses on several key areas where notable progress or intriguing discoveries have been made. Each issue is summarized in a “Letter from the Chair” of the Department of Surgery, Nancy L. Ascher, MD, PhD. These summaries appears below each link to the entire issue.
Letter From The Chair
This issue of Inside Surgery describes several exciting developments that are advancing our ability to provide outstanding care for a range of patients. The new Hepatobiliary Service, under the direction of Carlos Corvera, MD, provides comprehensive, multidisciplinary care for patients with liver and bile duct disease. The service offers a range of advanced laparoscopic liver procedures as well as expert treatment for patients with bile duct disease. The Hepatobiliary Service also offers a coordinated, patient-centered approach for perioperative care.
Quan-Yang Duh, MD, leads the section of Endocrine Surgery, that provides multidisciplinary, minimally invasive care for patients with a range of malignant and benign diseases affecting the thyroid, parathyroid and adrenal glands. The surgical team has particular expertise in performing challenging procedures for recurrence of conditions such as thyroid cancer and hyperparathyroidism. The UCSF Department of Surgery faculty not only provide exceptional surgical and perioperative care, but also lead many research initiatives to uncover the etiology of disease and develop better therapies. This issue offers an overview of the department’s clinical and research endeavors.
This issue also highlights San Francisco General Hospital’s Wraparound Project, founded and directed by trauma surgeon Rochelle Dicker, MD. This innovative hospital-based violence prevention program has reduced the reinjury rate among participants from 16 percent to 4 percent, reducing mortality and helping victims of violence turn their lives around.
Finally, I am very proud to note that many of our surgeons have recently been recognized by two external publications as among the best in their fields. In its most recent survey, U.S. News & World Report – in collaboration with Castle Connolly Medical Ltd. – included 25 surgeons in the UCSF Department of Surgery on the list of U.S. News Top Doctors. The list, compiled from a peer nomination process, recognizes doctors determined to be in the top 10 percent in their region.
Within this list of the best surgeons, 15 of these 25 UCSF surgeons have been named to a highly selective list of America’s Top Doctors. They were deemed, in Castle Connolly’s estimation, to be among the top 1 percent in the nation in his or her specialty. The 25 UCSF U.S. News Top Doctors are listed on page 8; those who also earned recognition as “America’s Top Doctors” are denoted by an asterisk. The full listings can be found at http://health.usnews.com/top-doctors/directory/best-surgeons. Also, Marin Magazine recognized a number of our faculty in its “[415] Top Doctors” list, compiled from a peer-to-peer voting poll. This list is also included on page 8, and the full online listing is available at www.marinmagazine.com. It is an honor to work with so many outstanding surgeons in providing exceptional care to our patients. I am pleased to share these updates with you.
Letter From The Chair
This issue of Inside Surgery describes some of the latest advances in fetal surgery and pediatric plastic and reconstructive surgery. UCSF is the birthplace of fetal surgery; Michael Harrison, Md, performed the first open fetal surgery here in 1981, and we continue to have more experience with fetal surgery and endoscopic fetal intervention than any other institution in the world. Now under the direction of Hanmin Lee, Md, the Fetal treatment center continues to pioneer new interventions for congenital defects, and to provide long-term follow-up care through the Life clinic.
William Hoffman, Md, leads the division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, offering a coordinated, multidisciplinary approach to craniofacial anomalies, including cleft lip, cleft palate and craniosynostosis, as well as birthmarks and vascular anomalies. Scott Hansen, Md, is a hand surgeon, skilled in the full range of procedures available to reconstruct a useful hand, including toe-tothumb transfer. i am also delighted to announce the opening of the connie Frank transplant center, the UCSF center for Bioengineering and tissue Regeneration, and the laboratory of Jason Pomerantz, Md, in the UCSF craniofacial and Mesenchymal Biology Program’s new facilities. these are just a few of the exciting developments in the UCSF department of Surgery. i am pleased to share these updates with you.
