[ccm-l] Gov Corzine & TRAUMA CENTERS
Hardcastle, Tim, Dr <tch at sun.ac.za>
tch at sun.ac.za
Tue Apr 17 09:57:13 BST 2007
Ken
Arthur's views do not reflect the feeling of most academic medical personnel (Surgical / Emergency Medicine / Others) in the rest of South Africa.
I am willing to be involved!
Tim
Dr T C Hardcastle
M.B.,Ch.B.(Stell); M.Med(Chir); FCS(SA)
Senior Surgeon / Senior Lecturer: Surgery (Trauma and ICU)
ATLS instructor and DSTC Cape Town Course Director
Intern program Coordinator: Surgery
M.Med (Emergency Medicine) Executive Committee member
Clinical Head (Director): Diana Princess of Wales Trauma Unit
Division of Surgery (General) Room 4064
Department of Surgical Sciences
Tygerberg Hospital / University of Stellenbosch
PO Box 19063
Tygerberg 7505
Western Cape
South Africa
e-mail: tch at sun.ac.za
Cell: +27824681615
Office: +27219389281 or 4911 pager 0302
-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org
[mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org]On Behalf Of KMATTOX at aol.com
Sent: Monday, April 16, 2007 6:10 PM
To: arthurmorgan2 at gmail.com
Cc: trauma-list at trauma.org; ccm-l at ccm-l.org
Subject: Re: [ccm-l] Gov Corzine & TRAUMA CENTERS
In a message dated 4/16/2007 10:56:01 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
arthurmorgan2 at gmail.com writes:
A heap of twaddle.
Surgeons are technicians.
Some surgeons are leaders, some physicians are leaders. Even some family
practitioners are leaders.
Some surgeons bother to learn about disasters, many just cut.
Other than a highly developed sense of self-importance nothing sets surgeons
apart from other doctors in general abilities.
--
Arthur Morgan
Anaesthesiologist, Johannesburg, South Africa
OK. I respect what you have written. I respect your leadership in
Johannesburg and in South Africa. I respect your involvement in the organization,
planning and response to disasters in your region. I commend your insight
into the personal, learned, technical, and leadership skills required for
research, medical staff management, and education for present needs and future
challenges. May I keep your name and insight in hand as we are planning
several national and international conferences on Disaster planning and
response, both community needs, medical support, surgical support, special needs
support, and mental health issues. As I have been charged with developing a
health care Integrated Collaborative Network for medical professionals, I
would be interested to know your desired role and that of your specialty in
this projected and potentially very useful resource. It might well be that
both surgeons and anesthesiologists will have some role in a potentially
anticipated Bird Flu pandemic. It was critical care doctors (not called that
back then), physicians who controlled the airway and ventilation, and surgeons
(Evarts Ambrose Graham) who were essential during the 1918 Pandemic Flu that
hit the United States.
I so appreciate your views and leadership in the past and anticipate that
each of us on this list server can expect such local, national and even
international leadership and involvement from you at the time when medical
leadership in the Regional and Joint Unified Incident Commands is needed.
Kenneth L. Mattox, MD
Houston
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