Cold Steel: Canadian Journal of Surgery Podcast

With all the attention to inequities in the surgical community and beyond, sometimes the invisible disparities goes unnoticed. Mental health and its impact on surgical outcomes has been relatively poorly studied, and so on today’s episode we invited the authors of a new narrative review on the topic to talk about what they found. The title of the paper is “Improving Surgical Quality for patients with Mental Health Illness: A Narrative review” and was published this August. Dr. Rebecca Afford, Dr. JJ Sidhu, and Dr. Morad Hameed joined us to talk about mental health and its impact on surgical outcomes. We would love to hear your thoughts – what does your institution to manage surgical patients with mental health conditions? Email us at podcast.cjs@gmail.com or on twitter @CanJSurg.

Links:

1. Improving Surgical Quality for Patients with Mental Health Illnesses: A Narrative Review. https://journals.lww.com/annalsofsurgery/Abstract/9000/Improving_Surgical_Quality_for_Patients_with.93312.aspx

Bios:

Rebecca Afford is a second year general surgery resident at the University of British Columbia.

Jesse Sidhu is a psychiatrist at the Vancouver General Hospital and is the Deputy Medical Director for Vancouver Mental Health and Substance Use, Acute, Tertiary, & Urgent Services.

Morad Hameed is the and intensivist at the Vancouver General Hospital (VGH) and an Assistant Professor of Surgery at the University of British Columbia (UBC). He is the Head of the UBC and VGH Division of General Surgery and is a Service Chief for Acute Care Surgery at VGH.

What is Cold Steel: Canadian Journal of Surgery Podcast?

The official podcast of the Canadian Journal of Surgery