Letter From The Chair
This issue of Inside Surgery outlines some of the latest developments at UCSF’s department of Surgery. the Pancreas center provides a coordinated, interdisciplinary approach to patients with complex disease. in addition to worldclass surgeons, the Pancreas center draws on the expertise of radiologists, gastroenterologists, medical and radiation oncologists, and other specialists to provide state-of-the-art care to patients. Similarly, the thoracic oncology Program is a world leader in innovative research and clinical care for patients with lung cancer.
Led by David Jablons, MD, the program is especially skilled in achieving local control of lung cancer. the team of outstanding surgeons, medical and radiation oncologists, interventional radiologists, and others can often perform complete resections in patients referred from other centers who had been told their tumors were inoperable.
This year, we are celebrating the 45th anniversary of the UCSF transplant Service, led by John Roberts, Md. We have one of the largest and most highly regarded transplant programs in the country, and we are an international leader in the field. our living donor program employs the latest innovations and a team approach to patient care, resulting in superior outcomes even as we treat some of the highest-risk patients. these advances illustrate just a few ways that UCSF’s department of Surgery provides the most comprehensive treatments available. We are pleased to share these updates with you.
Letter From The Chair
This issue of Inside Surgery delineates several new and exciting avenues of research in surgery and their application to important clinical conditions. The use of autologous islet transplantation reflects the application of refined techniques of islet isolation to the clinical problem of chronic pancreatitis with avoidance of the need for immunsuppression. The work represents a collaboration between transplant surgery (Dr. Andrew Posselt) and pancreas surgery (Dr. Hobart Harris).
Dr. Weaver’s work in regeneration represents an application of the need to study the specific environmental factors that may be important as we seek to replace diseased tissues and organs. We are delighted to have Dr. Weaver at UCSF directing the Department of Surgery Center for Bioengineering and Tissue Regeneration.
The third example of innovative approaches to clinical disease is the collaboration between Dr. Pierre Theodore (thoracic surgery) and Dr. Marco Patti (foregut surgery), who have developed a minimally invasive approach to the treatment of esophageal cancer. These three projects are exciting examples of the talent and innovation we are fortunate to have in the UCSF Department of Surgery
L E T T E R F R O M T H E C H A I R
This issue of Inside Surgery brings you up to date on progress in solid organ and cellular transplantation. UCSF Medical Center has been at the forefront of clinical transplantation since it performed its first kidney transplant in 1964. Each of the transplantation services reflects a collaborative partnership of specialists in complementary disciplines. The “team” approach to patient selection and care optimizes the management of patients.
Our transplantation services also exemplify the translation of innovative techniques and novel treatment to patient care. This promotes the rapid application of the best therapy to patients. Transplantation results must be assessed in the context of the recipient’s co-morbid conditions. We are proud of the fact that our transplantation services have superior outcomes that significantly exceed what would be expected, given the high-risk patients for whom we care. We are pleased to update you on these vital programs.
John Roberts, M.D. Elected President of the National Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network/United Network for Organ Sharing’s Board of Directors
John P. Roberts, M.D., Professor and Chief of Transplant Surgery and the Organ Transplant Service at UCSF, has been elected President of the National Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network/United Network for Organ Sharing (OPTN/UNOS) Board of Directors. Roberts will serve a one-year term beginning in late June 2012.
UCSF Patients Part of Nation’s Longest Living Kidney Transplant Chain
“Neither man had a donor who was a match. But each had a family member willing to donate a kidney to a stranger, allowing them all to be part of chain which would, in turn, give Baty and Cienfuegos kidneys from other strangers. With 17 participating hospitals in 11 states, the chain consisted of 30 people willing to give up their kidney, matched with 30 more who needed one to survive. UCSF surgeons Andrew Posselt, M.D., Ph.D. and Ryutaro Hirose, M.D., performed the transplants on Baty and Cienfuegos – just two of the 300 or so kidney transplants performed at UCSF every year.”
