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ASA NEWSLETTER reports how knowledgeable
and dedicated anesthesiologists are advancing the
science and practice of anesthesiology. Since the
specialty is broad — encompassing operative
and perioperative care as well as critical care
and pain medicine — anesthesiologists work
broadly. This breadth extends to their personal
and public lives, and thus the ASA NEWSLETTER
also reports how anesthesiologists are advancing
the general interests of society.
The “Spotlight On” column, introduced
in 2001 by the Committee on Communications, has
illuminated the outstanding personal achievements
of seven individuals [Table 1], in addition to several
collectively as responders to the September 11 tragedy.
“Anesthesiology In the News,” a feature
emphasized recently, briefly describes noteworthy,
publicly reported accomplishments of anesthesiologists.
During the past two years, “Anesthesiology
In the News” has included 135 reports. Members
are invited to identify more worthy individuals
and reports and forward them to Brittny Dziadula
at b.dziadula@asahq.org.
| “Spotlight
On”
Anesthesiologists |
• Chingmuh Lee, M.D. —
Olympic torch bearer.
Immigrant who beat the odds, became professor.
• Andrew P. Harris, M.D. —
State senator.
Only physician in Maryland state senate.
• Daniel W. Platt, M.D. —
Role model.
Honored with named hospital building.
• Lawrence S. Berman, M.D.
— Coast Guard volunteer.
Community service award winner.
• Perry G. Fine, M.D. — Olympic
physician.
Volunteer, helped athletes. •
Maurice S. Albin, M.D. — Historian.
Donated anesthesia collection to museum.
• Michael J. Murray, M.D.,
Ph.D. — Army Reserve.
Volunteer for service in multiple wars. |
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Documenting the broad involvement and many accomplishments
of anesthesiologists is good for the specialty.
For many years, anesthesiology residency training
programs have attracted outstanding students. They
have emerged predictably as high-achieving physicians.
Their life activities tell stories of excellence
that reflect well on all anesthesiologists. Collectively,
they document anesthesiologists as among the best
and brightest.
Safe delivery of anesthesia care is our core mission;
worthy second ones include professional citizenship,
community involvement and personal development.
Such public service and activities make the world
better.
Following are some noteworthy activities of anesthesiologists
aside from their usual patient care. These represent
only a few of the many stories worth telling.
Institutional Service: Physicians
often select anesthesiologists for leadership positions
because of their many talents and broad experiences.
Rodney C. Osborn, M.D. (Peoria, Illinois) thus serves
as president of the Illinois State Medical Society.
Rebecca J. Patchin, M.D. (Loma Linda, California)
and Joseph P. Annis, M.D. (Austin, Texas) serve
as Trustees of the American Medical Association.
Most anesthesiologists help their institutions through
service on committees that improve efficient functioning
and help their professional societies through active
participation to promote better health care. Edward
D. Miller, M.D. (Baltimore, Maryland) serves as
both dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
and chief executive officer of Johns Hopkins Hospital,
ranked number one in the country by U.S. News
and World Report.
Overseas Service: People in some
areas, especially in third-world countries, have
limited access to advanced surgery and anesthesia
care. Many anesthesiologists volunteer, at personal
expense, to help care for them. Two such individuals
are Mark A. Singleton, M.D. (San Jose, California)
and Charles Bowen, M.D., Ph.D. (St Louis, Missouri).
Dr. Singleton, a pediatric anesthesiologist, volunteers
with Interplast, traveling a couple times each year
to other countries to help with cleft lip, burn
scar and other plastic surgical operations in children.
He has worked in several countries in Africa, Asia
and Central America. Figure 1 shows Dr. Singleton
with a patient in 2007 in Bamako, Mali.
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| Figure 1. Mark A. Singleton,
M.D. in Bamako, Mali. |
Dr. Bowen travels overseas three or four times
per year and has participated in approximately 30
trips to mission hospitals in Haiti, Honduras and
Ecuador. He organizes and supplies these trips in
part through his volunteer service as the U.S. medical
director of the Wings on Hope Charity Air Ambulance.
Figure 2 shows Dr. Bowen in Milot, Haiti, with a
child before she underwent surgery for bilateral
club feet.
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| Figure 2.
