Chang, Victor P
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Revision as of 06:49, 29 April 2008
BSc (Med) 1961 MB BS 1963 MD honoris causa 1988 (UNSW) FRACS FACS
Victor Chang was responsible for the establishment of Australia’s National Heart Transplant Program at St Vincent’s Hosptital, Sydney in 1984 and was its head surgeon.[1]
Victor (Yam Him) was born in Shanghai of Australian-born Chinese parents. He came to Australia in 1953 to complete his secondary schooling at Christian Brothers College, Lewisham. He undertook a Bachelor of Medical Science, followed by a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery at the University of Sydney and then worked for two years as an intern and a registrar of cardiothoracic surgery at St Vincent’s Hospital.
He received further training at the Brompton Hospital for Chest Diseases in London and became the Chief Resident at the Mayo Clinic in the USA. During this time, he was awarded Fellowships to the Royal College of Surgeons, the Australasian College of Surgeons and the American College of Surgeons.
Victor then returned to St Vincent’s Hospital in 1972 to join their cardiothoracic team, which already included Dr Harry Windsor and Dr Mark Shanahan. In 1980, when heart transplants became more feasible due to the development of an anti-rejection drug, Victor made the initial submission to the governmentVictor was an original thinker and saw the need for research and development of various cardiothoracic devices. In his last project, he designed an artificial heart valve, coined the St Vincent’s Heart Valve, which is produced overseas and is used to treat hundreds of patients in South East Asia.
In 1986 Victor Chang was awarded a Companion of the Order of Australia by the Governor-General.
He died tragically in Sydney on 4 July 1991.
References
- ^ Much of the information for this biography is drawn and edited directly from the website of the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute website http://www.victorchang.com.au