Ablin Lectures

2017 Lucy Kalanithi, MD

Assistant Clinical Professor, Stanford University Lecture: When Breath Becomes Air - A Conversation with Lucy Kalanithi Lucy Kalanithi, MD, FACP is the widow of Dr. Paul Kalanithi, neurosurgeon and author of the #1 New York Times bestselling memoir When Breath Becomes Air, a meditation on mortality and meaning that spent 22 weeks at #1 on the New York Times bestseller list in 2016. A Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine at the Stanford School of Medicine, Dr. Kalanithi completed her medical degree at Yale, where she was inducted into the Alpha Omega Alpha national medical honor society, her residency at the University of California-San Francisco, and a postdoctoral fellowship training in healthcare delivery innovation at Stanford’s Clinical Excellence Research Center. Dr. Kalanithi has special interests in healthcare value, meaning in medicine, and end-of-life care. She wrote the epilogue to When Breath Becomes Air, has spoken at TEDMED, and appeared in The New York ...
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Past Lectures

2016 Larry R. Squire, PhD

Professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego Lecture: The Legacy of ...

2015 David Piepgras, MD

Professor of Neurosurgery, Mayo Clinic Lecture: Frontier Surgery: Lessons for Today from Beaumont ...

2014 Jon H. Robertson, MD

  Past chairman, Department of Neurosurgery, University of Tennessee Lecture: The Challenge of ...

2013 Samuel E. Wilson, MD

Professor, Department of Surgery, University of California, Irvine Lecture: Between Scylla and Charybdis: ...

2012 Robert W. Schrier, MD

Professor of Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine Lecture: Illnesses in the ...

2011 Volker Sonntag, MD

Vice-chairman, Barrow Neurological Institute Lecture: Cervical Instrumentation: Past, Present & Future. Born in ...

2010 Chris Wood, PhD

Vice-President, Santa Fe Institute Lecture: What Kind of Computer is the Brain? Dr. ...

2009 Michael A. DeGeorgia, MD

Professor of Neurology, Case Western Reserve University Lecture: Struck Down: The Collision of ...

2008 Michael Bliss, PhD

University Professor, University of Toronto; Author Lecture: Working Too Hard and Achieving Too ...

2007 Donald Trunkey, MD

Emeritus Professor, Department of Surgery, OHSU Lecture: The Crisis in Surgery with Particular ...

2006 August Turak

Spiritual and Business Consultant Lecture: Spirituality and the Neurosurgeon Most people wait their ...

2005 Rocco Armonda, MD

Neurological Surgeon, Lt.Col., U.S. Army Lecture: The Modern Management of Combat Neurotrauma Injuries: ...

2004 Gerald Kooyman, PhD

Research Professor, Scripps Institute of Oceanography Lecture: Emperor Penguins: Life at the Limits

2003 Frederic H. Chaffee, PhD

Director, W. M. Keck Observatory, Hawaii Lecture: The Keck Observatory at the Dawn ...

2002 Tom Campbell, JD, PhD

Professor of Law, Stanford; Former Congressman Lecture: Is Freedom Possible in Medicine?

After graduating Phi Beta Kappa in chemistry from Emory in 1980, Dr. Weinand attended St. Louis University School of Medicine, graduating in1984. He completed his neurosurgery residency at the University of Kansas in 1990. After a short stint as a clinical instructor at the University of Tennessee, he moved to Tucson, AZ in 1991 where he advanced from Assistant Professor to full Professor of Neurosurgery by 2002. He currently practices in Tucson in the Division of Neurosurgery at the University of Arizona College of Medicine. He has been the only program director at the University of Arizona neurosurgery residency which he founded in 2003. He served as Chief of the Division of Neurosurgery from 2004-2009. His practice interests include Neuro-Critical Care, Neurotrauma, Epilepsy Surgery and Surgical Pain Management and he has authored more than 100 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters.

Dr. Weinand is a member of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons, The Congress of Neurological Surgeons, and the American Epilepsy Society. He has served as a guest examiner for the American Board of Neurological Surgeons. He served as a neurosurgery representative on the American College of Surgeons’ Committee on Trauma.

Marty is married to his lovely wife, Shauna, who has worked as a neurotrauma ICU nurse for 16 years. She has nearly completed her graduate studies at the University of Arizona for her Doctorate in Nursing Practice (DNP). He has three children from his first marriage to Marcy Ann Coady, MD, a private practice psychiatrist whose untimely passing occurred in 2007. His oldest child Michael Alexander, is a physical therapist practicing in Philadelphia; a second son Jamie Drew is a first year Family Practice resident in the Southern New Mexico Family Practice Residency program in Las Cruces, NM, and his youngest is daughter Lauren Marie, a third year medical student at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

Marty enjoys swimming laps and working out with a trainer as an antidote to his long busy days. His favorite hobby is working in his lab where he does gene expression research in epilepsy. He enjoys traveling and is an avid reader.

As our new President, Dr. Weinand plans to:

  1. Emphasize increasing the membership of the Society.
  2. Nurture younger members to get involved in leadership of the Society.
  3. Grow corporate participation in support of the Society and its annual meetings.

Dr. Weinand has been an outstanding leader throughout his career. We look forward to his steady guidance and inspired leadership this year as President.

--Bill Ganz

WNS Communications Committee