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Pioneers of the O.R

USA Today (Society for the Advancement of Education),  Feb, 2008  

Here is a closer look at the four pioneers spotlighted in "Opening Doors: Contemporary African-American Academic Surgeons":

Dr. Alexa I. Canady is a neurosurgeon and professor of surgery. She was the first African-American woman pediatric neurosurgeon in the US. She received her medical degree from the University of Michigan's College of Medicine, Ann Arbor, in 1975, and completed her residency at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. Dr. Canady held an endowed professorship in pediatric neurosurgery at Wayne State University, Detroit. Much of her career was spent at the Children's Hospital of Michigan, where her program achieved national recognition as a top pediatric neurosurgery department. She became chief of neurosurgery at the age of 36 and retired after 18 years, having trained all four of the remaining neurosurgeons. Dr. Canady currently is semiretired and living in Pensacola, Fla.

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Dr. LaSalle D. Leffall, Jr., is an oncology surgeon and professor of surgery at Howard University's College of Medicine, Washington, D.C., where he received his medical degree in 1952, ranking first in his class; he was one of the first black surgical ontology fellows at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. After serving in the U.S. Army Medical Corps, Dr. Leffall concentrated on an academic career in surgery at Howard, where he was the chairman of the department for more than 25 years. Of the 7,500 medical school graduates at Howard, Dr. Leffall has taught over 5,000 of them (as well as more than 250 surgical residents). He was the first African-American president of the American College of Surgeons and the American Cancer Society and was appointed chair of the President's Cancer Panel in 2002.

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Dr. Claude H. Organ, Jr., was a general surgeon and professor of surgery. He received his medical degree in 1952 from Creighton University, Omaha, Neb., and remained at Creighton to complete his internship and residency, quickly moving up the ladder to become the first African-American chair of a department of surgery at a predominantly white medical school in 1971. Dr. Organ developed two successful surgical residency programs--one at Creighton and, later, at the University of California, San Francisco East Bay Surgery Department. Dr. Organ was the first African-American editor of the Archives of Surgery, the largest surgical journal in the world, and the senior author of a two-volume book, A Century of Black Surgeons: The USA Experience, considered the authoritative text on the subject. Dr. Organ passed away in 2005, but is remembered as a "giant in surgery" and the "conscience of American surgery."

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Dr. Rosalyn P. Scott is a cardiothoracic surgeon, professor of surgery, and chief of Surgical Services at Wright State University's Boonshoft School of Medicine and the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Dayton, Ohio. She was the first African-American woman cardiothoracic surgeon in the U.S. and is an advocate for--and mentor to--women and minority medical students. Dr. Scott received her medical degree from New York University School of Medicine in 1974, and completed her surgery and cardiothoracic residencies at Boston University Medical School and New York Medical College. She was the first Mary A. Frawley Fellow in cardiovascular surgical research at the Texas Heart Institute, Houston. Dr. Scott spent more than 20 years at UCLA and the Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science in Los Angeles, where she served as associate professor of surgery, vice chair of the Department of Surgery, and chief of the Division of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery. She also authored a chapter in A Century of Black Surgeons: The USA Experience.

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