Surgical News volume 22 issue 1

Page 23

Surgical News | Volume 22 | Issue 01

Dr Samantha Pillay, paving the way for many firsts

It was work experience, at the age of 15, in Cardiothoracic Surgery that cemented Dr Samantha Pillay on a surgical career path. Now she is a self-published author of The No Recipe Cookbook – a cookbook for people who don’t cook. Dr Pillay’s journey over 35 years, from work experience to author, has been an interesting one. She was the first female to complete surgical training in adult Urology in South Australia. She further trained in female Urology – concentrating on women’s incontinence – becoming the first urologist to exclusively sub-specialise in female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery. As the first female section chair in South Australia for the Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand (USANZ), Dr Pillay served on both the National Board of the Continence Foundation of Australia and as their state chairperson from 2011 to 2013. Born with congenital hip dysplasia, Dr Pillay started school in a wheelchair. “Surgery maybe wasn’t an ideal career choice for someone who experienced pain on standing, but I was driven, stubborn and the harder it was, the more I wanted to do it,” Dr Pillay said. “Urology had a lot of sit-down surgery and procedures under two hours. I had to be sensible about what speciality I chose and I enjoyed the endoscopic side,” she added. From 2007-2013 Dr Pillay served as chair of the Female Urology Special Advisory Group for USANZ. In 2007, she became the first female scientific chair for the USANZ Annual Scientific Meeting. “It was a great honour to serve in these roles – to be the custodian and to

progress the area of female Urology. We grew the content of female Urology in the curriculum and at scientific meetings.

Shopping once a fortnight saved her time and money, while also reducing her stress and food waste.

“This attracted surgeons into female Urology and grew recognition from our peers. There are now more women in Urology,” Dr Pillay reported. “When I started my training, Professor Helen O’Connell AO was the only female urologist in Australia. Today that number has grown, although we are still far from a place where being a female in Urology, choosing a career in female Urology, or being a woman and not choosing a career in female Urology, are the norm,” Dr Pillay said.

“At the end of the day I’m ‘hangry’ [hungry and angry] and I have decisionfatigue,” Dr Pillay said of her own experience. “I don’t want to choose from a menu or wait for a meal when I can have dinner on the table in under 20 minutes.” There are no intimidating glossy pictures in her book. “I call it the ‘anti-fancy’ cooking movement,” Dr Pillay said of this choice. “Cooking without a recipe allows me to be creative, take risks and embrace mistakes. Something I don’t get to do when I’m operating.”

Bringing awareness has been a driving force in Dr Pillay’s life, and she’s carried this into healthy eating in The No Recipe Cookbook, which took her 18 months to write and recently reached number one in several Amazon categories. Taking on extra responsibilities at work and at home during the COVID-19 pandemic refined Dr Pillay’s time-management skills and healthy meal planning.

23


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Good reads

4min
pages 52-53

Thank you to our Educators of Commitment

3min
pages 46-47

Sir William Arbuthnot Lane (1856-1943)

6min
pages 44-45

One stop shop for plastic surgery trainees established

2min
page 36

One College Transformation: making it easier to support you

3min
page 30

Cultural change and patient safety: a joint summit

4min
page 27

RACS and First Australians – the Indigenous Surgical Pathway Program

3min
pages 16-17

A new course for supervisors

1min
page 25

Dispatch from New York

6min
pages 24-25

Unveiling the Collections: a new RACS publication

2min
page 21

RACS affirms commitment to ethics in health care

1min
page 12

The College 2021 finance and budget report

8min
pages 6-8

Research scholarship and grant opportunities for 2022

10min
pages 48-60

When things do not add up

7min
pages 42-43

Specialist Training Program supports rural health strategy

6min
pages 39-41

Digging deeper into Australia and New Zealand road crash statistics

3min
page 38

Exceptional DCAS program planned

2min
page 37

Case note review

5min
pages 34-35

Educators of Merit

4min
pages 29-31

Highlights from the November Annual Academic Surgery Conference

3min
pages 32-33

Dr Samantha Pillay

2min
page 23

Introducing the Global Health Section

3min
page 22

A scientific congress like no other

2min
page 13

New framework to increase access to surgery for bariatric patients

7min
pages 15-17

Scholarship supports new renal transplant program

4min
page 18

Local instructor team conducts paediatric life support training in PNG

3min
page 14

Welcome to new RACSTA Chair, Dr Charles Jenkinson

2min
page 19

Open house at RACS South Australia

1min
page 20

New Zealand surgeon's work to change patients’ lives

9min
pages 10-12

President’s perspective

5min
pages 4-5
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Surgical News volume 22 issue 1 by RACSCommunications - Issuu