Renowned fetal and neonatal surgeon chosen to lead UC Davis Department of Surgery
“Diana L. Farmer, an internationally renowned fetal and neonatal surgeon, has been named chair of the Department of Surgery at UC Davis Health System. Farmer is known for her skilled surgical treatment of congenital anomalies and for her expertise in cancer, airway and intestinal surgeries in newborns. She is principal investigator of several National Institutes of Health clinical trials on the effectiveness and safety of spina bifida treatments before birth, and she is researching a novel stem cell therapy for repairing damaged neural tissue in spina bifida patients….Farmer comes to UC Davis from UC San Francisco, where she was chief of pediatric surgery, vice chair of surgery, surgeon-in-chief of the UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital and a professor of surgery, pediatrics, and obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences. ”
UCSF Accredited by the American College of Surgeons as Level 1 Accredited Bariatric Center (ACS BSCN)
The UCSF Bariatric Surgery Center, led by Stanley J. Rogers, M.D., has been accredited by the American College of Surgeons (ACS) as a Level 1 Accredited Bariatric Center (ACS BSCN). The American College of Surgeons Bariatric Surgery Center Network Accreditation Program (ACS BSCN) accredits facilities in the United States that have undergone an independent, voluntary and rigorous peer evaluation in accordance with nationally recognized bariatric surgical standards. This adds to the prestige of the program which previously also earned the Blue Distinction for Bariatric Surgery from Blue Shield of California and was designated a Blue Cross “Center of Expertise Hospital for bariatric surgery.
Dr. Edward Kim Honored with Haile T. Debas Academy of Medical Educator’s Excellence in Teaching Awards
Edward Kim, M.D. will be among the recipients of 2011 Haile T. Debas Academy of Medical Educator’s Excellence in Teaching Awards at the Academy’s annual Celebration on Monday, September 19, 2011. The Haile T. Debas Academy of Medical Educators is dedicated to creating an environment that enhances the status of teachers at UCSF, promotes and rewards teaching excellence, fosters curricular innovation and encourages scholarship in medical education.
For UCSF Surgeon, Hospital Overcrowding Becomes Personal
“The far-reaching implications were made painfully clear” in an eloquent and moving essay in the New England Journal of Medicine by John Maa, M.D., Assistant Professor of Surgery and Director of the UCSF Surgical Hospitalist Program. A national leader in improving emergency care, “Dr. Maa describes the all-too-familiar story of a 69-year-old woman who is admitted to the E.R. for a procedure to correct an irregular heartbeat. Her operation is delayed because she has to board for a full day while waiting for a real bed. During the delay, she suffers a major stroke and dies…………The woman, we learn, was the author’s mother.”
— Excerpt from NY Times article by noted physician-journalist Dr. Pauline Chen
“The Waits that Matter” – Essay in The New England Journal of Medicine”
NY Times: “When Hospital Overcrowding Becomes Personal”
Wall Street Journal Online Network: “Long hospital Wait Times Can be Deadly”
Warren J. Gasper, M.D. Wins Top Prize at SVS Poster Competition
Warren Gasper, M.D., junior fellow in the Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery and a member of the research lab of Christopher Owens M.D., was awarded first prize in the poster competition at the annual meeting of the Society for Vascular Surgery (SVS) for the posterPercutaneous Peri-Adventitial Guanethidine Delivery Induces Renal Artery Sympathectomy: Preclinical Experience and Implication for Refractory Hypertension. One hundred researchers competed worldwide for the honor. The President and President-Elect of SVS, and an audience of vascular surgeons, choose the winner after viewing PowerPoint presentations from the ten finalists.
Linda M. Reilly, M.D. Inducted into Prestigous “Society of Scholars”
Linda M. Reilly, M.D., Professor of Surgery in the Division of Vascular & Endovascular Surgery at UCSF, has been inducted into the prestigious “Society of Scholars”. Established in 1967 by Johns Hopkins University, the Society recognizes individuals whose careers began at Hopkins, and later rose to prominence in their fields through distinguished achievement. Dr. Reilly has the additional distinction of being the first woman to complete the General Surgery Residency program at Hopkins, one of the most storied in the country. She is now Director of a similarly distinguished program at UCSF. An outstanding and compassionate physician, Dr. Reilly is also Principal Investigator in a number of clinical trials focused on the improvement of devices and refinement of surgical technique in endovascular repair of complex aortic aneurysms. She is widely-respected for her clinical investigations that have led to numerous advances in treatment and improvements in patient outcomes.