PLAY PODCASTS
A Revolutionary Moment in Transplant Surgery: Dr. Andrew Cameron, Surgeon-in-Chief of Johns Hopkins Medicine
Episode 474

A Revolutionary Moment in Transplant Surgery: Dr. Andrew Cameron, Surgeon-in-Chief of Johns Hopkins Medicine

“There is a revolution at hand in which, after years of struggling to locate a new source of organs, there may finally be an answer and to everyone's surprise it is animal organs. Pigs may save the day,” says Dr. Andrew Cameron, chief of the Division of Transplantation at Johns Hopkins Medicine. While he’s encouraged by recent progress in using genetically-modified pig organs in humans, Cameron points to other ways of addressing this chronic shortage which include creative use of social media to raise awareness of the need, and even compensating people for donations. But, as you’ll learn on this episode of Raise the Line with host Shiv Gaglani, running the transplant program is just one of the hats Cameron wears. As director of the Department of Surgery and surgeon-in-chief, he has a hand in overseeing all surgical subspecialties, so Shiv also explores his thoughts on the role of robotics and other technologies in both performing operations and in training surgeons. And in what is perhaps an unexpected turn, Cameron expresses his excitement about non-surgical developments to improve health such as the new class of weight loss drugs. “We're not here for me to do fancy surgeries. We're here to take care of sick people, so if there is a non-operative solution that’s better for the patient, we're all in on that, too.” It’s an expansive and fascinating conversation you won’t want to miss. Mentioned in this episode: Johns Hopkins Department of Surgery: www.hopkinsmedicine.org/surgery DONOR App: www.thedonorapp.com

Raise the Line · Dr. Andrew Cameron, Shiv Gaglani

May 3, 202442m 45s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (cdn.simplecast.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

“There is a revolution at hand in which, after years of struggling to locate a new source of organs, there may finally be an answer and to everyone's surprise it is animal organs. Pigs may save the day,” says Dr. Andrew Cameron, chief of the Division of Transplantation at Johns Hopkins Medicine. While he’s encouraged by recent progress in using genetically-modified pig organs in humans, Cameron points to other ways of addressing this chronic shortage which include creative use of social media to raise awareness of the need, and even compensating people for donations. But, as you’ll learn on this episode of Raise the Line with host Shiv Gaglani, running the transplant program is just one of the hats Cameron wears. As director of the Department of Surgery and surgeon-in-chief, he has a hand in overseeing all surgical subspecialties, so Shiv also explores his thoughts on the role of robotics and other technologies in both performing operations and in training surgeons. And in what is perhaps an unexpected turn, Cameron expresses his excitement about non-surgical developments to improve health such as the new class of weight loss drugs. “We're not here for me to do fancy surgeries. We're here to take care of sick people, so if there is a non-operative solution that’s better for the patient, we're all in on that, too.” It’s an expansive and fascinating conversation you won’t want to miss.

Mentioned in this episode:

Johns Hopkins Department of Surgery: www.hopkinsmedicine.org/surgery

DONOR App: www.thedonorapp.com

TEDx Talk on Xenotransplantation

If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at www.osmosis.org/podcast

Topics

drug costspharmacy benefit managersdrug developmentcontinuing educationjohns hopkins universityomicrondoctorsmedical degreescoronavirushome caredigital healthhealth insurancewearablesfrontline providersosmosis from elsevierpfizerjohns hopkins medicinefdagovernment policypsilocybinmedicareraise the linegenetically modified pig organsvirusmachine learningeducation innovationpharmaceuticalshospital staysinterviewnursing schoolflatten the curvemichael carreseelsevieraihealthcare entrepreneurstransplant surgerynursing cmenursesprimary carehealthcare capacityhealthcare reformbig pharmaastra zenecacovid-19rare disordershealthcare workforceexpertsspace repetitionmedical educationnursing shortagelsdmedicaidlearning sciencegene editingvalue-based caretechnologyflipped classroommedicare advantagenursing educationsolutionsrobotic surgeryphysician shortageprovider burnoutcdcepidemicosmosisdelta variantremote monitoringhealthcare systemmark cubanosmosis.orgdecision supportrare diseasesvirus outbreaksurgeryonline educationallied health professionspublic policycovid19edtechshiv gaglanimdmamodernaphysician assistant educationvivian leechelsea clintonpodcastsnursing degreepsychedelicsdr. andrew cameronhospital systemspublic healthpublic healthdr. ashish jhaanimal organs in human transplant operationsvaccineseric topolyear of the zebradental educationtestingsurgery clerkshipcenters for disease controlpsychedelic-assisted therapyhealth professionspandemicjohnson & johnsontelehealth