OBITUARY: Giorgio Gambale (1955-2015)
نویسندگان
چکیده
Fig. 1 Giorgio Gambale (1955-2015) Giorgio Gambale (Fig. 1) was born November 14, 1955 and died October 16, 2015 at his home in Bologna, Italy, surrounded by his family and friends after a one year battle with cancer. He received his medical degree in Bologna in 1980 and he got a postgraduate degree in Anesthesia and Intensive Care in 1983 and in Pneumology in 1987. He worked at Maggiore Hospital in Bologna where he gave a substantial contribution in setting up and running the Trauma Center. In 2005 he became the head of Anesthesia Department at Morgagni Pierantoni Hospital in Forlì (Italy) and in 2011 he was awarded by the European Institute of Public Administration for the project about the management of the surgical process. Afterwards in 2013 he moved to Cesena (Italy) to become head of Emergency and Trauma Department of Maurizio Bufalini Hospital. He was the author of more than 50 peer-reviewed publications and in 2015 of a book titled “Medicine according to Captain Zantax” where he, after being diagnosed with glioblastoma, tells his professional life and sums up the meaning of his commitment in medicine. Captain Zantax is the nickname his colleagues gave him in Bologna because of the calm and kind confidence he displayed even in the most chaotic situation in the Emergency Department; his confidence, in turn, affected all the people around him positively. Like ranitidine, he could reduce the amount of ‘acid’ among people around him. Giorgio had an emotional leadership style; he was able to inspire, to lead. He stayed in the background when everything was going fine and always in the foreground when something went wrong. As a visionary man he suffered when people around him were not able to see the big picture, to imagine the hypothetical future he was distinctly seeing and fighting for. His enthusiasm for the field of trauma was stimulating and contagious. He never lost the curiosity for medicine and for life. Giorgio believed in meritocracy and in the strength of young generation of doctors. He thought the future was for “hungry and foolish” people, no matter the age.
منابع مشابه
Thomas Elliot, 1817-1859; a forgotten ophthalmologist.
But Doctor, it's only Jimmie's right eye that has the cast. Why must you operate on the other one as well? How often has a puzzled parent confronted us with that question and, before answering, who among us has ever wondered what brave man first grasped his courage and advanced his scalpel at the " good eye "? That man died almost one hundred years ago; he lived in the then remote town of Carli...
متن کاملExercise and physical activity in the prevention and treatment of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
Dr Paul Dudley White, the Boston cardiologist famous for consulting on President Eisenhower when Eisenhower suffered a myocardial infarction in 1955, believed that “a normal person should exercise seven hours a week. If you could not exercise an hour everyday, make up the difference on the weekend.”1 So familiar was White’s advocacy of exercise that his obituary in the New England Journal of Me...
متن کاملObituary: in memoriam, Marcel Rudasingwa (18 June 1955 - 17 November 2014)
Marcel survived the genocide. So did Monique. Their five children were not so fortunate. With a resilience almost super-human, Marcel and Monique rebuilt their lives, Marcel resuming his work with UNICEF in successive duty postings in Africa and Europe. I remember meeting with him in Bamako a few years back. There was a funding shortfall for the measles campaign. He was all business, pulling ou...
متن کاملObituary: Cornelius H. Vanderwolf.
C.H. Vanderwolf described motor correlates of hippocampal theta oscillations and uncovered two broad classes: atropine-sensitive and atropine-resistant rhythm with likely different behavioral and cognitive significance.
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 11 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2016