Biographies of international women leaders in neurosurgery

We received so many biographies of women neurosurgery leaders for this issue that only a selection could be condensed here. In all of them, the essence of a leader shines through. Many are included as “first” of their country or color or other achievement. All of them are included as outstanding—in...

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Autores:
Casillo, Stephanie M.
Venkatesh, Anisha
Muthiah, Nallammai
Agarwal, Nitin
Scott, Teresa
Romani, Rossana
Fernández, Laura L.
Aristizabal, Sarita
Ginalis, Elizabeth E.
Ozair, Ahmad
Bhat, Vivek
Faruqi, Arjumand
Bajaj, Ankur
Sonkar, Abhinav Arun
Ikeda, Daniel S.
Chiocca, Antonio
Lonser, Russell R.
Sutton, Tracy E.
McGregor, John M.
Rea, Gary L.
Schunemann, Victoria A.
Ngwenya, Laura B.
Marlin, Evan S.
Porensky, Paul N.
Shaikhouni, Ammar
Huntoon, Kristin
Dornbos, David
Shaw, Andrew B.
Powers, Ciarán J.
Gluski, Jacob M.
Culver, Lauren G.
Goodwin, Alyssa M.
Ham, Steven
Marupudi, Neena I.
Bhat, Dhananjaya I.
Berry, Katherine M.
Wu, Eva M.
Wang, Michael Y.
Tipo de recurso:
Article of journal
Fecha de publicación:
2021
Institución:
Universidad El Bosque
Repositorio:
Repositorio U. El Bosque
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:repositorio.unbosque.edu.co:20.500.12495/6723
Acceso en línea:
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12495/6723
https://doi.org/10.3171/2021.1.FOCUS201096
Palabra clave:
Biography
Women
International
Neurocirugía
Biography
Women
International
Neurosurgery
Rights
openAccess
License
Acceso abierto
Description
Summary:We received so many biographies of women neurosurgery leaders for this issue that only a selection could be condensed here. In all of them, the essence of a leader shines through. Many are included as “first” of their country or color or other achievement. All of them are included as outstanding—in clinical, academic, and organized neurosurgery. Two defining features are tenacity and service. When faced with shocking discrimination, or numbing indifference, they ignored it or fought valiantly. When choosing their life’s work, they chose service, often of the most neglected—those with pain, trauma, and disability. These women inspire and point the way to a time when the term “women leaders” as an exception is unnecessary.