Kelly McQueen
Department of Anesthesiology Chair
Personal details
Born (1962-06-27) June 27, 1962
Augusta, Georgia, U.S.
EducationColorado College (BS)
Robert Larner College of Medicine (MD)
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (MPH)
Awards
  • AOA Honor Medical Society
  • Nicholas M. Greene, M.D., Outstanding Humanitarian Contribution (2017)
  • Service to Medicine and Community Service (2016)
  • Pfizer Surgical Volunteerism and Humanitarian Award (2010)
  • Benezet Lifetime Achievement Award (2009)
Scientific career
FieldsAnesthesiology, Public health
InstitutionsUW Health University Hospital

Kathryn Ann Kelly "Kelly" McQueen (born June 27, 1962) is an American anesthesiologist and global health expert. She currently practices anesthesiology at the UW Health University Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin[1] and serves as the chair for the Department of Anesthesiology at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public health.

Early years and education

McQueen was born at Fort Gordon Hospital in Augusta, Georgia, to Jon Anthony and Betty Kay Green. The family eventually moved to Littleton, Colorado where McQueen and her two sisters grew up, and she graduated from Littleton High School in 1980. McQueen earned a bachelor's degree in Biology from Colorado College in 1984 and graduated with a Doctor of Medicine from the University of Vermont College of Medicine in 1991. She completed her anesthesiology residency at the University of Arizona and Mayo Clinic Arizona in 1994 and 1995 respectively. In 1996 McQueen completed her obstetrical anesthesia fellowship at Mayo Clinic.

Additionally, she earned a Masters of Public Health from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and completed a fellowship in Health Policy from American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2002.

Career

Upon completing her training, McQueen joined Valley Anesthesiology Consultants, a private practice in Phoenix, Arizona as a partner from 1996–2012. During her tenure in private practice, McQueen focused on OB, Pediatric and Ambulatory Anesthesia. She was actively involved in teaching residents from the University of Arizona and the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, AZ. She served as an Adjunct Clinical Professor to the Mayo Clinic, and was the Education Liaison between Valley Anesthesia Consultants and the Mayo Clinic Scottsdale. She was also active in the delivery of humanitarian assistance during this time, often taking months away from her practice to serve overseas.

In 2012 McQueen was recruited to the Department of Anesthesiology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. She served as the Director to the Vanderbilt Global Anesthesia Programs and Development, and started the Vanderbilt Multidisciplinary Global Journal Club and the Vanderbilt Global Anesthesia Fellowship. Her research programs took her to Guatemala, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, and South Africa. She taught in Australia annually, at the National Critical Care and Trauma Response Center in Darwin, Australia. She provide many keynote addresses around the globe and scores of academic presentations focusing on surgical and anesthesia infrastructure in low and middle-income countries, and the global anesthesia and patient safety crisis in these same countries. Her research focus eventually focused on surgical and anesthesia outcomes, especially perioperative mortality rates. She also began working on Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) approaches for low and middle-income countries.

In Oct 2019, McQueen moved to Madison, WI to lead the Department of Anesthesiology within the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. Leading the oldest academic department of anesthesiology in the United States offered unique opportunities for McQueen. Her leadership has focused on bringing equity and transparency to all aspects of the department's tripartite mission of clinical excellence, education and training, and research. Since her arrival she has started efforts focusing on enhancing Diversity, Equity and Inclusivity, and improving Wellbeing. It is her goal to create departmental programs, while also aligning with the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and UW Health University Hospital. She is creating a Global Academic Anesthesia Consortium, that is committed to education and training in low-income settings and is a collaboration between many like-minded US Academic Anesthesia Programs. She has also started a sustainable Global Anesthesia Program, with current efforts focused in Rwanda and Zambia.

Currently, McQueen serves as a Professor and the Ralph Waters Distinguished Chair for the Department of Anesthesiology at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, and continues to actively research outcomes and opportunities for system improvements in low and middle-income countries.

In 2022, McQueen was elected to serve on the executive board for the Multicenter Perioperative Outcomes Group (MPOG).

Humanitarian aid and disaster relief

McQueen's first involvement in humanitarian work was as a medical student in the Dominican Republic. During her residency, she joined an Obstetrical Team for People to People on a trip to Russia in 1992. Since then, she has committed time annually to serving humanitarian and disaster relief organizations including Doctors Without Borders and Operation Smile.[2]

She became a fellow of the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (HHI) after completing her MPH at the Harvard School of Public Health in 2002. .[3] During her time as an HHI fellow, McQueen transitioned from providing service overseas to researching infrastructure and outcomes, and focusing on education and training to improve surgery and anesthesia in low and middle-income countries. She has taught extensively around the world on topics of Anesthesia for Austere Environments and Anesthesia delivery during humanitarian crises and following disasters. She eventually founded the Burden of Surgical Disease Working Group, and later Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence (ASAP) and The Global Surgical Consortium.[4] McQueen is also currently a member of the World Health Organization's Global Initiative on Emergency and Essential Surgical Care (GIEESC).

