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Interesting People Topics:

Engineering :
- Kim Bigelow - Engineering Professor

Brain Surgery :
- Atom Sarkar - Neurosurgeon
- David Moxness - Procedure Solutions Specialist

Crash Scene:
- Alexia Fountain - Mechanical Engineering Student
- Ed Conkel – Emergency Medical Technician
- Trooper Fred J. Cook – Crash Scene Reconstruction Unit
-
Matthew A. Wolfe – Highway Safety Specialist

Compound Machines:
- Eric Westervelt - Electrical Engineer, Control Theory Specialist
- Ray Morrow– Exhibit Engineer
- Teresa Brusadin
– Welding Engineer

Weather:
- Rick Toracinta – Research Associate, Polar Meteorology Group
- Ben Gelber - On-air Meteorologist

Hip Surgery:
- Wilma Gillis - Chief Clinical Anesthetist
- John Heiner - Professor of Orthopedic Surgery
- Pat Johnson - Medical Assistant
- Shawn Knock - Surgical Technician
- Karen Myung - Orthopedic Surgery Resident

- Pat Schubert - R.N. Team Leader, Orthopedics
- Richard Illgen - Orthopedic Surgeon
- Carolyn Steinhorst - Nurse Clinician
- Eric Stormoen - Unit Coordinator, Orthopedics
- Szymon Wozniczka - Physical Therapist


Knee Surgery:
- Leanne Turner – Orthopedic Prosthetic Engineer
- Dr. Joel Politi - Orthopedic Surgeon
- Jan Augenstein - Physician Assistant
- Ed Lafollette - Registered Nurse
- Jeremy Daughtery - Clinical Manager Neurosurgery and Orthopedics


 

Wilma K. Gillis, CRNA
Chief Clinical Anesthetist
University of Wisconsin, Department of Anesthesiology

Education :

  • University of Michigan, School of Nursing, BSN in 1975

  • University of Michigan Medical School, Program of Nurse Anesthesia, Certificate of Anesthesia in 1983

Certification :

  • Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist since January of 1984

  • Advanced Cardiac Life-Support, ongoing recertification

  • Registered Nurse in the State of Wisconsin since 1983

  • Advanced Practice Nurse Prescriber

I am the chief anesthetist, supporting and supervising approximately 30 clinical anesthetist—both CRNAs and anesthesiologist assistants-- in a fine institution with a distinguished academic faculty of anesthesiologists.  Twenty percent of my work involves some aspect of administration, while 80% involves providing direct anesthesia care within a team concept of anesthesia care delivery.  Anesthetists in this academic department work under the supervision of anesthesiologists (medical doctors), providing all types of anesthesia care to a complex and diverse patient population.  Anesthetists have the exciting opportunity to teach medical students and non-anesthesiology residents within the clinical setting.  We occasionally teach through both clinical settings and lectures to visiting students, nursing staff and others.   We are able to interview and consult on our patients preoperatively, allay their apprehensions, provide direct anesthesia care, assist in planning for their care during surgery and assist with pain relief after surgery, as well as evaluating the success and patient satisfaction through a post-operative visit.  Every day is new and different, as are the individual patients for which we are privileged to care. 

I enjoy working with the orthopedic surgeons at the University of Wisconsin and seeing the outcomes achieved.  Many life-improving procedures are performed by the excellent, progressive orthopedic surgeons.  I have great respect for the quality of work we do at the
University of Wisconsin.

In the ORHistorically, I have been involved with the Comprehensive Cancer Center, providing anesthesia sedation for a cancer research program, Whole Body Hyperthermia.  I was able to travel to European Cancer Centers to assist the principal investigator, Ian Robins, MD, PhD, to export that technology and therapy options to centers in Germany and Holland.

Anesthesia care has become exponentially safer, since I began my study of this specialty in the early 1980s.  Technologic advances, improved monitoring and education and improvements in drugs and therapies have made the anesthesia experience less risky for patients to undergo.  The greatest recent improvements in my specialty include fewer undesirable side effects, less morbidity (disease) and mortality (deaths) and more rapid return to pre-operative comfort and functionality.  It is imperative that patients reveal a true health profile during the pre-operative evaluation phase to enable the anesthesia provider to plan for the safest, most satisfactory anesthetic that is possible for each individual. 

I love helping patients be less anxious and more psychologically accepting of the surgical experience, while trusting our anesthesia teams during the surgical procedure.  In the future, I expect more computer-driven patient monitoring, care documentation and less invasive surgical procedures.  I look to the future for improved, less invasive surgical options that allow a faster recovery and even better anesthesia medications and anesthetic techniques to more precisely tailor our care to each individual’s needs.

 

 

 
   

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