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Paul G. Gauger, M.D. is an Assistant Professor of Surgery in the Division of Endocrine Surgery. Dr. Gauger received his B.A. and M.D. concurrently at the University of Missouri in Kansas City. Postgraduate training in General Surgery was undertaken at the University of Michigan where he also completed fellowships in Extracorporeal Life Support and Surgical Critical Care. It was here that he developed a strong interest in Surgical Endocrinology. After graduation, he served as the T.S. Reeve International Fellow in Endocrine Surgery at the Royal North Shore Hospital in Sydney, Australia. He returned to join the University of Michigan Faculty in 1999.
Dr. Gauger concentrates his clinical efforts in the field of Endocrine Surgery - including benign and malignant diseases of the thyroid, parathyroid, pancreas, and adrenal glands. He has a special interest in minimally invasive and laparoscopic operative alternatives to treat these diseases.
Dr. Gauger's research interests have included advanced techniques in life support such as extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and liquid ventilation. His current research activities include intraoperative hormone monitoring and anesthetic alternatives for thyroid and parathyroid operations. Dr. Gauger also has a strong interest in medical informatics and has applied this to innovative database projects based on a novel combination of clinical, gene expression, financial, and outcomes data to guide patient care and future research in endocrine cancers.
Dr. Gauger is also deeply involved in graduate medical education issues such as residency program administration and regulation of resident work hours. He has spearheaded the development of an integrated web-based process for resident scheduling and documentation of compliance with national regulations. This activity is related to his duties as the Assistant Program Director for the General Surgery Resident Program.
He has recently returned to the University of Michigan to practice general and endocrine surgery. Although his past research efforts have focused on liquid ventilation and extracorporeal life support, his clinical interests center on outcomes measures in endocrine surgery and medical informatics. He has a special interest in diseases of the thyroid, parathyroid, pancreas, and adrenal glands and the development of minimally-invasive surgical techniques to treat them.
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Richard E. Burney, M.D.
Richard E. Burney, M.D. is Professor of Surgery on the General and Endocrine Surgery Service (GSE) at the University of Michigan Medical Center. He is a graduate of Harvard Medical School. He received his post-graduate training in General Surgery at Yale-New Haven Medical center, where his initial research was carried out as part of the Yale Trauma Program. He served for two years as a major in the U.S. Army Medical Corps before joining the faculty at the University of Michigan in 1976. In addition to his clinical role as a general surgeon, Dr. Burney has held major administrative responsibilities in the areas of trauma, emergency services, and critical care transport. He has served as Chief of the Section of Emergency Services and Medical Director of Survival Flight.
Dr. Burney's primary clinical interests are in gastrointestinal and endocrine surgery, including endoscopy and laparoscopic surgery. He has a special interest in inguinal hernia and colorectal problems. He also has a long-standing interest in medical care quality issues. His current research is in outcomes measurement. He leads a group measuring patient reported functional health status and well being after operation for
common surgical conditions, and learning how to apply this information to improve the quality of patient care.
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Norman W. Thompson, M.D.
(Emeritus)
After graduating from the University of Michigan Medical School, Norman W. Thompson, M.D. remained at the University for his surgical training and completed a residency in General Surgery in 1962. He was then appointed to the faculty as Instructor and rose through the ranks to full Professor in 1971. In 1979, he was appointed the first Henry King Ransom Professor of Surgery and Chief of the Division of Endocrine surgery.
His clinical and research interests focused on surgical diseases of the thyroid, parathyroid and adrenal glands as well as endocrine diseases of the pancreas and gastrointestinal tract. In addition, he maintained a special interest in hereditary endocrine diseases including MEN I and MEN II and their detection by gene mutational analysis. He was a founding member of both the American and International Associations of Endocrine Surgeons and has served as President of both societies.
Dr. Thompson retired in 2002. At that time a professorship in endocrine
surgery was established in his name.
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