Medical missions

Ordered chronologically:[2]

  • 1988: Dominican Republic
  • 1992: People to People Delegation on OB, Russia, Latvia and Lithuania
  • 1996: American Society of Anesthesiologists Overseas Teaching Program, Tanzania
  • 1998, 1999: Operation Smile, China
  • 1999, 2004: Operation Smile, Jordan
  • 2000: Operation Smile, Brazil
  • 2001: Doctors Without Borders, Sri Lanka
  • 2002: Operation Smile, Peru
  • 2003: Operation Smile in collaboration with Partners in Health Hinche, Haiti
  • 2006: American Society of Anesthesiologists, Haiti
  • 2009: American Society of Anesthesiologists, Ethiopia
  • 2012: American Society of Anesthesiologists, Rwanda

Public health career

After receiving her MPH from the Harvard School of Public Health in 2002, McQueen went on to complete a fellowship at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) from 2002–2003.[5] During her fellowship, she served at the Office of Naval Research where she worked with the US Navy's International Field Offices on infectious disease topics. The Anthrax letter scare of 2002 occurred during her tenure with AAAS, prompting McQueen to plan and coordinate a bilateral meeting with Mexico on Emerging Infectious Disease Threats in Latin America in Cuernavaca, Mexico in September 2003.

Since 2003, McQueen has combined a career in anesthesiology with a global public health career. Soon after completing the AAAS fellowship, she began focusing on the role of surgery and safe anesthesia in global public health. While the public health community only initially endorsed emergency surgery as an important component of population based health, her worked informed the literature and eventually the global community on the importance of both emergency and essential surgery for all populations.

Leadership

In 2006, she founded the Burden of Surgical Disease Working Group and served as its leader until its transition to the Alliance of Surgery and Anesthesia Presence (ASAP) in 2010. ASAP later became the 6th integrated society of the International Society of Surgeons; she was the inaugural president from 2013–15.[6] In 2007, McQueen developed the idea for the Global Surgical Consortium (GSC), a 501c3 non-profit organization, which was officially established in 2010

McQueen also became one of the founding board members of the G4 Alliance in 2015.[7] McQueen continues to serve as founder and President of GSC. She has also served as the American Society of Anesthesiologists Global Humanitarian Outreach Committee Chair from 2009-2015. Since 2011 she has been a board member to the American Society of Anesthesiology Charitable Foundation.[8] From 2017-2019 she served as a board member to the Shalom Foundation.[8] Since 2021 she serves on the University of Wisconsin Medical Foundation Board of Directors.[9]

Charitable activities

In 2010, McQueen founded The Global Surgical Consortium, a 501c3 non-profit organization and charity dedicated to providing the evidence and data required for the building of surgical infrastructure in low-income countries.[10]

Author

McQueen is the author of multiple peer-reviewed research and review articles, and is the author of two children's books, What's A Virus Anyway,[11] published in 1990, and Let’s Talk Trash,[12] published in 1992. In 1991, What's A Virus Anyway was awarded the Benjamin Franklin Children's Book Award.

The Global Anesthesia Crisis

McQueen's work was informed by her research on access to and infrastructure for surgery and safe anesthesia in many low and middle income countries. She is considered as one of the global experts on the [13][14] and patient safety in low income countries.

Awards

In 1997, McQueen earned an award from the AOA Honor Medical Society. Later in 2010, McQueen earned the International College of Surgeons Surgical Volunteerism and Humanitarian Award from the International College of Surgeons. She also received the Arizona Medical Association Humanitarian Award in 2011 and the Colorado College Benezet Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012. In 2016, she received the University of Vermont College of Medicine Service in Medicine Award and later received the Nicholas M. Greene, M.D., Outstanding Humanitarian Contribution award in 2017.

Publications

Her most cited publications are:

References

  1. "Department Leadership". Department of Anesthesiology. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  2. 1 2 Cook, J (9 March 2016). "Anesthesiology: Dr. Kelly McQueen". Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  3. "Kelly McQueen | Harvard Humanitarian Initiative". Archived from the original on 2016-03-10. Retrieved 2016-03-16.
  4. McQueen, K; Burdic, M (January 2011). "2011 Global Surgical Consortium Annual Report". Harvard Humanitarian Initiative. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  5. "Fellows Directory". AAAS S&T Policy FellowsCentral. AAAS. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  6. McQueen, K (March 2014). "Welcome from the ASAp President". The Alliance for Surgery and Anesthesia Presence. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  7. Kamali, Parisa (26 February 2015). "Historic Congressional Briefing on the Need for Surgical Care in Low-Resource Settings". G4 Alliance: Global Alliance for Surgical, Obstetric, Trauma, and Anesthesia Care. G4 Alliance: Global Alliance for Surgical, Obstetric, Trauma, and Anaesthesia Care. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  8. 1 2 "Home". theshalomfoundation.org.
  9. "UW Health corporate governance".
  10. "The Global Surgical Consortium". The Global Surgical Consortium. March 2016. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  11. Fassler, David; McQueen, Kelly (25 February 1995). What's A Virus Anyway. Waterfront Books. ISBN 0914525158.
  12. McQueen, Kelly; Fassler, David (February 1991). Let's Talk Trash. Waterfront Books. ISBN 0914525190.
  13. {{TEDxTalk |url= https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tt8%202Qdhexg]
  14. {{TEDxTalk |url= https://ethos3.com/tedxnashville-kelly-mcqueen/]
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 KellyMcQueen profile on google Scholar
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