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The Doctor's Art

The Making of a Heart Surgeon (with Dr. Craig Smith)

The Doctor's Art

Henry Bair and Tyler Johnson

Medicine, Society & Culture, Health & Fitness, Philosophy

52.1K Ratings

🗓️ 5 March 2024

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

If you were to rank all the medical specialties by the arduousness of the training required, the technical complexity and high stress of the interventions involved, and the harshness of the working hours, cardiothoracic surgery would be near or at the top of anyone's list.


In this episode, cardiac surgeon and Chair of the Department of Surgery at Columbia University Medical Center Craig Smith, MD takes us into the heart and mind of a physician who regularly cracks open a person's chest to manipulate some of their most anatomically intricate parts in order to save their lives. He is the author of the 2023 memoir Nobility in Small Things: A Surgeon's Path, and famously performed the quadruple bypass surgery that saved former US president Bill Clinton's life in 2004.


Over the course of our conversation, Dr. Smith discusses the joys of exploring the human body, what motivates him to get up at 4 a.m. every day with the same burning passion for his work, why his family is one of the most important elements of work life balance, how he deals with mistakes and adverse events in the operating room, and more.


In this episode, you will hear about:


2:23 - Dr. Smith’s initial path to medicine


4:43 - What drew Dr. Smith to the field of cardiothoracic surgery and how he handles the high-stakes nature of the work.


15:47 - What happens when a surgery goes not go according to plan


18:54 - Dr. Smith’s approach to comforting and connecting with patients prior to surgery


22:24 - Dr. Smith’s experience performing surgery while struggling through what he later learned was a very early case of COVID-19 in early 2020


29:03 - How Dr. Smith views work-life balance


34:17 - The role of spirituality and religion in Dr. Smith’s work


35:51 - How Dr. Smith has retained his sense of purpose and calling throughout his career


45:28 – A patient story that encapsulates why performing surgery is so meaningful for Dr. Smith



Dr. Craig Smith is the author of Nobility in Small Things: A Surgeon’s Path (2023).



Visit our website www.TheDoctorsArt.com where you can find transcripts of all episodes.

If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, rate, and review our show, available for free on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. If you know of a doctor, patient, or anyone working in health care who would love to explore meaning in medicine with us on the show, feel free to leave a suggestion in the comments or send an email to [email protected].



Copyright The Doctor’s Art Podcast 2024

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, I'm Henry Bear.

0:03.0

And I'm Tyler Johnson.

0:05.0

And you're listening to The Doctors Art, a podcast that explores meaning in medicine.

0:09.0

Throughout our medical training and career, we have pondered.

0:13.2

What makes medicine meaningful?

0:15.1

Can a stronger understanding of this meaning create better doctors?

0:18.8

How can we build health care institutions that nurture the doctor-patient connection.

0:23.0

What can we learn about the human condition

0:24.8

from accompanying our patients in times of suffering?

0:28.0

In seeking answers to these questions,

0:30.0

we meet with deep thinkers working across health care,

0:33.0

from doctors and nurses to patients and health care

0:35.4

executives, those who have collected a career's worth of hard-earned wisdom.

0:40.1

Probing the moral heart that beats at the core of medicine, we will hear stories that are by turns heart-breaking, amusing, inspiring, challenging, and enlightening.

0:49.0

We welcome anyone curious about why doctors do what they do.

0:52.8

Join us as we think out loud about what illness and healing can teach us

0:57.1

about some of life's biggest questions.

0:59.3

If you were to rank all the medical specialties by the arduousness of the training required,

1:08.0

the technical complexity and high stress of the interventions involved,

1:12.0

and the harshness of the working hours,

1:14.8

Cardiothorastic surgery would top just about anyone's list, well except

1:19.6

maybe those of the neurosurgeons out there.

...

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