Armenian Surgeon Appointed Britain's Health Minister
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Sir Ara Darzi (Terzian) |
LONDON (BBC)--Prime Minister Gordon Brown has
appointed a practicing surgeon as a minister at the
Department of Health.
Professor Sir Ara Darzi (Terzian), who is charged
with improving patient care, has been promoted from
his previous role as National Advisor on surgery.
Sir Ara, chair of surgery at Imperial College
London, supports government plans to reconfigure NHS
services.
When he took over as prime minister, Brown said he
planned a broad-based government of "all the
talents."
But the Conservatives have criticized the
appointment, accusing Sir Ara of having a poor
record of supporting access to services for patients
and rubber-stamping the demands of the Department of
Health.
In a report published earlier this year Sir Ara said
80 percent of operations should be carried out on
patients in their local area, with the remaining
complex cases undertaken at specialist centers by
highly skilled surgeons.
Sir Ara will combine his ministerial duties with his
research and clinical commitments, including the
supervision of students.
Sir Ara, 47, said: "It is a great honour and
privilege to be asked by the Prime Minister to
continue that work for patients across the country.
"I will be working closely with Alan Johnson to map
out the next steps of the reform agenda that has
achieved so much in the last 10 years. But we can do
better."
Sir Ara is one of the world's leading surgeons,
specializing in the field of minimally invasive and
robot-assisted surgery, having pioneered many new
techniques and technologies.
Professor Darzi joined Imperial College London in
1994, becoming Head of Division in 2004. During this
time he has also served on the Department of
Health's National Modernization Board, the NHS
Executive and the National Institute of Clinical
Excellence. As well as pioneering robot-assisted
surgery, he has helped develop new training methods,
involving the use of virtual reality to allow
surgeons to practice their skills.
Professor Darzi was born in Iraq but spent much of
his childhood in Ireland. In 2003 he became a
British citizen. He was awarded a knighthood in 2003
for his services to medicine and surgery.
Dr. Darzi's father, Vartkes, is a retired civil and
structural engineer who was the first Iraq-born
Armenian to study at the University of California in
Berkeley in the late 1940's.
The son of a Genocide survivor, Vartkes (Terzian)
Darzi settled in Dublin after graduation and started
a family in a city which did not even have an
Armenian community.
"I used to travel a lot, working in many countries
in the Middle East, while Ara and his sister stayed
home with my wife. But we were a very close-knit
Armenian family and I have raised Ara as an
Armenian," Vartkes Darzi said.
"Unfortunately, we did not have a large circle of
Armenian friends, something which I want my son to
start doing. I have retired, and London is our home
now, and it is such an advantage to be involved with
the Armenian community," he said.
While not involved in things Armenian, Dr. Darzi
remains greatly interested in Armenian issues.
But in a recent interview, Dr. Darzi said he would
"really like to take my knowledge to Armenia. I
would love to visit and do something constructive
there.
"I have not had the chance until now, but I hope to
get more involved in the coming years. I want to go
to my roots. I have served in many countries around
the world. Why not also Armenia?" he said.
"I would like to volunteer and even take some
essential equipment to Armenia to train other
doctors there. All I need is the right opportunity."
he said.
Monday, July 2, 2007
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