4.8 • 1.4K Ratings
🗓️ 28 May 2019
⏱️ 31 minutes
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Woo (@woosongdo) and Meghana (@PubMEG) sit down with Dr. Allan Goldstein (@MGHPedisurg) to talk about the surgeon-scientist and how a young surgeon can become a successful academic surgeon (https://t.co/PJdjl0BQyP). Dr. Todd Ponsky (@tponsky) talks about the development of the Stay Current in Pediatric Surgery app and podcast as a means to digest all the information out there, and provides a contrasting opinion about social media's utility in academia. Finally, Dr. Ron Hirschl (@Ronstoppable) provides insight into how he brought APSA's 50th Anniversary Meeting into the 21st century and how his program is working on resident/fellow autonomy.
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0:00.0 | Expand your coin collection with a range of historical denominations struck by the Royal Mint. |
0:06.2 | Whether they're related to changes in the British monarchy or times of conflict, |
0:10.8 | each denomination has a fascinating story to tell. |
0:14.0 | From the Schilling and the Sixpence to the Guinea and the Sovereign, |
0:17.0 | there is so much for you to discover with the Royal Mint. |
0:21.0 | Search Royal Mint.com to discover some of the most popular denominations to circulate before decimalization today. |
0:27.0 | Behind the Knife, the Surgery Podcast, where we take a behind the scenes intimate look at surgery |
0:36.1 | from leaders in the Knife. This is Wu Doe with Megan Ad Keshup at the 50th anniversary of Apsa, the American Pediatric |
1:00.0 | Surgical Association. Today we have the distinct honor of sitting with Dr. |
1:04.1 | Alan Goldstein. He is the Surgeon and Chief of the Mass General Hospital for Children. |
1:08.9 | He is also Chief of Pediatric Surgery as well as Director of the Pediatric Neurogastron neurology program there. |
1:14.7 | Dr Goldstein, thank you for coming on with us today. |
1:18.0 | Thank you very much for having me. |
1:21.1 | So to kick things off, why don't you tell our audience? |
1:25.0 | You know, a lot of us know about you, but in your own words, where did you get started? |
1:29.8 | How did you come to become a surgeon-in-chief of the Mass General Hospital for Children, |
1:34.5 | kind of that trajectory. |
1:36.6 | Great. |
1:37.3 | I did my medical school at Harvard in the HST program and then completed my surgical residency at Mass General Hospital. |
1:49.2 | In 2000 I went to Columbia and spent two years doing my pediatric surgical fellowship and I knew I |
1:53.7 | wanted to come back to M. G. H. because I was interested in pursuing a |
1:57.8 | academic career and it was important to me to go to a place that had an established legacy of academic |
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