Daily Mail

Best doctors are psychopath­s, says surgeon

- By Richard Marsden

RUTHLESSNE­SS, emotional detachment and fearlessne­ss are traits more usually associated with psychopath­s.

But the best doctors also need the same ‘attributes’, a leading cardiac surgeon has revealed. Professor Stephen Westaby, 71, said it helped him undertake a pioneering operation that saved a baby girl’s life.

He developed an appetite for risk following a rugby accident as a medical student that left him with a fractured skull.

Prof Westaby told the Cheltenham Literature Festival: ‘When they shipped me back to medical school they could immediatel­y tell that I was different to the shy and retiring person I’d been before.

‘I didn’t register fear and that became significan­t in my medical career.

‘I changed and I enjoyed the change. I could cope with anything in terms of the misery you face when you first start in heart surgery. When I first went to the Royal Brompton [in London] in 1974 operating on the children, one in four died.

‘I think we are talking about selected tendencies that represent psychopath­y.’ The surgeon, from the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, told the audience how his ability to take calculated risks helped save the life of a baby. Prof Westaby removed a third of five-month-old Kirsty Collier’s heart and replaced an artery in a pioneering double operation.

He recalled how the procedure went ahead despite colleagues advising him to give up. Prof Westaby said: ‘I have to say that to do two new operations and film them, you need to be a psychopath.

‘You have to be on the edge, but you have to take a chance.’ Miss Collier is now a healthy 21-year-old. Fellow heart surgeon Samer Nashef, who has practised at Papworth Hospital in Cambridge, added: ‘You do need slightly psychopath­ic [surgeons], who have the ability to deal with the unexpected crisis.’

Mr Nashef also revealed how he accidental­ly set an elderly heart bypass patient on fire on the operating table. Flammable surgical solution got too close to an electric cauterisin­g device and ignited near the groin. He said: ‘The patient did absolutely fine but was rather bemused to find he’d had a full Brazilian.’

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