Henry Marsh (neurosurgeon)

Last updated

Henry Marsh

Henry Thomas Marsh - 16091909.jpg
Marsh visiting Ternopil National Medical University in September 2016
Born (1950-03-05) 5 March 1950 (age 74)
NationalityBritish
Alma mater University College, Oxford Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine.
Known forawake craniotomy techniques and neurosurgical work in Ukraine.
Spouse Kate Fox
Scientific career
Fields Neurosurgery

Henry Thomas Marsh CBE FRCS (born 5 March 1950) is a British neurosurgeon and author, a pioneer of awake craniotomy techniques and of neurosurgical work in Ukraine.

Contents

Early life

Marsh is the youngest of his parents' four children. His parents were the law reformer Norman Stayner Marsh (1913–2008) and bookseller Christiane "Christel" Christinnecke (1917–2000). His mother relocated from Halle in Germany to England in 1939 after she had been denounced to the Gestapo for "making anti-Nazi comments". [1] They married in London in the late summer of 1939. [2] They played a leading role in the creation of the human rights organisation Amnesty International, the brainchild of the lawyer and activist Peter Benenson.[ citation needed ]

Marsh was born in 1950, near Oxford, where his father taught law at the university. [3] Marsh attended the Dragon School in Oxford. [4] The family later moved to London and he studied at Westminster School, before returning to Oxford, to read Politics, Philosophy and Economics at University College, where he obtained First Class Honours, before graduating with Honours in Medicine from the Royal Free Medical School. Fragile mental health left Marsh considering suicide, and he took a year out, spending time as a voluntary patient, as well as working as a porter in a hospital. [3]

Career

Marsh was until 2015 the senior consultant neurosurgeon at the Atkinson Morley Wing at St George's Hospital, south London, one of the country's largest specialist brain surgery units.

He specialised in operating on the brain under local anaesthetic and was the subject of a major BBC documentary Your Life in Their Hands [5] in 2004, which won the Royal Television Society Gold Medal.

He has been working with neurosurgeons in the former Soviet Union, mainly in Ukraine since 1992 and his work there was the subject of the BBC Storyville film The English Surgeon from 2007. This won an Emmy award in 2010 for best science documentary. [6]

He has a particular interest in the influence of hospital buildings and design on patient outcomes and staff morale; he has broadcast and lectured widely on this subject. He states that one of his proudest achievements has been the creation of a balcony garden outside the two neurosurgical wards at St. George's Hospital.

His memoir Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery was published in 2014. [7] According to The Economist , this memoir is "so elegantly written it is little wonder some say that in Mr Marsh neurosurgery has found its Boswell". [8] It has been translated into 37 languages.

In 2017, Marsh published Admissions: Life as a Brain Surgeon, a second memoir with Weidenfeld & Nicolson, an imprint of Orion. In 2022 he published And Finally with Jonathan Cape, in which he describes his transition from being a doctor to being a patient with cancer. Both books were Sunday Times best sellers. He writes regularly for the New Statesman magazine and has written for the Guardian, the Financial Times , the Times, the New York Times , the Sunday Times and the online Ukrainian newspaper Ukrainska Pravda.

Marsh was the castaway on BBC Radio 4's long-running Desert Island Discs in September 2018. His favourite selection was Better Not Look Down by B.B. King. [9]

In 2023 he co-founded with Dr Rachel Clarke the charity Hospice Ukraine, which aims to help palliative care doctors and nurses in Ukraine. He has been working with medical colleagues in Ukraine since 1992, and has continued to visit since the Russian invasion in February 2022.

Awards and honours

Marsh was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2010 Birthday Honours. [10] Also in 2010 he presented the Leslie Oliver Oration at Queen's Hospital. [11]

In 2015 his book Do No Harm won both the Pen Ackerly prize for biography and the South Bank Sky Arts Award.[ citation needed ] In 2017 Marsh was awarded the Times Newspapers' William Howard Russell Award for non-fiction.[ citation needed ] In 2023 Marsh was awarded the Clement Price Thomas medal by the Royal College of Surgeons (England).[ citation needed ] In 2023 he was awarded the Society of British Neurological Surgeon's medal for his outstanding contribution to neurosurgery.[ citation needed ]

Personal life

Henry Marsh is married to the social anthropologist Kate Fox, author of the best-selling "Watching the English", and spends his spare time making furniture and keeping bees. [12] He is a younger brother of the architectural historian Bridget Cherry. [13]

Marsh is a Patron of My Death My Decision, an organisation that campaigns for the legal right to a medically-assisted death in England and Wales. [14]

In April 2021 it was announced that Marsh had been diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer, [15] which as of August 2022 is now in remission. [16] He has, in the meantime, continued to visit Ukraine since the 2022 Russian invasion to teach and advise local doctors. [16]

Publications

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Neurosurgery</span> Medical specialty of disorders which affect any portion of the nervous system.

