Biography
Dr. Ozgediz became involved in surgical collaborations in Uganda in 2003 and since then has been part of multiple collaborations to strengthen surgery and anesthesia care there and in the region, mostly through support of capacity-building initiatives.
He is a co-founder of the Global Partners in Anesthesia and Surgery (GPAS) collaboration, focused in Uganda, as well as the Global Initiative for Children's Surgery (GICS). He is also on the advisory board of KIDS OR, an international charity dedicated to strengthening surgery and perioperative care in low resource settings.
Dr. Ozgediz's research focuses on global equity in surgical services, and spans clinical surgery and outcomes, along with work on the burden of disease, barriers to care, and effectiveness of interventions to advance surgical care globally and integrate surgical services with public health. He came to UCSF from Yale, where he had directed global surgery programs. At UCSF he will also be associated with the HEAL initiative and fellowship focused on global health equity.
Dr. Ozgediz has focused on scholarship related to strengthening access to surgical care for vulnerable populations mostly in low-income countries. He has had a longstanding relationship with colleagues in Uganda since 2003 and spent 2007-2008 living and working there. His collaborative scholarly activity has characterized the burden of surgical disease, outcomes, workforce gaps, and access strategies tailored to the limited-resource setting. he has led multiple collaborative teams to develop training courses and curricula geared for the low resource setting.
Dr. Ozgediz has been a part of multiple groups advancing global surgery such as the Bellagio Essential Surgery Group and the Burden of Surgical Disease Working Group in 2008, that subsequently became the Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence (ASAP), and through contributions to Disease Control Priorities third Edition. He also has worked closely with groups such as Global Partners in Anesthesia and Surgery (GPAS) and the Global Initiative for Children's Surgery (GICS) to evaluate interventions to strengthen surgical capacity in LMIC. He helped lead the Optimal Resources for Children's Surgery (ORECS) guidelines for children's surgery in LMIC and also works closely with the KIDS OR charity in implementation for children's surgery in LMIC and their Africa 2030 initiative.
Education
| Institution | Degree | Dept or School | End Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Toronto, Hospital for Sick Children | Fellow Pediatric Surgery | 2010 | |
| University of California, San Francisco | Chief Resident General Surgery | 2007 | |
| University of California, San Francisco | Residency General Surgery | 2006 | |
| London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine | MSc. | Public Health in Developing Countries | 2004 |
| University of California, San Francisco | Internship General Surgery | 2001 | |
| University of California, San Francisco | MD | 2000 | |
| Harvard University | BA | Economics | 1995 |
Board Certifications
American Board of Surgery, General Surgery
American Board of Surgery, Pediatric Surgery
Clinical Expertise
Neonatal Surgery
Pediatric Minimally Invasive Surgery
Pediatric Trauma
Pediatric Surgical Oncology
Congenital Anomalies
In the News
Research Narrative
Dr. Ozgediz has focused on scholarship related to strengthening access to surgical care for vulnerable populations mostly in low-income countries. He has had a longstanding relationship with colleagues in Uganda since 2003 and spent 2007-2008 living and working there. His collaborative scholarly activity has characterized the burden of surgical disease, outcomes, workforce gaps, and access strategies tailored to the limited-resource setting. he has led multiple collaborative teams to develop training courses and curricula geared for the low resource setting.
Dr. Ozgediz has been a part of multiple groups advancing global surgery such as the Bellagio Essential Surgery Group and the Burden of Surgical Disease Working Group in 2008, that subsequently became the Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence (ASAP), and through contributions to Disease Control Priorities third Edition. He also has worked closely with groups such as Global Partners in Anesthesia and Surgery (GPAS) and the Global Initiative for Children's Surgery (GICS) to evaluate interventions to strengthen surgical capacity in LMIC. He helped lead the Optimal Resources for Children's Surgery (ORECS) guidelines for children's surgery in LMIC and also works closely with the KIDS OR charity in implementation for children's surgery in LMIC and their Africa 2030 initiative.
Research Interests
Health Services
Health Disparities
Health Equity
Global Surgery
Burden of Disease
Implementation Research
Surgical Education
Epidemiology
Economic Evaluation
Research Pathways
Publications
- Fighting for Life: Five Advances in Neonatal Surgery Over 50 Years.| |
PubMed
- Innovation to Equity: Five Advances That Redefined Children's Surgery in the Past 50 Years.| |
PubMed
- Risk factors for catastrophic healthcare expenditure and high economic burden for children with anorectal malformations in Southwestern Uganda.| |
PubMed
- Current Landscape of Children's Surgery in Africa: A Multicenter Analysis of 16,000 Cases.| |
PubMed
- Surgery and the first 8000 days of life: a review.| |
PubMed
- Ugandan physician attitudes towards a potential, local trauma fellowship program.| |
PubMed
- The Social Challenges of Stomas Faced by Families of Children With Anorectal Malformations in Uganda.| |
PubMed
- Impact of Reducing Time Lived With Colostomies on Social Stigma Affecting Children With Anorectal Malformations in Southwestern Uganda.| |
PubMed
- Long-Term Outcomes of Patients with Digestive Tract Congenital Anomalies and Their Caregivers in Uganda: A Cohort Study.| |
PubMed
- KIT Inhibitor Therapy in a Pediatric Patient With Systemic Mastocytosis and a Germ Cell Tumor of Shared Clonal Origin.| |
PubMed