Jellybean Podcast with Doug Lynch

Jellybean #17 with Derek Angus

05.16.2016 - By Doug Lynch @TheTopEndPlay

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Derek Angus; 15/15 on the Glasgow Conversational Scale.

Derek is the lead author of the PROCESS trial. You may have heard him on EMCrit talking about that study. http://emcrit.org/podcasts/process-trial/

You may have heard that he is one of the Heavyweights invited to SMACC CHICAGO.

So where does he come from, how did he get here, is he the right fit for that SMACC scene and will he be singing until 3am at FOAMaoke?

I caught up with Derek in Wellington, New Zealand at the Paul Young curated “Down with Dogma” College of Intensive Care Medicine Annual Scientific Meeting and I won’t pretend; I really like him.

Angus is a Prince of research. Do a Pubmed search for him if you don't believe me; there are literally hundreds of papers.

He started out at Glasgow University. (I seem to have a thing for Glaswegians a.k.a. “Weegies”) He was aiming at neurosurgery but after his MRCP and became the first Commonwealth citizen to work for MSF back when MSF were much, much smaller.

This conversation was just too interesting to stop around 10 minutes as Jellybeans usually are.

Have a listen. I think you’ll like it.

Derek went from MSF to working with Peter Safar no less.

From his early papers co-authored by Safar he has gone onto publish nearly 300 article of all shapes and sizes. These do not focus on the minutiae of some esoteric area, they seem to cover almost everything. Can you be a research generalist?

Talking to Scott Weingart he gave a restrained epidemiologically tight representation of what the PROCESS trial tells us. Many of the questions and comments on EMCrit.org blog were focusing upon “what should we do with our septic patients?” My understanding of the ProCESS trial is that it tries to answer a specific question; what part of this bundle actually works. Anthony Delaneys understanding is rather more important than mine though. http://www.intensivecarenetwork.com/index.php/icn-activities/icn-podcasts/906-process-delaneys-take

Sepsis is just one small part of what he does; he has fingers in all sorts of pies from Social Justice to Disaster Management. But what I should have asked him was what he was doing when he worked at “Reanimation Medicale” Hopital Cochin in Paris?

One of the best things that we talked about was heros, mentors and role models. Don't be afraid of these guys.

If you've got a hero out there at least send them an email!

This guy is seriously impressive; apparently you or I could be him!

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