Biography
Suresh Vatsyayann is a family medicine specialist, an international MBA with Distinction and Honors’ graduate with 1st class honors’ in International Health Development and Policy. He has over 70 publications in and has invented 10s of new techniques in surgery, medicine, etc. He has given health through wisdom lectures weekly to doctors, medical staff and the general public spanning 21 years in New Zealand, India and the world over. The lectures have been part of the series of "Health for All Through Wisdom," a crusade against the pandemic of the non-communicable diseases (NCD). He has astonishing results with over 30 thousand followers and beneficiaries of his guidance and management. He has enlightened great medical, management and health policy audiences world over. A firm believer in education, he is making a visible difference in the lives of individuals, groups of people and the public through one to one, group and mass communication techniques of his, and feels obliged and thankful to all for being able to share his dream, results and education techniques with their fellow medical fraternity, especially the junior medics and paramedics, opinion leaders and the younger generations
Research Interest
Pilonidal Surgery,Lipoma Surgery
Biography
Dr. Ellahham received his undergraduate degree in biology and his M.D. from the American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon. Dr Ellahham finished his internal medicine residency in Georgetown University Hospital - Washington Hospital Center and his fellowship in Cardiology at the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System in USA. Dr. Ellahham worked in Washington DC in Georgetown University Hospital - Washington Hospital Center and in several clinical and leadership positions before moving to UAE in 2008. Dr. Ellahham continues to be an active clinician. He demonstrates great skill and experience in the management of patients with heart failure, ischemic heart disease, and valvular heart disease and led a multi-disciplinary team in the care and delivery of advanced therapies to these patients. He has unique abilities to partner and engage local and regional referring providers. He can work in a highly matrixed environment, possess strong leadership and organizational skills and have experience to working effectively in a large health system. He led the First AHA GWTG Heart Failure Initiative outside US and was the recipient of the AHA GWTG Award in Wash. DC. He is the champion of the AHA GWTG in the region. Dr. Ellahham has served as Chief Quality Officer for SKMC from 2009 till 2017. In his role, he has led the development of a quality and safety program that has been highly successful and visible and has been recognized internationally by several awards. As Chief Quality Officer and Global Healthcare Leader, he had a focus on ensuring that implementation of these best practices leads to breakthrough improvements in clinical quality, patient safety, patient experience and risk management.
Research Interest
Dr. Ellahham is an avid researcher; his research includes heart failure, acute coronary syndromes, frailty, dyslipidemia, accreditation, second victim phenomenon, resilience, innovation, artificial intelligence, telehealth, block chain, patient flow, patient experience and engagement, lean-six sigma, patient safety, bowtie risk management tool and KPI management. He is a recognized world-leader in these fields.
Biography
William J. Rowe M.D. FBIS (Fellow British Interplanetary Society), FACN (Fellow American College of Nutrition, Retired Fellow Royal Society of Medicine), is a board certified specialist in Internal Medicine. He received his M.D. at the University of Cincinnati and was in private practice in Toledo, Ohio for 34 years. During that time he supervised over 5000 symptom - limited maximum hospital-based treadmill stress tests. He studied 3 world class extraordinary endurance athletes and published their exercise-related magnesium deficiencies.
Research Interest
Heart Diseases He studied 3 world class extraordinary endurance athletes and published their exercise-related magnesium deficiencies. This triggered a 20 year pursuit of the cardiovascular complications of Space flight.