Charles Bowen, M.D., Ph.D. in Milot, Haiti. |
Political: Several anesthesiologists
have won election to public office. Kyle L. Janek,
M.D. (Austin, Texas) has served 12 years in the
Texas House and Senate and currently chairs the
Texas State Senate Subcommittee on Emerging Technologies
and Economic Development. He inspired his partner,
John M. Zerwas, M.D. (Austin, Texas), who won election
to the Texas House of Representatives in 2007. Sam
L. Page, M.D. (St Louis, Missouri) has served in
the Missouri House of Representatives for six years
and is a leading candidate for lieutenant governor.
Andrew P. Harris, M.D. (Baltimore, Maryland) has
served in the Maryland Senate for eight years, three
years as minority whip, and is currently a leading
candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives
from Maryland.
Arts and Literature: Michael F.
Roizen, M.D. (Cleveland, Ohio) has authored several
very successful books, including RealAge: Are
You as Young as You Can Be?, You: Staying Young
and You: The Owners Manual, which sold
more than 2.7 million copies. Miles Dinner, M.D.
(New York, New York) is a concert pianist, who performs
annually at the Postgraduate Assembly in Anesthesiology
before the Robertazzi Memorial Panel. He feels blessed
to be able to combine his musical passion with a
career in anesthesiology and keeps a piano in his
New York Presbyterian Hospital office, where he
practices occasionally between cases. Dr. Dinner
keeps up with the full range of piano literature,
from the Baroque to such contemporary composers
as Bartok and Boulez, and he is currently organizing
a blues-based band. Figure 3 is a studio picture
of Dr. Dinner.
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| Figure 3.
Miles Dinner, M.D., at the keyboard. |
Military: Paul J. Teiken, M.D.
(Hummelstown, Pennsylvania), now in civilian private
practice, earned a Bronze Star and two Air Medals
during Desert Storm for his service with the 101st
Airborne Infantry. Several anesthesiologists have
won Bronze Stars for their brave and heroic actions
since September 11, 2001. For instance, Craig McFarland,
M.D. (San Antonio, Texas) was awarded one with a
V-device, which denotes valor above the call of
duty while under direct enemy fire.
Business: Many anesthesiologists
lead businesses that improve the delivery of anesthesia
care. Chester A. Phillips III, M.D. (Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania) developed the CompuRecord electronic
anesthesia record and now consults for Philips,
which markets the system. Theodore H. Stanley, M.D.
(Salt Lake City, Utah) has founded six medical companies,
including the Zars, Anesta and NeuroAdjuvants corporations.
Zars develops products designed to administer pain-killing
drugs through the skin. Anesta was bought by Cephalon,
which now markets Actiq, the primary drug of Anesta.
Sales of Actiq since 2000 have exceeded $2.5 billion.
Athletics: Jenny B. Thompson, M.D.,
one of the most decorated Olympians in history,
is now an anesthesiology resident at the Brigham
and Women’s Hospital in Boston. She won 12
Olympic medals, including eight golds, while representing
the United States in the 1992, 1996, 2000 and 2004
summer Olympics. She held world records in the women’s
100-meter freestyle, 100-meter butterfly and individual
medley. Dr. Thompson volunteers for Swim Across
America, an organization that raises money for cancer
research.
Several other anesthesiologists have had successful
athletic careers and now mentor the athletic development
of others. Roger A. Cook, M.D. (Great Falls, Montana),
for instance, played quarterback on college and
professional football teams. Sorin Brull, M.D. (Ponte
Vedra Beach, Florida) played professional tennis
before becoming an anesthesiologist.
Legacy: These anesthesiologists
are carrying on traditions of achievement. In 1963,
Thomas F. Hornbein, M.D. (Seattle, Washington) was
the first person to reach the summit of Mount Everest,
the highest mountain in the world, by the west slope.
During the Vietnam War, Ronald D. Miller, M.D. (San
Francisco, California) conducted research on massive
blood transfusions of critically wounded soldiers
that identified the importance of a platelet count
of 50,000. For performing this research, so vital
to patient care, in a war zone, he was awarded a
Bronze Star with a V-device. Also during the Vietnam
War, J. Kent Garman, M.D. (Palo Alto, California)
served as a flight surgeon with the First Marine
Air Wing and won a Marine Corps Air Medal for 25
combat air missions and a Navy Commendation Medal
with Combat V.
These current and past stories of anesthesiologists
are enduring examples of excellence and service,
inspirations for all and evidence that our specialty
includes the best and brightest.
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Robert
E. Johnstone, M.D., is Professor of Anesthesiology,
West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia. |
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