Neurosurgery or neurological surgery, known in common parlance as brain surgery, is the medical specialty concerned with the surgical treatment of disorders which affect any portion of the nervous system including the brain, spinal cord and peripheral nervous system.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joseph Ransohoff</span>

Dr. Joseph Ransohoff, II was a member of the Ransohoff family and a pioneer in the field of neurosurgery. In addition to training numerous neurosurgeons, his "ingenuity in adapting advanced technologies" saved many lives and even influenced the television program Ben Casey. Among other innovations, he created the first intensive care unit dedicated to neurosurgery, pioneered the use of medical imaging and catheterization in the diagnosis and treatment of brain tumors, and helped define the fields of pediatric neurosurgery and neuroradiology.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Walter Dandy</span> American neurosurgeon (1886–1946)

Walter Edward Dandy was an American neurosurgeon and scientist. He is considered one of the founding fathers of neurosurgery, along with Victor Horsley (1857–1916) and Harvey Cushing (1869–1939). Dandy is credited with numerous neurosurgical discoveries and innovations, including the description of the circulation of cerebrospinal fluid in the brain, surgical treatment of hydrocephalus, the invention of air ventriculography and pneumoencephalography, the description of brain endoscopy, the establishment of the first intensive care unit, and the first clipping of an intracranial aneurysm, which marked the birth of cerebrovascular neurosurgery.

Fred J. Epstein was a pediatric neurosurgeon credited for the development of pioneering neurosurgical techniques to treat children threatened by brain and spinal-cord tumors.

<i>The English Surgeon</i> 2007 British documentary film

The English Surgeon is a documentary film that premiered at the BFI London Film Festival in 2007. It focuses on the work of Henry Marsh, a neurosurgeon from the UK, and his efforts to help desperately ill patients in Ukrainian hospitals.

Professor Laurence Fraser Levy was a pioneering neurosurgeon based in Harare, Zimbabwe, noted as the first neurosurgeon in Africa. He was Professor of Surgery and Anatomy at the University of Zimbabwe and managed to train about a dozen other neurosurgeons despite the lack of resources. He published more than 90 articles. He was also awarded a gold medal in 2005 by the World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa</span> American physician

Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa is a Mexican-American neurosurgeon, author, and researcher. Currently, he is the William J. and Charles H. Mayo Professor and Chair of Neurologic Surgery and runs a basic science research lab at the Mayo Clinic Jacksonville in Florida.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gail Rosseau</span>

Gail Linskey Rosseau is Clinical Professor of Neurosurgery at George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, D.C. Prior to this position, she was Associate Chairman of Inova Fairfax Hospital Department of Neurosciences. She previously served as director of skull base surgery of NorthShore University HealthSystem. She is board-certified and has been an examiner for the American Board of Neurological Surgery. She has been elected to the leadership of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons, World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies, and the Société de Neurochirurgie de Langue Française.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William Beecher Scoville</span> American physician (1906–1984)

William Beecher Scoville was an American neurosurgeon at Hartford Hospital in Hartford, Connecticut. Scoville established the Department of Neurosurgery at Connecticut's Hartford Hospital in 1939. He performed surgery on Henry Gustav Molaison in 1953 to relieve epilepsy that damaged the hippocampus of both the right and left temporal lobes of Molaison's brain and left him with a memory disorder.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roger Härtl</span> American neurosurgeon

Roger Härtl is an American neurological surgeon at Weill-Cornell Medical College and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. He is the Director of Spinal Surgery at the Weill Cornell Brain & Spine Center. Härtl has been named by Becker's Spine Review as one of the Top 50 Spine Surgeons in the United States as well as one of the Top 10 Spine and Neurosurgeon Leaders at Non-Profit Hospitals. He was named one of New York's Top Doctors by New York Magazine after he saved the life of New York firefighter Eugene Stolowski.

Sir Wylie McKissock, OBE was a British neurosurgeon. He set up the neurosurgical unit at the Atkinson Morley Hospital, was Britain's most prolific leucotomist (lobotomist), and president of the Society of British Neurological Surgeons.

Albert Loren Rhoton Jr., was an American neurosurgeon and a professor specializing in microsurgical neuroanatomy. He was on the editorial boards of six surgical journals, and worked as professor and chairman of the Department of Neurological Surgery at the University of Florida. He was also president of organizations such as the American Association of Neurological Surgeons, among other surgical organizations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael L. J. Apuzzo</span> American academic neurological surgeon

Michael L. J. Apuzzo is an American academic neurological surgeon, the Edwin M. Todd/Trent H. Wells, Jr. Professor Emeritus of Neurological Surgery and Radiation Oncology, Biology, and Physics at the Keck School of Medicine, of the University of Southern California. He is also editor emeritus of the peer-reviewed journals World Neurosurgery and Neurosurgery. He is distinguished adjunct professor of neurosurgery at the Yale School of Medicine, distinguished professor of advanced neurosurgery and neuroscience and senior advisor, at the Neurological Institute, Wexner Medical School, The Ohio State University, and adjunct professor of neurosurgery, Weill Cornell Medicine, Department of Neurological Surgery & Weill Cornell Brain and Spine Center.

