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            NRI Dr. Atul 
              Gawande wins 2006 'genius' award in US 
            Chicago, Sep. 19, 2006 
              Darshan Malhotra 
              NRI press 
            NRI Dr. Atul Gawande is a general 
              and endocrine surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, 
              an assistant professor at the Harvard School of Public Health and 
              of surgery at Harvard Medical School is among 25 winners who have 
              won a spend-it-as-you-like $ 500,000 prize known as the 
              'genius' grants awarded annually by a well-known American 
              Foundation.  
            The fellowships awarded by the The John D. and Catherine 
              T. MacArthur Foundation, worth a total of $12.5 million US, are 
              given to individuals who display "exceptional creativity, promise 
              for important future advances based on a track record of significant 
              accomplishment, and potential for the fellowship to facilitate subsequent 
              creative work and these awards are about more than money," 
              the organization said in a statement. The grants are awarded by 
              an anonymous 12-member selection committee and the foundation's 
              board of directors. The foundation has named 732 fellows since 1981.This 
              year's MacArthur Fellows, who range in age from 28 to 64 years old, 
              also include a jazz violinist, a painter and a playwright, among 
              others. 
            Other winners:  
            
              - A master glassblower from New York, a deep-sea explorer from 
                Florida and a Harvard University professor from Argentina who 
                is working to uncover the early history of the cosmos
 
              - Kevin Eggan, 32, an expert in embryonic stem cells and somatic 
                cell nuclear transfer, otherwise known as therapeutic cloning.
 
              - Mr. D. Holmes Morton, 55, is a pediatrician who studies inherited 
                disorders in rural Strasburg, Pa. Along with his wife, Caroline, 
                Morton founded the nonprofit Clinic for Special Children, which 
                has reduced child mortality in Lancaster County's Amish and Mennonite 
                communities.
 
              -  Australian Terence Tao, 31, the fellowship comes weeks after 
                the UCLA professor won the Fields Medal, often described as the 
                "Nobel Prize of math."
 
              - Sarah Ruhl, 32, from New York, playwright was a finalist last 
                year for a Pulitzer Prize for the play "The Clean House." 
                She said the fellowship will give her the freedom to pick projects 
                she is passionate about.
 
             
            Dr. Atul Gawande 
            NRI Dr. Atul Gawande was born on November 5, 1965 in Brooklyn, 
              NY. His parents are from India and both doctors.  
            
              - He grew up in Athens, OH with his sister. He is a Rhodes scholar 
                and attended Harvard Medical School after obtaining an undergraduate 
                degree at Stanford. He also has a Master of Public Health from 
                the Harvard School of Public Health. 
 
              - He is also an editor at the New England Journal of Medicine. 
                In the medical field, he is a leading expert on the removal of 
                cancerous endocrine glands. These impressive accomplishments have 
                paved the way for Gawande to be named as one of the 20 Most Influential 
                South Asians by Newsweek Magazine.
 
              - Dr. Gawande lives in Newton, Massachusetts and has three children.
 
              - Education 
 
                M.P.H., 1999, Harvard School of Public Health 
                M.D., 1995, Harvard Medical School 
                M.A., 1989, Oxford University 
                B.A.S., 1987, Stanford University 
             
            He has written extensively on medicine and public health for The 
              New Yorker magazine and the online magazine Slate. His essays have 
              appeared in The Best American Essays 2002 and The Best American 
              Science Writing 2002. His book, Complications: A Surgeon's Notes 
              on an Imperfect Science. was a National Book Award finalist. 
            Research Interests  
              Atul Gawande and his colleagues have focused their research on problems 
              at the intersection of surgery and public health.  
              Much of their work has examined error in surgery, establishing its 
              frequency and seriousness and revealing underlying mechanisms. Ongoing 
              work ranges from observation research on performance and safety 
              in the operating room to studies of medical malpractice claims to 
              the development of technologies to prevent surgeons from inadvertently 
              leaving sponges or instruments in patients. A newer area of research 
              concerns the current state of care in developing countries for illness 
              requiring surgery or other high technology interventions.  
            Publications:  
            
              - AA Gawande. Complications: A Surgeon’s 
                Notes on an Imperfect Science. New York: Metropolitan Books; 2002. 
                Paperback publication: New York, Picador USA, April, 2003. Audio 
                publication: New York, Audio Renaissance, April 2003. Also published 
                in 17 languages and more than 100 countries.
 
              -  The Malpractice Mess. The New Yorker. November 
                14, 2005. 
 
              -  Perspective. Naked. The New England Journal 
                of Medicine. 2005;353(7)645-648. 
 
              - Piecework. The New Yorker. April 4, 2005. 
 
              -  Accidental deaths, saved lives and improved 
                quality. The New England Journal of Medicine. 2005;353(13):1405-9. 
              
 
              -  The Bell Curve. The New Yorker. December 6, 
                2004. 
 
              - Perspective. Notes of a surgeon: Casualties 
                of war - Military care for the wounded from Iraq and Afghanistan. 
                The On washing hands. The New England Journal of Medicine. 2004;350(13):1283-6. 
              
 
              - The Mop-Up. The New Yorker, January 12, 2004. 
              
 
              - Notes of a surgeon: Dispatch from India. The 
                New England Journal of Medicine 2003;349(25):2383-2386. 
 
              -  Improving safety with information technology. New England Journal 
                of Medicine 2003;348(25):2526-34. 
 
              - Desperate Measures. The New Yorker, May 5, 
                2003. 
 
              - Creating the educated surgeon in the twenty-first century. 
                American Journal of Surgery 2001;181(6):551-556. 
 
              - Analysis of errors reported by surgeons at three teaching hospitals. 
                Surgery 2003;133:614-621. 
 
              - Risk factors for retained instruments and sponges after surgery. 
                New England Journal of Medicine 2003;348(3):229-235. 
 
              - Error in medicine: what have we learned? Annals of Internal 
                Medicine 2000;132:763-767. 
 
              - The impact of the internet on quality measurement. Health Affairs 
                2000;19(6):104-114. 
 
              - The incidence and nature of surgical adverse events in Colorado 
                and Utah in 1992. Surgery 1999;126(1):66-75. 
 
              -  Does dissatisfaction with health plans stem from having no 
                choices during enrollment? Health Affairs, 1998;17(5):184-194. 
              
 
             
            
             His new book, Complications, Atul 
              Gawande describes the tasks of the men and women of the medical 
              trade in a way that many may find unsettling: "We drug people, 
              put needles and tubes into them, manipulate their chemistry, biology, 
              and physics, lay them unconscious and open their bodies up to the 
              world." This sentence has none of the antiseptic, doctor-as-deity 
              gloss with which medicine is often painted; a slow cultural shift 
              over the past twenty years, led by television (from St. Elsewhere 
              to E.R), has been humanizing our view of the practice of medicine, 
              and Gawande's book is perhaps the biggest and most convincing step 
              in that direction so far. 
             
               
              
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