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Browsing by Author "El-Ghandour, Nasser M. F."
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Item In Memoriam: A Memoir for Our Fallen "Heroes"(Oxford University Press, 2020-07-13) Chaurasia, Bipin; Deora, Harsh; El-Ghandour, Nasser M. F.; Oyesiku, Nelson M.; Chaurasia, Raushan Kumar; Schulder, Michael; Soriano Sanchez, Jose Antonio; Teo, Mario; Hernesniemi, Juha; Linzey, Joseph Raynor; Schwartz, Theodore H.; Cohen-Gadol, Aaron A.; Lawton, Michael; Umana, Giuseppe; Mura, Jorge; Grotenhuis, Andre; Sinha, Ajit K.; Schroeder, Henry W. S.; Natarajan, Sabareesh; Sughrue, Michael E.; Spetzler, Robert F.; Drummond, Katharine; Tanikawa, Rokuya; Seixo Kadri, Paulo Abdo do; Kato, Yoko; Teo, Charles; Suri, Ashish; Tomasi, Santino Ottavio; Winkler, Peter A.; Scalia, Gianluca; Sampron, Nicolas; Rasulic, Lukas; Cappabianca, Paolo; Fontanella, Marco M.; Laws, Edward R.; Neurological Surgery, School of MedicineEven though neurosurgeons exercise these enormous and versatile skills, the COVID-19 pandemic has shaken the fabrics of the global neurosurgical family, jeopardizing human lives, and forcing the entire world to be locked down. We stand on the shoulders of the giants and will not forget their examples and their teachings. We will work to the best of our ability to honor their memory. Professor Harvey Cushing said: “When to take great risks; when to withdraw in the face of unexpected difficulties; whether to force an attempted enucleation of a pathologically favorable tumor to its completion with the prospect of an operative fatality, or to abandon the procedure short of completeness with the certainty that after months or years even greater risks may have to be faced at a subsequent session—all these require surgical judgment which is a matter of long experience.” It is up to us, therefore, to keep on the noble path that we have decided to undertake, to accumulate the surgical experience that these icons have shown us, the fruit of sacrifice and obstinacy. Our tribute goes to them; we will always remember their excellent work and their brilliant careers that will continue to enlighten all of us. This memorial is intended to commemorate our colleagues who succumbed during the first 4 months.Item Letter: The Impact of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic on Neurosurgeons Worldwide(Oxford University Press, 2020-05-20) El-Ghandour, Nasser M. F.; Elsebaie, Eman H.; Salem, Amany A.; Alkhamees, Abdullah F.; Zaazoue, Mohamed A.; Fouda, Mohammed A.; Elbadry, Rasha G.; Aly, Mohamed; Bakr, Hebatalla; Labib, Mohamed A.; Tobin, Matthew K.; Gragnaniello, Cristian; Gonzalez-Lopez, Pablo; Shamisa, Abdalla; Jhawar, Balraj S.; Soliman, Mohamed A. R.; Neurological Surgery, School of MedicineThe aim of our study was to explore the impact of this pandemic on neurosurgeons with the hope of improving preparedness for future crisis. We created a 20-question survey designed to explore demographics (nation, duration and scope of practice, and case-burden), knowledge (source of information), clinical impact (elective clinic/surgery cancellations), hospital preparedness (availability of personal protective equipment [PPE] and cost of the supplies), and personal factors (financial burden, workload, scientific and research activities). The survey was first piloted with 10 neurosurgeons and then revised. Surveys were distributed electronically in 7 languages (Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish) between March 20 and April 3, 2020 using Google Forms, WeChat used to obtain responses, and Excel (Microsoft) and SPSS (IBM) used to analyze results. All responses were cross-verified by 2 members of our team. After obtaining results, we analyzed our data with histograms and standard statistical methods (Chi-square and Fisher's exact tests and logistic regression). Participants were first informed about the objectives of our survey and assured confidentiality after they agreed to participate (Helsinki declaration). We received 187 responses from 308 invitations (60.7%), and 474 additional responses were obtained from social media-based neurosurgery groups (total responses = 661). The respondents were from 96 countries representing 6 continents (Figure (Figure11A-A-11C).