Frank Henderson Mayfield, was an American neurosurgeon and founder of the Mayfield Clinic and Spine Institute in Cincinnati, Ohio. A pioneer in brain and spine surgery, he invented the spring aneurysm clip and the Mayfield skull clamp. Mayfield is best known for his clinical interests in peripheral nerve and spine injuries, development of neurosurgical instruments, and medical politics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aaron Cohen-Gadol</span> American neurosurgeon

Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol is a professor of neurological surgery in the department of neurosurgery at Indiana University School of Medicine and a neurosurgeon at Indiana University Health specializing in the surgical treatment of complex brain tumors, vascular malformations, cavernous malformations, etc. He performs removal of brain tumors via minimally invasive endoscopic techniques, which use the nasal pathways instead of opening the skull.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Rutka</span> Canadian neurosurgeon

James Rutka is a Canadian neurosurgeon from Toronto, Canada. Rutka served as RS McLaughlin Professor and Chair of the Department of Surgery in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto from 2011 – 2022. He subspecializes in pediatric neurosurgery at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), and is a Senior Scientist in the Research Institute at SickKids. His main clinical interests include the neurosurgical treatment of children with brain tumours and epilepsy. His research interests lie in the molecular biology of human brain tumours – specifically in the determination of the mechanisms by which brain tumours grow and invade. He is the Director of the Arthur and Sonia Labatt Brain Tumour Research Centre at SickKids, and Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Neurosurgery.

Rahul Jandial is an American, dual-trained brain surgeon and neuroscientist. He is also a London Times bestselling & international bestselling author with his books translated into over 20 languages.

<i>Do No Harm</i> (book) 2014 memoir written by Henry Marsh

Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death, and Brain Surgery is a 2014 memoir written by Henry Marsh and published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson. The book details the author's career as a neurosurgeon.

Nelson M. Oyesiku is a Nigerian-American professor of neurosurgery and endocrinology. With a specialty in pituitary medicine and surgery, currently, he is the chair of the department of Neurological Surgery and Professor of Medicine (Endocrinology) at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. he has been editor-in-chief of Neurosurgery, Operative Neurosurgery, and Neurosurgery Open. He was previously chair of the American Board of Neurological Surgery, among other organizations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">B. K. Misra</span> Neurosurgeon

Dr. Basant Kumar Misra is a neurosurgeon specialising in treating brain, spine, cerebrovascular and peripheral nervous system disorders, injuries, pathologies and malformations. He is the Vice-President of the World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies, and the former President of the Asian Australasian Society of Neurological Surgeons, and the Neurological Society of India. He is a recipient of Dr. B. C. Roy Award, the highest medical honour in India.

References

  1. William Goodhart (27 October 2008). "Norman Marsh". Founding member of the Law Commission, reformer and academic. The Guardian, London. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  2. "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  3. 1 2 "Henry Marsh - a life in brain surgery". March 2018.
  4. "OD News". The OD. Vol. 1. Dragon School. 2011. p. 22.
  5. "I was awake during brain surgery". BBC News . BBC. 9 March 2004. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
  6. Sanderson, Greg (28 March 2008). "Brain surgery with a DIY drill". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
  7. Marsh, Henry (2014). Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery. Orion. ISBN   978-0297869870.
  8. "Books of the Year: Page turners". The Economist. 6 December 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  9. Presenter: Kirsty Young; Interviewed Guest: Henry Marsh; Producer: Sarah Taylor (23 September 2018). "Desert Island Discs: Henry Marsh". Desert Island Discs . BBC. BBC Radio 4 . Retrieved 28 September 2018.
  10. "No. 59446". The London Gazette (Supplement). 12 June 2010. p. 23.
  11. "Third Annual Leslie Oliver Oration". Neurosurgery News. Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust. 16 January 2010. Archived from the original on 30 August 2012. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  12. Wagner, Erica (March 2014). "Life and death at his fingertips: watching a brain surgeon at work". New Statesman .
  13. Wintle, Angela (11 June 2017). "British neurosurgeon Henry Marsh on his passion for tools, doing up houses and beekeeping". Sunday Times online. Retrieved 15 June 2017.(subscription required)
  14. "About Us". mydeath-decision.org. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  15. "Assisted dying inquiry essential, leading brain surgeon says". BBC News. April 2021.
  16. 1 2 Henry Marsh, How brain surgeon Henry Marsh went from doctor to patient,' The Guardian 13 August 2022

Further reading