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May 22, 2018 Presenters: Joseph Woo, Sharon Hunt, Phil Oyer, Bruce Reitz Moderator: Joseph Woo In 1968, the very concept of transplanting a beating heart from one human to another seemed like science fiction. A visionary Stanford cardiothoracic surgeon named Dr. Norman E. Shumway set about to change that; and in the process created the standard by which nearly 2,000 life-saving surgeries are performed annually today. However Shumway’s legacy is cemented not only for those three hours of surgery in January 1968, but in his team’s decades-long commitment to further transforming transplant protocols and the translational science to lower patient rejection and increase survival rate. This remarkable session features insights from several pioneering leaders in the field who were trainees on Dr. Shumway’s team, including one of the first females in cardiovascular medicine, the inventor of the first mechanical heart device, as well as Shumway’s partner in the first-ever heart-lung transplant. They explore the impact of this historic innovation at Stanford on human health and the extraordinary new directions in cardiovascular medicine that Stanford is leading today. Joseph Woo, MD Norman E. Shumway Professor Chair, Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery Stanford University School of Medicine Sharon Hunt, MD Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine, Emerita Stanford University School of Medicine Phil Oyer, MD, PhD Roy B. Cohn-Theodore A. Falasco Professor in Cardiothoracic Surgery Stanford University School of Medicine Bruce Reitz, MD Norman E. Shumway Professor, Emeritus Former Chair, Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery Stanford University School of Medicine