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Ann Thorac Surg 2012;93:2111-2116. doi:10.1016/j.athoracsur.2012.03.060
© 2012 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

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Our Surgical Heritage

Robert R. Shaw, MD: Thoracic Surgical Hero, Afghanistan Medical Pioneer, Champion for the Patient, Never a Surgical Society President

Harold C. Urschel, Jr, MD, LL.D. (HON)*, Betsey Bradley Urschel, M.Ed., D.H.L. (HON)

Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, Texas

* Address correspondence to Dr Urschel, Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, Baylor University Medical Center, 3600 Gaston Ave, Ste 1201, Dallas, TX, 75246 (Email: drurschel{at}me.com).

Presented at the Fifty-eighth Annual Meeting of the Southern Thoracic Surgical Association, San Antonio, TX, Nov 9–12, 2011.

Dr Robert R. Shaw arrived in Dallas to practice Thoracic Surgery in 1937, as John Alexander’s 7th Thoracic Surgical Resident from Michigan University Medical Center. Dr Shaw’s modus operandi was, "You can accomplish almost anything, if you don’t care who gets the credit." He was a remarkable individual who cared the most about the patient and very little about getting credit for himself. From 1937 to 1970, Dr Shaw established one of the largest lung cancer surgical centers in the world in Dallas, Texas. It was larger than M.D. Anderson and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Hospitals put together regarding the surgical treatment of lung cancer patients. To accomplish this, he had the help of Dr Donald L. Paulson, who trained at the Mayo Clinic and served as Chief of Thoracic Surgery at Brook Army Hospital during the Second World War. Following the War, because of his love for Texas, he ended up as a partner of Dr Shaw in Dallas. Together, they pursued the development of this very large surgical lung cancer center. Dr Shaw and his wife Ruth went to Afghanistan with Medico multiple times to teach men modern cardiac and thoracic surgery. They also served as consultants on Medico’s Ship of Hope in Africa. Dr Shaw initiated multiple new operations including: 1) resection of Pancoast’s cancer of the lung after preoperative irradiation; 2) upper lobe of the lung bronchoplasty, reattaching (and saving) the lower lobe to prevent the "disabling" pneumonectomy; and 3) resections of pulmonary mucoid impaction of the lung in asthmatics. Because of his humility and giving "the credit to others," Dr Shaw was never President of a major medical or surgical association.







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